In the Estate of Charlene Butts v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 14, 2023
Docket09-21-00269-CV
StatusPublished

This text of In the Estate of Charlene Butts v. the State of Texas (In the Estate of Charlene Butts v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Estate of Charlene Butts v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________

NO. 09-21-00269-CV ________________

IN THE ESTATE OF CHARLENE BUTTS

________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the Probate Court No. 1 1 Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 20-40347-P ________________________________________________________________________

OPINION

Appellant Tommy Lynn Cooper appeals the trial court’s Judgment and Order

Admitting Copy of Will to Probate as Muniment of Title wherein the trial court

admitted a copy of his mother’s will to probate as a muniment of title. Appellee

Susan Bolster filed a cross appeal regarding the trial court’s decision not to award

her attorneys’ fees. Finding no reversible error, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

1 This case has been transferred from the former Montgomery County Court at Law No. 2 to the newly created Montgomery County Probate Court No. 1. 1 I. Background

While decedent Charlene Butts was married to her first husband, she gave

birth to Tommy, her only biological child.2 Charlene divorced her first husband, and

when Tommy was thirteen years old, Charlene married Billy Ray Butts, who had

three children of his own, including Susan Butts Bolster, Appellee. 3 Charlene and

Billy Ray remained married until Charlene died on March 26, 2008.

In April 2005, Charlene and Billy Ray executed wills with similar inheritance

provisions. Each will bequeathed everything to the other, and named the other

spouse as executor. Each will also named the four children and stepchildren as

contingent beneficiaries, and named alternate executors; Charlene’s will named

Tommy and Susan, respectively, as alternate executors, and Billy Ray’s will also

named Susan and Tommy as alternate executors.

Neither Billy Ray nor either of the alternate executors took any steps to

probate Charlene’s will within four years after Charlene died. Eight months before

Billy Ray died on May 25, 2018, he executed a transfer on death deed in favor of

Susan. This deed had the effect of transferring Billy Ray’s real property to Susan at

the time of Billy Ray’s death.

2 For ease of reference, we identify the parties and their family members by their first names. 3 Billy Ray also had two adopted children who are expressly excluded from inheriting under the terms of both Charlene’s and Billy Ray’s wills. 2 After Billy Ray’s death, Susan probated his will. In 2020, Susan also filed a

copy of Charlene’s will for probate as a muniment of title, in the attempt to show

that Billy Ray had inherited all of Charlene’s real estate when Charlene died, and

further that the real property identified in the transfer on death deed then passed to

Susan after Billy Ray’s death. Tommy contested Susan’s attempt to probate

Charlene’s will, alleging that the copy of Charlene’s Will could not be admitted to

probate more than four years after Charlene’s death, and that the lack of the original

will was evidence of Charlene’s revocation of her will during her lifetime. Tommy

argued that Charlene had died intestate, and that he accordingly inherited Charlene’s

community half of the real estate in question. Tommy also sought partition of the

land and the trial court severed the partition claim.4

The trial court granted interlocutory partial summary judgment in favor of

Susan holding that Susan was not in default for failing to file the application to

probate Charlene Butts’ will as a muniment of title within four years of Charlene’s

death and granted a no-evidence summary judgment in favor of Susan on Tommy’s

claim to invalidate Billy Ray’s transfer on death deed. The case was then submitted

to the jury on a single issue: whether Charlene did or did not revoke her will. 5 The

4 The partition claim is also on appeal as case no. 09-22-00045-CV, and we have entered a separate memorandum opinion on the partition. 5 The jury question, instructions, and response are as follows: Was the document identified as Exhibit A-1 not revoked by decedent? “Decedent” or “Testator” means Charlene Butts. 3 jury decided that Charlene did not revoke her will, and the trial court then entered a

Judgment and Order Admitting Copy of Will to Probate as Muniment of Title.

We summarize the evidence before the trial court:

A. Susan Bolster’s Testimony

Susan testified that her stepmother Charlene died at the age of seventy on

March 26, 2008, in Montgomery County, Texas. At the time of Charlene’s death,

she had been married to Billy Ray for approximately thirty years. Susan identified

the copy of Charlene’s will admitted into evidence, and noted that the will named

Susan’s father, Billy Ray, as the executor. Charlene’s will also names Tommy and

Susan as alternate executors in the event that Billy Ray was unable or unwilling to

serve in that capacity. Billy Ray died in 2018. When probating Billy Ray’s will,

Susan realized that the real property was in both Charlene’s and Billy Ray’s name,

“Contestant” means Tommy Cooper. A person may revoke a will by destroying or canceling the will, or by causing it to be destroyed or canceled in her presence. You are instructed that when the original will cannot be produced, and it is shown that when last seen it was in the possession of Testator or in a place to which she had ready access, it is presumed that she has destroyed it with intent to revoke it; however, no such presumption of revocation exists when the original will has been traced to the hands of another than the Testator in which case it is presumed the will has not been revoked unless the Contestant provides substantial evidence that the Testator revoked her will. Answer “It was not revoked” or “It was revoked.” The answer “It was not revoked” must be based on a preponderance of the evidence. If you do not find that a preponderance of the evidence supports that answer, then answer “It was revoked.” Answer: IT WAS NOT REVOKED 4 and that Charlene’s will therefore needed to be probated. Susan testified that when

she found Charlene’s and Billy Ray’s wills after Billy Ray’s death, she gave Billy

Ray’s will to her attorney so that it could be probated, and she gave Charlene’s will

to Tommy. When Tommy could not produce Charlene’s original will, and denied

having it, Susan and her attorney filed a copy of Charlene’s will to be probated as a

muniment of title.

Although Susan knew where the wills were kept, she did not look for them

until after her father died. She testified that she gave no thought to probating

Charlene’s will or to the joint ownership of the property until that time.

B. Tommy Cooper’s Testimony

Tommy, Charlene’s son, testified to the property that Charlene and Billy Ray

owned at the time of Charlene’s death. Tommy also recalled that Billy Ray worked

as a mechanic, and Charlene was an accountant for HW Daily, Inc. for thirty-five

years. In Tommy’s opinion, Charlene’s efforts and investment decisions were half

responsible for the size of Billy Ray’s estate, and she would have wanted Tommy to

benefit from her efforts. Tommy did not know what happened to Charlene’s original

will and testified that Susan did not give it to him.

C. Tamara Paul’s Testimony

Tamara Paul is the attorney who prepared Charlene’s and Billy Ray’s wills in

2005. She described the usual procedure for drafting and signing a will, noting that

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In the Estate of Charlene Butts v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-estate-of-charlene-butts-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2023.