in the Estate of Dennis M. Vackar

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 9, 2011
Docket04-10-00044-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
in the Estate of Dennis M. Vackar, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION No. 04-10-00044-CV

IN THE ESTATE OF Dennis M. VACKAR, Deceased

From the Probate Court No. 2, Bexar County, Texas Trial Court No. 2007PC3440 Honorable Tom Rickhoff, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Rebecca Simmons, Justice

Sitting: Karen Angelini, Justice Phylis J. Speedlin, Justice Rebecca Simmons, Justice

Delivered and Filed: March 9, 2011

AFFIRMED IN PART & REVERSED IN PART AND RENDERED

Magdalen “Maggie” Marbry appeals the trial court’s judgment, which invalidated the

Statutory Durable Power of Attorney and Last Will and Testament of her brother, Dennis

Vackar. She also appeals the jury’s finding that Dennis’s gift of life insurance proceeds to her

was unfair. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

BACKGROUND

On July 28, 2007, Dennis suffered a severe spinal injury when he fell approximately eight

feet from the bucket of a front-end loader while he was trimming trees. At the time of the

accident, Dennis was estranged from his wife of twenty-seven years, Betty Vackar. Their

marriage had been “rocky” for at least five years. Dennis’s relationship with his son, Dustin, 04-10-00044-CV

was also estranged due to Dustin’s relationship with his girlfriend and a prior physical altercation

between him and Dustin; they had not truly spoken in approximately three years.

Betty believed that many of her marital problems were related to Dennis’s close

relationship with Maggie. Maggie was Dennis’s confidant, and when Dennis was forced to

choose between Maggie and Betty, he would choose Maggie. Betty was also annoyed that

Dennis chose to travel every year with his sister instead of her.

In March of 2006, unbeknownst to Dennis, Betty began moving items out of the

residence into a storage shed. Seven months later, while Dennis was traveling with Maggie in

Morocco, Betty began moving personal items out of the residence into a one-bedroom apartment

she had rented. When Dennis returned, Betty picked him up at the airport, drove him to their

house, and told him that she had moved out. Betty and Dennis never lived together as husband

and wife after October of 2006.

Immediately after falling, Dennis requested that Maggie and his brother Steve be

contacted; he did not request that either Betty or Dustin be notified. A helicopter transported

Dennis to University Hospital in San Antonio. As a result of the fall, Dennis suffered a serious

spinal cord injury resulting in partial paralysis and the necessity of a ventilator. The hospital

staff suggested to Dennis that he execute a medical power of attorney, and Dennis indicated that

he wanted Maggie to be his agent. Dennis also requested that Maggie put her name on his

checking account so that she could take care of his business while he was in the hospital.

Dennis executed a durable statutory power of attorney while in the hospital. Using the

power of attorney and pursuant to Dennis’s request, Maggie named herself as the beneficiary of

Dennis’s John Alden life insurance policy. Notably, prior to the accident, Dennis designated

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Maggie as the beneficiary of his retirement funds and a Dearborn life insurance policy. While at

the hospital, he also executed a Last Will and Testament leaving all of his property to Maggie.

Dennis’s health declined, and he was ultimately transferred to a rehabilitation facility.

Following several months of care, Dennis decided to discontinue his treatment and withdraw all

supportive care. Before discontinuing treatment, the hospital’s medical ethics committee

confirmed that Dennis was competent to make such a decision. Dennis died shortly after the

hospital withdrew his life support.

Maggie filed an application in probate court to probate Dennis’s Last Will and

Testament. Betty and Dustin contested the will, alleging Dennis lacked testamentary capacity,

and asserted that the will and the power of attorney were executed as a result of Maggie’s undue

influence. The jury found in Betty and Dustin’s favor.

UNDUE INFLUENCE

The jury found that Dennis executed the durable statutory power of attorney and his will

as a result of Maggie’s undue influence and that he lacked capacity to execute the power of

attorney and the will. The trial court’s judgment concludes that the will and power of attorney

are invalid due to Dennis’s lack of competence. The judgment makes no mention of undue

influence and reflects no conclusion based on undue influence. In issues eight through eleven,

Maggie argues that there is no evidence or, alternatively, insufficient evidence to support the

jury’s finding of undue influence. Betty did not respond to these issues in her brief; instead she

focused on the sufficiency of the evidence to support Dennis’s lack of testamentary capacity. At

oral argument, counsel for Betty agreed that the court did not incorporate the jury’s undue

influence finding into the judgment and stated that she was not relying on the jury’s finding of

undue influence to support the trial court’s judgment. Based on Betty’s concession that the trial

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court’s judgment is not supported by the jury’s finding of undue influence, we need not address

Maggie’s issues regarding undue influence.

ADMISSION OF DENNIS’S MEDICAL RECORDS

Betty introduced a number of Dennis’s medical records to support her contention that

Dennis lacked capacity to execute his will or durable power of attorney. Maggie argues that the

trial court erroneously admitted Dennis’s medical records into evidence. Betty and Dustin

contend that the trial court properly admitted the documents because they were produced in

response to discovery and were admitted under the rule of optional completeness. 1 Because

Maggie’s complaints pertaining to Dennis’s medical records may affect the scope of our review

as to the execution of Dennis’s will and durable power of attorney, we first consider whether the

trial court erred in admitting the medical records that Betty and Dustin rely on to support the

jury’s finding of lack of capacity.

Specifically, Betty and Dustin rely on the following medical records: (1) an August 27

record listing several of Dennis’s medications; (2) a July 28 record indicating that Dennis denied

being married; (3) an August 7 record stating that Dennis was “feeling hopeless” and that “his

thinking [wa]s slightly illogical in that at times he report[ed] wanting to get better and get back

to his life, while at other . . . times he sa[id] he wants to go home even if it means that he will

die”; and (4) another August 7 record stating that Dennis’s judgment was “severely impaired.” 2

A. Standard of Review

We review a trial court’s evidentiary ruling for an abuse of discretion. Horizon/CMS

Healthcare Corp. v. Auld, 34 S.W.3d 887, 906 (Tex. 2000). In determining whether the trial

1 We note the record does not support the documents were proffered in the context of optional completeness. 2 An August 6 medical record indicating that Dennis was suffering from “depression/adjustment disorder” is contained in the record as an exhibit, but the record reflects that this medical record was not admitted at trial.

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court abused its discretion, we ask whether the trial court acted without reference to any guiding

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