in the Estate of Ernst B. Fiedler

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 2011
Docket13-09-00386-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
in the Estate of Ernst B. Fiedler, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

                                       NUMBER 13-09-00386-CV

                                        COURT OF APPEALS

                     THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                         CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

IN THE ESTATE OF ERNST B. FIEDLER, DECEASED

On appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1

of Jefferson County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Benavides

                      Memorandum Opinion by Justice Benavides

Appellant, Tammy Laurie Leger, contends the trial court erred in the underlying will contest lawsuit when it denied her motion for directed verdict because there was insufficient evidence to justify the jury’s findings of undue influence and fraud.  We affirm. 

I. Background[1]

            Ernst B. Fiedler was born on November 16, 1926, the youngest of five siblings.  A World War II veteran, Fiedler spent most of his life working on his family’s farm-and-ranch homestead in Hamshire, Jefferson County, Texas.  According to his niece Paula Fiedler, Ernst was a frugal, taciturn man who was “forthright” and “strong-willed.”  He married Bessie Fiedler in 1967.  Ernst and Bessie’s marriage lasted for twenty years until she passed away in 1987.  They had no children.

Paula testified at trial that, over the years, Ernst refused to prepare a will or final testament to dispose of his personal property.  Paula testified that she “would explain to him that it would be to his benefit to have some sort of will that would designate what to do with his property” and “offered to take him to a lawyer.”  However, according to Paula, Ernst stalwartly opposed the idea:

His response was, over all the years with the family members, including my father and myself, was that he really and truly didn’t give a blankety-blank-blank about having a will and that, you know, it was going to be as it was.  He didn’t care about having a will.  He didn’t care what happened . . . .

Paula testified that Ernst’s “strong-willed” disposition changed in 2002, when he fell off the roof of his garage and lay in his yard for approximately four to six hours in the dark, cold night until someone found him.  At this point, Paula stated that Ernst “became quite paranoid about being alone and being sick or being injured.”  Ernst was taken to the Veteran’s Administration (“VA”) hospital in Houston to recuperate from this fall.  Ernst convalesced at the VA hospital for a full year as his recovery was complicated by his injuries from the fall and an ongoing fight with cancer.  He kept company with his brother Paul Fiedler, Paula’s father, who was also undergoing treatment at the VA at the same time.  While at the hospital, Paula paid Ernst’s bills, cared for his property, and visited him regularly.

The record shows that Ernst met Leger in July of 2002 at the VA hospital while he was still recuperating from his surgery. Leger’s husband, David, was related to Ernst’s late wife Bessie.  Leger testified that the next time she saw Ernst was when he stopped by her home in Hamshire in May 2003.  Ernst began visiting Leger regularly to have dinner and the two eventually became friends.  Leger helped Ernst with his cancer medications by organizing them into a daily pill box.  She also gave him occasional rides to the VA hospital for various doctor appointments. 

In approximately July of 2003, Ernst and Leger drove around Jefferson County to visit Ernst’s numerous properties.  Ernst owned several tracts of land, both individually or jointly with other family members, throughout the Hamshire/Winnie area.  Leger asked Ernst if he had a will.  Ernst told Leger that “he did not have a will and did not intend to have a will.”  In fact, Ernst proclaimed that he would “just let [his family] fight over it.”  Leger told Ernst that if he did not prepare a will, the State of Texas would decide how his property was disbursed.  Leger stated that she “did not agree” with Ernst’s decision to not have a will and “thought he should decide where his property goes.  He worked for [his property]; he should decide.”  In her words, she continued to “fuss” about Ernst getting a will, but he remained unconvinced.

Leger testified that she, of her own volition, called Thomas Niederhofer, a local attorney, to discuss the disposition of Ernst’s property in approximately July 2003.  Niederhofer had previously handled Leger’s parents’ wills, and he had also handled some child custody issues for Leger’s brother.  Leger testified that she discussed Ernst’s properties with Niederhofer.  Niederhofer told her that he would need legal descriptions of Ernst’s property to prepare a will and gave Leger directions about what to look for and how to look for it.  Shortly thereafter, Leger drove Ernst to the Jefferson County courthouse to research and make copies of the deeds to his properties.  Leger testified that she “lifted the books” at the courthouse to obtain the deeds, because Ernst was seventy-five years old at the time and could not do so. 

Leger then scheduled a meeting between Niederhofer and Ernst at her home.  The conversation regarding Ernst’s will took place at Leger’s kitchen table, with Leger present the entire time.  After meeting with Ernst, Niederhofer prepared Ernst’s will. Niederhofer later called Leger, not Ernst, to inform her that Ernst’s will was ready.  The record showed that Leger and Niederhofer agreed to execute the will at Prosperity Bank in Winnie, Texas.  Leger drove Ernst to the bank to execute his will and witnessed him sign his will.


Ernst died on February 17, 2006, at the age of seventy-nine. 

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