In THE ESTATE OF MYRTLE DELL BROWN v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 30, 2024
Docket23-0258
StatusPublished

This text of In THE ESTATE OF MYRTLE DELL BROWN v. the State of Texas (In THE ESTATE OF MYRTLE DELL BROWN v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court 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 MYRTLE DELL BROWN v. the State of Texas, (Tex. 2024).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 23-0258 ══════════

In the Estate of Myrtle Dell Brown, Deceased

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the First District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

PER CURIAM

Justice Lehrmann did not participate in the decision.

This case involves the Humane Society of the United States’ uncontested application to probate a copy of decedent Myrtle Dell Brown’s will executed in October 2009, which named the Society her sole beneficiary. Although the application was uncontested and the trial court found that a reasonably diligent search for the original will occurred, the court nonetheless reached the contrary conclusion that the Society failed to establish the cause of nonproduction and denied the application. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that on-the-record testimony from Catherine Wylie—an attorney and the guardian of Brown’s person and estate before her death—could not be considered evidence because the record of the hearing did not show Wylie was sworn as a witness. The court of appeals therefore did not consider whether the Society had shown any of the Estates Code’s other requirements for proving up a copy of a will, including whether the Society sufficiently overcame the presumption of revocation that attaches when the original will is missing and was last seen in the decedent’s possession. We hold that neither the Estates Code nor the Rules of Evidence required Wylie’s testimony to be sworn under these circumstances. The court of appeals therefore erred in refusing to consider Wylie’s testimony, which we hold was sufficient as a matter of law to satisfy the Estates Code’s requirement that the applicant establish the cause of nonproduction. We therefore reverse the court of appeals’ judgment. Because the court of appeals did not address whether the Society overcame the presumption of revocation, we remand for that court to consider the question in the first instance—including, if necessary, the applicable burden of proof for showing nonrevocation when the proceeding is uncontested. BACKGROUND

The following facts are drawn from the Society’s pleadings and evidence presented at the trial court hearings, which we view in the light most favorable to the Society. 1 Where applicable, we note whether a particular fact is contested or stems from documents or evidence not included in our record on appeal. In August 2009, Myrtle Dell Brown signed a will naming her cousin, Annabelle Powell, executor and sole distributee of her estate. Brown and Powell subsequently had a falling out because Powell fired

1 See Natividad v. Alexsis, Inc., 875 S.W.2d 695, 699 (Tex. 1994).

2 one of Brown’s caretakers and allegedly stole from Brown. One of Brown’s caretakers told Beverly June Eriks about the situation, and Eriks decided to help Brown after notifying the State Bar. On October 1, 2009, Brown allegedly made the new attested will at issue here, which was drafted by attorney John Yow. The October 2009 will revoked all prior wills, named the Society sole distributee of her estate, and named Eriks independent executor. The original October 2009 will was in Brown’s possession after signing. Shortly after the October 2009 will’s signing, David Easterling, a former attorney of Brown, wrote a letter to the trial court suggesting the need for guardianship. 2 The trial court opened a guardianship proceeding and appointed attorney Catherine Wylie as Brown’s guardian on October 19, 2009. 3 Wylie concluded that Brown’s caretakers were stealing from her. According to the trial court, Brown also told guardian Wylie that Eriks was stealing from her, but there are no details underlying this allegation in our record. Within a few months, Brown moved to an assisted living center, where she passed away in June 2018. In August 2018, Eriks filed an unopposed application to probate a copy of Brown’s October 2009 will, in which she states that the original

2 A copy of this letter is not included in the appellate record but is referenced in the hearings below and by the trial court in its findings of fact and conclusions of law. 3 The court initially appointed Wylie as a guardian ad litem. After a December 2009 medical examination determined Brown was totally incapacitated, Wylie was appointed as the guardian of her person and estate in February 2010, which left Brown unable to revoke a will unilaterally.

3 will could not be located and that she believed it had been accidentally disposed of during the guardianship. 4 At the trial court’s direction, Wylie then filed an Application for Determination and Declaration of Heirship in December 2018. That same month, Eriks moved the court to reconsider and objected to an heirship determination, and the Society filed its own application for probate, which was unopposed. The Society also filed a jury demand, requesting a trial by jury of any contested matter. The trial court held a hearing on the applications by Eriks and the Society in September 2019, and Wylie gave possibly unsworn testimony 5 that Brown’s caretakers were stealing from Brown, that Brown’s papers and belongings were disordered and had clearly been gone through before Wylie searched for the original will, and that Brown was very easily exploited. Wylie also observed that several people had access to and frequently entered and left Brown’s quarters at the assisted living center. Although Brown had a “history of hiding” valuables such as cash, Wylie explained that her search for Brown’s original October 2009 will was so thorough that she “cleared the whole house” and “if there was an original it was not in her home or in the safe deposit box.” The trial court stated that it “want[s] the Humane Society

4 Brown’s two potential heirs signed waivers under Texas Estates Code

Section 258.051(c), relinquishing their right to notice of any further proceedings regarding the admission to probate of any will of Brown’s. The Attorney General also filed a waiver declining to be a party to the proceeding. 5The Society acknowledges that “the transcript fails to reflect that [Wylie] was present as a witness, not counsel,” but nonetheless maintains Wylie “was in fact sworn in at the beginning of the proceeding.”

4 to get their money too,” but it ultimately refused to probate a copy of the October 2009 will, rejecting the proponents’ insistence that “[t]hey probate copies [of wills] every day in every court.” Despite the case’s uncontested nature, the trial court denied the application for probate. In November 2019, the Society filed a motion to reconsider and for new trial, and the trial court held a hearing on the motion that same month. Wylie again provided unsworn testimony that she searched Brown’s safe deposit box and “cleared the whole house” in the course of searching for the will. No one objected to Wylie’s not being sworn in on the record. John Yow also testified that he had drafted the October 2009 will and unsuccessfully searched his office for the will even though it was not his practice to keep originals. The trial court denied the motion to reconsider and later issued findings of fact and conclusions of law at the Society’s request. Despite finding that “a diligent search of [Brown’s] home and safe deposit box” took place “during the guardianship,” the trial court concluded “[t]here was not sufficient evidence as to the cause of nonproduction of the October 1, 2009 Will” under Texas Estates Code Section 256.156.

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In THE ESTATE OF MYRTLE DELL BROWN v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-estate-of-myrtle-dell-brown-v-the-state-of-texas-tex-2024.