James Powell and Alice Rae "AlRae" Huseman v. Shandy Phillip Powell Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 9, 2025
Docket03-24-00558-CV
StatusPublished

This text of James Powell and Alice Rae "AlRae" Huseman v. Shandy Phillip Powell Smith (James Powell and Alice Rae "AlRae" Huseman v. Shandy Phillip Powell Smith) 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
James Powell and Alice Rae "AlRae" Huseman v. Shandy Phillip Powell Smith, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-24-00558-CV

James Powell and Alice Rae “AlRae” Huseman, Appellants

v.

Shandy Phillip Powell Smith, Appellee

FROM COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 4 OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY NO. 22-0797-CP4, THE HONORABLE JOHN MCMASTER, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

James Powell and Alice Rae “AlRae” Huseman appeal the trial court’s judgment

declaring that Shandy Phillip Powell Smith is the sole devisee under the will of Smith’s father,

Bryan Thomas Powell. We will affirm.

BACKGROUND

Bryan1 died in April 2022, leaving a holographic will executed on January 29,

1998. The will provided that:

Power of attorney is given to my Mother, Elsie Alice Powell, 29 January 98. After expenses, all remaining funds go to my Son. As to the disposition of my car, it also is to go to my Son, Shandy Phillip Powell Smith; any balance on its loan to be paid out of my estate funds. [] Everything else shall be divided up and/or disposed of as the Family see fit. No fighting or other unpleasantness is allowed. 1 Because James Powell and Bryan Powell share a surname, we will refer to them by their given names for clarity. When Bryan died, his surviving relatives included his brother James, his sister Huseman, and his

son Smith. On July 14, 2022, Smith, as applicant, filed an application for probate of Bryan’s

holographic will and for letters of independent administration pursuant to Texas Estates Code

section 401.002(b). See Tex. Est. Code § 401.002(b) (providing that when no executor is named

in decedent’s will, all decedent’s distributees may agree on advisability of having independent

administration and collectively designate qualified person to serve as independent administrator).

The application states, incorrectly, that Smith is an executor named in the will. The application

states that Bryan executed a valid holographic will in January 1998 that was never revoked; that

no children were born or adopted by Bryan after execution of the will; and that no marriage of

Bryan was dissolved after the will was executed. The application further stated:

An independent administration of the estate is advisable and in the best interest of the estate and of the distributee. The only distributee of the estate and person required to receive notice under Section 401.004, Texas Estates Code, is Shandy Powell Smith and such person will file a Waiver of Notice and Consent to Application for Independent Administration.

Applicant requests Shandy Phillip Powell Smith be appointed independent Administrator of Decedent’s estate, without bond. Shandy Phillip Powell Smith is qualified to be appointed as administrator of this estate, and is not disqualified by law to act as such.

The application requested that “citation issue to all persons having an interest in Decedent’s

estate as required by law,” that “Decedent’s Will be admitted to probate,” and that “Shandy

Phillip Powell Smith receive letters of administration.” On July 29, 2022, Smith filed a waiver

of citation and bond and consent to appointment of independent administrator, in which he

stated: “I hereby designate and request the court to appoint Shandy Phillip Powell Smith, who is

a qualified person, to serve as Independent Administrator With Will Annexed, to serve without

bond.”

2 On September 21, 2022, the trial court signed an order admitting the holographic

will to probate and granting letters of independent administration pursuant to Texas Estates Code

section 401.002(b). The court found that, although the will did not provide for an independent

administration, “the distributee has requested an independent administration as required in

Section 401.004, Texas Estates Code.” The court further found that Smith was not disqualified

to serve as independent administrator and that “[t]he distributees designated [Smith] to serve

without bond.” The court ordered Bryan’s will admitted to probate and further ordered that

“upon taking and filing of the oath required by law, Shandy Phillip Powell Smith shall be

issued letters of administration and appointed Independent Administrator With Will Annexed of

Decedent’s Will and estate.” On October 17, 2022, Smith, as Independent Administrator, filed a

certificate of compliance for notice to beneficiaries stating that no notice to beneficiaries had

been provided because the only beneficiary named in the will was Smith, who had already made

an appearance in the proceeding.

On November 2, 2022, James and Huseman, Bryan’s surviving siblings, filed a

motion to vacate the order appointing Smith Independent Administrator of Bryan’s estate. James

and Huseman alleged that they were not notified of the application filed by Smith and that

neither had agreed to appoint him as Independent Administrator without bond. James and

Huseman asserted that, because Bryan’s will provided that “[e]verything else shall be divided up

and/or disposed of as the Family sees fit,” the will “makes clear that the intended distributees of

this estate include more individuals than [Smith],” and that the language of the will indicates that

Bryan “clearly intended that other family members, in addition to [Smith], to [sic] take under the

terms of the will.” James and Huseman argued that the trial court had “ignored the residuary

bequest to Decedent’s family and instead found that [Smith] was the sole beneficiary under the

3 will,” and sought to set aside the order appointing Smith the Independent Administrator because

the lack of citation and notice to them deprived the court of jurisdiction to order his appointment.

James and Huseman also sought declaratory relief under the Texas Uniform

Declaratory Judgments Act (UDJA). See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 37.005 (providing for

declaration of rights or legal relations in respect to estate to determine questions of construction

of wills). James and Huseman sought a declaration that the word “Family” in the will included

them and that, consequently, they “are beneficiaries under the Will.”

Smith opposed the motion to vacate and request for declaratory judgment,

asserting that the court lacked plenary power to act on it. The parties briefed the issue of the

court’s continuing jurisdiction and, on April 5, 2024, the trial court signed an order vacating its

earlier order appointing Smith as Independent Administrator and cancelled the Letters of

Independent Administration issued to Smith. The order states that “[t]here is bona fide dispute

regarding the proper construction of the Will’s dispositive language giving rise to the need for

this Court’s declaratory judgment as to the disposition of Decedent’s estate under the Will.”

On July 16, 2024, the court held an evidentiary hearing on James and Huseman’s

request for declaratory relief. Huseman testified that when Bryan died, his surviving relatives

were James, Huseman, and Smith. Huseman confirmed that Bryan was not married when he

died and had no other children besides Smith. Huseman stated that Bryan, who had suffered a

severe heart attack when he was 34 years old, moved into their parents’ house after his divorce.

In 1998, when Bryan executed his will, he and his parents were living in a house the parents

owned in Austin.

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Related

In Re Estate of Florence
307 S.W.3d 887 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2010)
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610 S.W.2d 147 (Texas Supreme Court, 1980)

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James Powell and Alice Rae "AlRae" Huseman v. Shandy Phillip Powell Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-powell-and-alice-rae-alrae-huseman-v-shandy-phillip-powell-smith-texapp-2025.