Jennings v. Jennings

212 S.W. 772, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 746
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 15, 1919
DocketNo. 947.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 212 S.W. 772 (Jennings v. Jennings) 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
Jennings v. Jennings, 212 S.W. 772, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 746 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

Plaintiff in' error, E. Y. Jennings, filed his application in the county-court of Stephens county to probate the will of his deceased wife, Modena V. Jennings. Mrs. Herrington, Mrs. McNabb, Mrs. Mitchell, and Mrs. Lacey, married daughters of the proponent and deceased, joined by their respective husbands, and Grover C. Jennings, a son of proponent and the deceased, contested the probate of the will upon the ground of mental incapacity and undue influence. In the county court the ease was submitted to a jury upon the issues mentioned, and a verdict returned in favor of contestants. Judgment was there rendered, refusing to probate the will. Upon appeal to the district court the case was submitted to the jury upon the issue of undue influence, and a verdict rendered in favor of the contestants. Judgment was there rendered that the will be not admitted to probate. Erom this judgment proponent prosecutes this writ of error.

Opinion.

It is assigned as error that the court erred in admitting certain evidence, and that the evidence is insufficient to show undue influence. The record discloses the following facts:

Proponent and Modena Yeale, his deceased wife, were' married in 1880, and lived to-gether as man and wife for 36 years, and until she died on April 20, 1916. To them 15 children were born, of whom 13 survive. Eive of the adults, as stated above, have joined in the contest of her will. They lived in Stephens county during their entire married life. They accumulated a community estate, consisting of land and personal property. Mrs. Jennings also had some separate property which it seems she inherited from her father. They lived upon their land about 10 miles from the town of Ranger. About February, 1915, Mrs. Jennings became afflicted with cancer, which resulted in her death. On November 27, 1915, Mr. and Mrs. Jennings together came to the town of Ranger, where they each executed their wills. They procured the services of Hon. J. R. Stubblefield, an attorney, of Eastland, Tex., to prepare the wills for' them. By the terms of her will, Mrs. Jennings gave to her husband all of her personal property. All of her real estate she gave to Mr. Jennings for life, with remainder to their children. She invested him with power to sell and dispose of the land as he might see proper. It provided that after his death the real estate should pass to their children and. their descendants, share and share alike, as they would inherit under the law of descent and distribution; and if the real estate had been sold by the husband during his life, then that the proceeds thereof should descend and pass as the real estate. She appointed her husband as executor, and directed that no bond be required of him, and that no action be taken in the probate court except to probate the will and file an inventory and appraiser ment. Mr. Jennings’ will gave his personal property to his wife; his real estate to her for life, With remainder to their children, and appointed her executrix without bond. Otherwise it was precisely the same as Mrs. Jennings’ will. Mr. and Mrs. Jennings went to the office of the First National Bank of Ranger, and there signed their wills in the presence of F. W. Melvin and Rex O. Outlaw, whom they desired to witness the same. At the time of her death four of the surviving children of Mr. and Mrs. Jennings were minors living at home. Two of them were girls, 16 and 12 years old, and two boys, 14 and 8 years old.

There is not a scintilla of evidence in this record impeaching the mental capacity of Mrs. Jennings. To sustain the allegation of undue influence evidence was adduced by the contestants as follows: gome of the contestants testified that on various occasions, and long prior to the execution of the will, Mr. Jennings had whipped and assaulted his wife, used abusive language towards her, and was otherwise guilty of unkind treatment. Most of these matters related to instances long prior to the execution of the, will, some of them being as remote as 12 years. A Miss Irene Gold was also permitted to testify that about 5 years before the death of Mrs. Jennings she heard proponent make the statement that on the evening before he had whipped his wife.

Contestant Mrs. Herrington testified she had lived at home for 23 years prior to her marriage, and that her father dominated her mother. This was objected to upon the ground that it was the opinion of the witness. Mrs. Mitchell, contestant, testified that 12 years prior to the death of her mother she heard this conversation between her father and mother:

“About the time my mother’s father died, I heard my mother tell my father that she wanted some land nearer our home, as her portion of her father’s estate. I heard her state that she did not desire the canyon land, which lay further from our home, as her portion of her father’s estate. At the time she made this state■ment my father and mother were talking about my mother’s part of her father’s estate. My mother did not like it because my father went down to see my grandmother in reference to the matter. My mother always said that she did not want the canyon land as her portion of her father’s estate.”

*774 Grandma Veale, tlie mother of Mrs. Jennings, was permitted to testify that when her husband died her daughter inherited a portion of his estate, and that the next morning after her husband’s death proponent came to her house and demanded his wife’s share of the property, and that she thereafter told Mrs. Jennings about Mr. Jennings’ conduct, and that when she told Mrs. Jennings thereof the latter went into the kitchen and cried. Mrs. Herrington, contestant, was permitted to testify that she knew an instance in which her mother wanted to purchase some clothing and her father refused to permit her to do so. Contestant Grover Jennings testified that the first time he heard about his mother’s will was about July 3, 1916, after the notices were posted.. Grover Jennings also testified:

“Judge W. C. Veale is related to the Jennings family. He was related to my mother, who was a Veale before she married. Judge W. C. Veale was residing in Breckenridge at the time my mother is said to have made the will in controversy. At the time this purported will was made E. Y. 'Jennings resided 10 miles from Ranger, in Eastland county, and it was 25 miles to Breckenridge. It is about 12 miles from Ranger to Eastland. My mother was not intimate with Judge W. C. Veale during her lifetime.”

[1,2] We think.that all of the testimony indicated above was improperly admitted, except that- showing, that proponent had whipped and assaulted his wife and abused her. All the rest of the testimony was inadmissible, and calculated to prejudice and inflame the minds of the jury against the proponent, except the testimony of Sirs. Her-rington that her father dominated her mother, and this was a conclusion of the witness. Whether a man dominates his wife, or vice versa, is sometimes a very debatable question. Many a man fancies that he rules his wife when the reverse is the ease, and a declaration by an interested contestant of her mother’s will that her father dominated her mother is no more than the expression of an opinion, and inadmissible.

[3] It is not apparent that the testimony of Mrs. Mitchell, as to the conversation between her father and mother about 12 years ago, was at all relevant to the issue of undue influence.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W. 772, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennings-v-jennings-texapp-1919.