Johnson v. Durst

115 S.W.2d 1000, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 1938
DocketNo. 8520.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 115 S.W.2d 1000 (Johnson v. Durst) 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
Johnson v. Durst, 115 S.W.2d 1000, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 505 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

McCLENDON, Chief Justice.

Suit by Mary Celesta and Sophia Elizabeth Durst (daughters, of Mrs. Celesta R. Durst, sister of Mrs. Birdie Robertson Johnson, deceased, wife of the late Hon. Cone Johnson) to establish an equitable title and trust in all the property of Mr. Johnson predicated upon a written contract (alleged to have been lost) executed by Mr. and Mrs. Johnson in the spring of 1926, by which, in consideration of an agreement on Mrs. Johnson’s part not to revoke a will she had made in 1913 devis-’ ing all her property (except certain specific bequests) to him, he agreed to devise to plaintiffs all the property he thereby acquired and all other property (exce-pting two legacies aggregating $4,000) owned by him at the time of his death. Mrs. Johnson died in November, 1926, and her 1913 will was probated. . Mr. Johnson married Miss Ethel F. Hilton August 2, 1928. July' 28, 1928, he made a will, reciting his contemplated marriage to Miss Hilton, and be-' queathing to her $2,000 in money, other *1002 personal property of the value of $10,000, his home in Tyler, the furnishings thereof, and his personal effects. The remainder of his estate, after seven specific legacies, he left to Mrs. Durst and her two daughters (plaintiffs). These specific legacies were: $2,000 to Cone Johnson, son of his brother, Earl Johnson; $1,000 to Samuel Johnson, son of his brother, Dr. S. W. Johnson; $2,000 to Gilbert Robertson, nephew of his deceased wife; $1,000 each to two daughters of Mrs. Howell, a niece of his deceased wife; $2,000 to his brother, Dr. Clay Johnson; $2,000 to his sister, Mrs. Matchett; and $1,000 to the daughter of his deceased brother, A. C. Johnson. He died March 17, 1933, and his above will was probated in Smith county. JVlrs. Ethel F. Hilton Johnson was appointed and qualified as administratrix with the will annexed, and administration was pending in the probate court of Smith county at the time of the trial below. The suit was against Mrs. Ethel F. H. Johnson, both individually and as administratrix, the other beneficiaries under the 1928 will, and others not essential to note. The trial was to a jury upon two special issues, which, with the jury’s answers, read:

“1. Do you find from a preponderance 'of the evidence that sometime in March, April or May, 1926, or prior thereto, Cone Johnson agreed with his wife, Birdie R. Johnson, that if the latter would not revoke her will of date, May 24, 1913, offered in evidence before you herein, he, the said Cone Johnson, would devise and bequeath the property thereby devised and bequeathed to him, together with all other property which he might own at the time of his death, to plaintiffs Mary C. Durst and Sophia E. Durst, except the sum of Two Thousand Dollars to Gilbert Parker Robertson and Two Thousand Dollars to the two daughters of Birdie R. Howell?” Answer: “Yes.”
* “2. Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that said agreement, if any was made, as referred to in Special Issue No. 1, was in writing, signed by said Cone Johnson and" Birdie R. Johnson?” Answer: “Yes.”

The judgment was in favor of plaintiffs decreeing in them all the property of Mr. Johnson, specifically enumerating it in the decree, including (as against Mrs. Johnson both individually and as administratrix) all rentals and income upon the property accruing since the death of Mr. Johnson, subject to “legal" offsets because of taxes paid, necessary insurance premiums paid, and such repairs and'maintenance as may have been necessary and proper for the preservation and care -of said property,” and subject to a certain rental contract made by the administratrix. Execution was ordered to enforce the judgment.

The appeal is by Mrs. Johnson, individually and as administratrix, and by all the other beneficiaries under the 1928 will, except Cone Johnson, Gilbert Robertson, the two daughters of Mrs. Howell, and Mrs. Durst and her two daughters (plaintiffs).

Appellants present ten propositions, nine in their original and one in a supplemental brief. These urge the following points:

(1) The contract sued upon was against public policy and void, since its effect was to barter away whatever Mr. Johnson might acquire in the future (Sup. br.).
(2) The contract was void, being'between husband and wife (No. 5).
(3) The contract was inadmissible to vary the terms of Mrs. Johnson’s 1913 will (No. 2).
(4) Testimony supporting the contract sued on and a prior will of Mr. Johnson were inadmissible, as no abstract of title had been filed as requested (Nos. 3 and 4).
(5) The evidence was insufficient to support the verdict (No. 9).
(6) The probate court of Smith county had exclusive jurisdiction of the case (No. !)•
(7) The recovery in any event should have been subject to administration (No. 7), and no personal judgment should have been rendered against Mrs. Johnson or her tenant for rents accruing after Mr. Johnson’s death (No. 8).
(8) Certain argument of counsel to the jury constituted reversible error (No. 6). Preliminary to a discussion of these points, we make the following general statement from the record:

Cone Johnson and Birdie Robertson were married about 1880, and lived together as man and wife until her death November IS, 1926. They had no children. Mrs. Johnson was a daughter of C. Sterling C. Robertson, who left quite a large landed estate that was divided among his ten children, including Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Durst. Mrs. Durst was about eight years younger than Mrs. Johnson, and the record- shows that Mrs. Johnson was very fond of Mrs. Durst’s two daughters (plaintiffs), often had-them visit her, and showed great solicitude for *1003 their welfare. In her 1913 will she provided for their education to the extent of not exceeding $2,000 to each. The evidence in support of the contract sued on came from Mrs. Durst and Mrs. Andrews, the widow of a Methodist minister who had been the pastor of Mr. and Mrs. Johnson in Tyler in 1913 and 1914, and their presiding elder in 1926. Mrs. Andrew testified to a conversation between her and Mrs. Johnson in the spring of 1926, in which Mrs. Johnson showed her a paper signed by Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, in which: “It (the paper) said that she agreed not to change her will of 1913, and he agreed to leave the property to the girls (plaintiffs) in his will, after the four thousand dollars to the two bequests had been paid, and that he would also leave them any property he had acquired.”

She had previously testified to a conversation between her husband and Mr. Johnson, during a visit of the latter to their house in 1913, in which the subject of wills was under discussion, and in which she quoted Mr. Johnson as follows: “He. said that the best kind of a will to make was a joint will, between husband and wife, and that his wife had recently made her will leaving her property to him; that she had originally intended it to go to her nieces and that he had promised her he would will it to them. He used that as an illustration of a joint will.”

Mrs. Durst testified to a conversation between her and Mr. Johnson a few days after Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.W.2d 1000, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-durst-texapp-1938.