Johnston v. Stephens

49 S.W.2d 431, 121 Tex. 374, 1932 Tex. LEXIS 128
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1932
DocketNo. 5049.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 49 S.W.2d 431 (Johnston v. Stephens) 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
Johnston v. Stephens, 49 S.W.2d 431, 121 Tex. 374, 1932 Tex. LEXIS 128 (Tex. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice CURETON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was filed by J. B. Johnston and others, the children of one Willie Stephens, deceased, against W. H. Stephens, his wife Annie S. J. Stephens, and their son W. C. J. Stephens. The general demurrer to the petition was sustained by the district court, and the judgment affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. (300 S. W., 225).

The judgment of the trial court recites that special exceptions as well as the general demurrer to the petition were sustained, but the answer of the defendants in error found in the transcript presents only a general demurrer and general denial, followed by certain special pleas. The special exceptions, if any there were, are not before us. As the case is presented in this court, the sole question is whether or not the general demurrer should have been sustained.

*378 The facts as stated in the petition may be summarized as follows:

On the 6th of June, 1899, one Annie S. Johnston executed a will, under the terms of which she disposed of the whole of her property. The property consisted of her residence, then occupied by her, together with two acres of land and a former residence, four tracts of land, one of 130 acres, one of 100 acres, one of twenty-five acres, and an undivided interest in a tract of some eighty-seven acres, — all out of the Jordan League in Cherokee County. Annie S. Johnston, the testatrix, died a feme sole on or about September 22, 1901. The executor named in the will declined to act, and the defendant in error W. H. Stephens in April, 1902, applied to the probate court of Cherokee county for letters of administration with the will annexed. The will was admitted to probate in May, 1902, and W. H. Stephens was appointed administrator with the will annexed, and qualified as such. By the terms of the will Annie S. J. Stephen, the wife of W. H. Stephens, the administrator, was devised the home in which the testatrix resided in the town of Mt. Selman, consisting of a house and two acres of land. The following bequest was made to Margaret Johnston:

“I give to my niece, Margaret Johnston, daughter of my brother, Gabrial C. Johnston, my former residence and 100 acres of land adjoining it for her lifetime. I wish my niece, Annie S. J. Stephens and Col. William G. Horseley of Greenville to manage it for her, during her lifetime, and at her death for it to go to her brother, Willie, or to one or more of his children, whichever she prefers leaving it to.”

The remainder of her estate was bequeathed to the Protestant Episcopal Church of Honey Grove, Texas, Bishop Garret having control of it.

The petition alleges that W. H. Stephens, purporting to act as administrator of the estate with the will annexed, caused certain persons to be named as partitioners of the estate, and had the same partitioned. On the 18th day of January, 1905, the partitioners made a report to the probate court, in which they partitioned the property among the legatees. It appears also from the plaintiff’s petition that Annie S. J. Stephens was also allotted the undivided interest in the eighty-seven and seven-tenths acres of land heretofore referred to, but the authority and reason therefor are not apparent in the petition. A copy of the will is attached to the petition, and it appears therefrom that Mrs. Stephens was only to be given the home at Mt. Selman and two acres of land, and that all the estate *379 of Annie S. Johnston, except that given her, the two acres referred to and the home, and the home and 100 acres devised for life to Margaret Johnston, was to go to the Protestant Episcopal Church. At any rate, according to the petition Mrs. Stephens not only had set apart to her the property willed to her at Mt. Selman, but an undivided interest in the eighty-seven and seven-tenths acres in addition. The property awarded her by the petitioners is described in the petition before us by metes and bounds. The partitioners also allotted to Margaret Johnston, the life devisee under the will, certain property situated on the waters of the Neches river, about four miles southwest from the town of Bullard, which is described by field notes in their report. The property allotted to the Protestant Episcopal Church, or to Bishop Garret for the church, is also described by field notes.

The plaintiffs’ petition, after setting forth the facts but briefly referred to by us, but failed to call attention to the undivided interest in the eighty-seven and seven-tenths acres awarded Mrs. Stephens, above mentioned, contains the following allegations:

“Your plaintiffs further allege upon information and belief that prior to the time said estate was partitioned the said W. H. Stephens had contracted to purchase from the Methodist Protestant Episcopal Church, all its interest in said estate, and did, soon after the partition, purchase same. That in making said partition, the said Stephens fraudulently and with the intent to render that part of the property set apart to plaintiffs and their ancestor worthless and (of) no value, caused same to be partitioned in such a manner as that the said church and the said defendant Annie S. J. Stephens, who is the wife of the defendant W. H. Stephens, received practically all the land that was of any value whatever. That part of said land which was surveyed and set apart to plaintiffs’ ancestors was surveyed so that it would take in all of the roads, gulleys, hills and waste land belonging to the estate of the said Annie S. Johnston and practically all of the good land was set apart to the said Church and to the said defendant Annie S. J. Stephens, wife of the defendant; that said land was not partitioned in accordance with the provisions of said will in that the 100 acres set apart to plaintiffs’ ancestors was not the land adjoining the former residence of the said Annie S. Johnston, but was fraudulently divided and partitioned so that the said Church and the wife of said defendant W. H. Stephens received practically all of the land adjoining the former resi *380 dence of the said Annie S. Johnston, and left for the ancestors of the plaintiffs and the plaintiffs herein, 100 acres which was of little value; that the land so set apart to plaintiffs’ ancestors and to plaintiffs was so surveyed that it contained 12 different corners and angles and was surveyed so that it included all the poor land, roads, ditches and gulleys on the entire tracts held and owned by the said Annie S. Johnston at the time of her death; that the partitioners appointed by the court to partition said land had nothing whatever to do with the surveying and partitioning of said land, but that said survey and partition was made under the direction and at the instance of the defendant, W. H. Stephens, that he was on the ground with the surveyor at the time the survey was made and showed the surveyor where to run the lines so that said survey of the 100 acres so set apart to plaintiffs’ ancestors and to plaintiffs would contain and include all of the worthless land owned by said estate by the said Annie S. Johnston. That as hereinbefore alleged, the said defendant, Stephens, as plaintiffs are informed and believe and therefore allege the facts to- be, had, prior to the partition, agreed to purchase the land bequeathed to the said Church, and did, soon after said partition, become the owner and holder of same. That subsequent to the time the defendant W. H.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W.2d 431, 121 Tex. 374, 1932 Tex. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-stephens-tex-1932.