Lynn v. Jackson

216 S.W.2d 649, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 944
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 23, 1948
DocketNo. 12040.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 216 S.W.2d 649 (Lynn v. Jackson) 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
Lynn v. Jackson, 216 S.W.2d 649, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 944 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This was a will-contest, tried de novo in the District Court of Anderson County, Texas, before a jury, on a single special issue of whether the instrument purporting to be the last-will and testament of Laura Parker Lynn was procured through undue influence exerted on her by her husband, J. M. (Mack) Lynn. In fact, it purported to be the joint-will of the two, as the full copy thereof, hereto attached and made a *650 part hereof, discloses. 1 Both are now dead, the husband having predeceased his wife.

Upon the jury’s answering the special issue “yes,” that the will was procured by such undue influence, the court rendered *651 judgment decreeing the same to be null and void, insofar as it appeared to be the last will and testament of Laura Parker Lynn, and denying the probate thereof as such.

In this Court appellant, named in the will by its makers as their nephew and sole executor, challenges the judgment so adverse to him below upon some seven points-of-error, the gist of which — in addition to several procedural complaints against the court’s respective rulings upon the admission and rejection of testimony — is to the effect that there was no competent evidence of probative value that the will was the product of undue influence of J. M. Lynn on his wife, the testatrix; or, if there was any such evidence, it was insufficient to support the jury’s finding that such undue influence was exerted; wherefore, the trial court erred, first in submitting such inquiries to the jury, and second, in not setting their verdict aside upon that ground.

The appellees, in turn, while affirming the correctness of the judgment as rendered, first present cross-points here to the effect that the trial court erred in overruling their motions — urged, respectively, both at the close of appellant’s testimony, and also at the close of all the testimony in the cause — for an instructed verdict in their favor upon the alleged ground that the proffered will was — upon its face — inherently invalid and not susceptible of probate as a will, for a number of specified reasons. The main one of these was that it so overtly appeared not to have been contractual in nature, nor had any evidence been offered in support of it; that it had not been executed between the parties' thereto in pursuance of any agreement between them as to the disposition of their several properties “as one common fund, and to take effect only at the death of the survivor”, etc.

This Court, following a review of the extended record — aided by helpful briefs and oral arguments from both sides — is constrained to hold as follows:

(1) That the trial court erred in not holding with the appellant that there was no competent evidence of probative value that this will was the product of undue influence of the husband over his wife;

(2) That, in any event, if there was an issue-of-fact raised as to such undue influence, the jury’s verdict finding it was so exerted as to bring about the execution of the will was so against the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the testimony as a whole as to be clearly wrong;

(3) That the trial court was correct 'in its overruling of the appellees’ recited-motions for peremptory instruction in their favor, and in holding in that behalf that the challenged instrument was not void upon its face as a will, but was at least testamentary in character, and hence was subject to admission to probate as such, if there had been proper proof thereof.

An examination of the will itself shows that, intrinsically, and upon the face thereof, it met the full requirements of our Statutes on Wills, as they appear in Vernon’s Texas Statutes, 1948, Title 129, and of particular Articles 8283 and 8297 thereof, prescribing, respectively, the basic requisites thereof, and the proof by witnesses thereto.

Likewise, it is thought that appel- *652 lees’ stated-construction in their motions for peremptory instruction in their own favor that “the purported will is not to take effect until the death of the survivor”, is erroneous, since this recitation in Paragraph 4 of the copied will is directly to the contrary: “It is our joint desire that upon the death of either of us that all of the property, both real and personal, belonging to us or either of us, shall pass to and vest in fee simple to the survivor ⅝ sji ⅜ >>

In other words, it seems clear that this will does not, upon its face, run counter to any of “the rules and regulations prescribed by law, as recited in R.S. Art. 8281 [Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 8281], su<-pra”.

Whereas, extrinsically, the record brought here seems to this Court to conclusively show thát the execution and delivery of the will was shown to have been accomplished under all the requirements, and solemnities so prescribed in our law for the accomplishment of those purposes; and that, in consequence, all the vast testimony presented and urged by the contestants of it below — the appellees here — failed to raise a material issue-of-fact to the contrary; or, to say the least of it, if that great body of testimony — in some instances reaching back to 25 years before the making of the will- — did have any probative value concretely indicative of any undue influence in the actual making of the will, it was so overwhelmed by direct and immediate proof to the contrary as to -have become completely cancelled out in its effect.

Indeed, first and foremost, was the testimony of the two witnesses to the will, Mrs. Ollie Lasiter, and Mr. Nolan Buckhanan. These two persons were fully competent in every way to serve as witnesses, were fellow-residents of the community, Mrs. Las-iter being an old friend of the Lynn family, and Mr. Buckhanan being an employee of the couple at that time. Both testified that they were called in by the couple for that purpose, and requested by them to witness their signatures, after being told what the will was; in fact, Mrs. Lasiter recalled distinctly the particular part that Mrs. Lynfi had taken in bringing about the signing of the will, saying, after the four of them had assembled in the Lynn home for that purpose — that is, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn, Mrs. Lasiter, and Mr. Buckhanan — this:

“Q. Who talked first about it? A. Mrs. Lynn first, in the kitchen when I went in.
“Q. Was there anyone else in the kitchen? A. No sir.
“Q. What did she say to you? I know it has been a long time, but do you remember what was said? A. Well, I don’t recollect her exact words. She told me they had made a will, and asked if I would witness it for them. I told her I would.
“Q. Did she say anything else about the will? A. Not right then.
“Q. ■ Later? A. Yes sir, on the inside, she was standing there and said that was the first will they had made that suited both parties.”

Likewise, Mr. Buckhanan thus responded to inquiries about the same occasion:

“Q. Did they execute the will there, both of them, J. M. Lynn and Laura Parker Lynn? A. Yes sir.
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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W.2d 649, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-v-jackson-texapp-1948.