Marshall v. Land

413 S.W.2d 820, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 24, 1967
Docket16857
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 413 S.W.2d 820 (Marshall v. Land) 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
Marshall v. Land, 413 S.W.2d 820, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2170 (Tex. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

DIXON, Chief Justice.

Appellant Mrs. Viola Walker Marshall, widow of W. E. Marshall, brought suit against her daughter, Mrs. Erie Darnall Land, her daughter’s husband, Henry L. Land, and her granddaughter, Linda Dar-nall, appellees herein, seeking judgment for title to her one-half community property interest in shares of stock in Franklin Insurance Company.

Appellant alleges that without her knowledge her husband, W. E. Marshall, several years before his death had executed an alleged trust instrument naming their daughter Mrs. Land as Trustee and had transferred legal title to all the shares of stock to the named Trustee. She further alleges that said alleged trust instrument cannot have the effect of depriving her of her community interest in the property because it was not a gift inter vivos and because it was an illegal attempt by her husband to make a testamentary disposition of her Community interest.

Both appellant and appellees filed motions for summary judgment. The motion of appellant was overruled. The motion of appellees was sustained.

The material facts are undisputed. Appellant and W. E. Marshall were married in the year 1905 and remained husband and wife until his death on August 4, 1965. During their marriage they acquired 760 shares of stock in Franklin Insurance Company. Over the years the number of shares had increased by reason of stock dividends and the splitting of stocks. They had acquired a value at the time of W. E. Marshall’s death in 1965 of approximately $99,-957. It is undisputed that all these shares of stock are community property.

On August 23, 1960 W. E. Marshall alone executed the instrument in question. By this instrument it was provided that all the shares of stock should be transferred to the daughter, Erie Darnall Land, as Trustee. However, the instrument by its express terms required the Trustee to obey instructions and directions of W. E. Marshall in regard to management and control of the stocks both as to corpus and income, and that it could be revoked at any time by W. E. Marshall. The instrument further provided that upon the death of W. E. Marshall and the termination of the trust, the property should go to the granddaughter, Linda Darnall. On August 7, 1961 the instrument was amended to provide that upon the death of W. E. Marshall the stocks should go to the daughter, Erie Darnall Land, or if she be not living then to the granddaughter, Linda Darnall, or if she be not living then to the descendants of Linda Darnall, or if there be no such descendants, then to the heirs at law of appellant Viola Walker Marshall and W. E. Marshall. *

*822 Pursuant to the terms of the instrument W. E. Marshall endorsed the stock certificates to Mrs. Erie Darnall Land and on September 29, 1960 the books of Franklin Insurance Company were made to show that the stocks had been so transferred.

Thereafter until his death all dividends on the stocks were turned over by Mrs. Land, as Trustee, to W. E. Marshall pursuant to the terms of the trust instrument. Also on two occasions Mrs. Land upon direction of W. E. Marshall sold several shares of the stock and turned the proceeds over to him.

In an affidavit appellant says that she was not aware that her husband had transferred the stocks to their daughter until shortly before his death in 1965. Becoming suspicious she wrote to Franklin Insurance Company inquiring as to the status of the stocks. In reply she received from the transfer agent of Franklin Insurance Company a letter dated July 16, 1965 informing her that on September 29, 1960 the stock which was held by William E. Marshall had been transferred to Erie Darnall Land as Trustee, closing the account of William E. Marshall. A copy of the letter is included in the record of this case as an exhibit. This letter was dated only three weeks prior to the death of W. E. Marshall.

In her affidavit appellant also states that W. E. Marshall never told her anything *823 about their business affairs, or volunteered any information on that subject. She did not see the instrument of August 23, 1960 or the amendment of August 7, 1961 until after the death of W. E. Marshall, when the attorney for Mrs. Erie Darnall Land sent copies of the instruments to appellant’s attorney.

In another affidavit appellant swore that after the death of W. E. Marshall there was found in a lock box in the Mansfield State Bank of Mansfield, Texas (to which box only W. E. Marshall and Erie Darnall Land had the right to enter), a letter addressed to her by W. E. Marshall dated August 24, 1964. In this letter W. E. Marshall stated that he was writing the letter to inform her of “the actions I have taken in regard to the property we jointly own, and to assure you that every action was with your welfare in view.” He then explained that he had put the property in a trust fund primarily to save inheritance taxes.

The record indicates that Mrs. Erie Dar-nall Land has faithfully attempted to administer her duties as Trustee. The stocks and money which were not paid over to her father pursuant to the terms of the trust instrument are intact and still on hand. Since the death of W. E. Marshall one check has been received as dividends on the shares of stock. Mrs. Land sent the check in the amount of $896.07 to Mrs. Marshall, who declined to accept it and returned the check to Mrs. Land.

In the petition filed in this case appellees Erie Darnall Land and Linda Darnall were charged with intentional fraud and undue influence in inducing W. E. Marshall to execute the instrument in controversy, but such allegations were withdrawn during the hearing.

In an affidavit Erie Darnall Land, Trustee, stated that in the summer of 1960 her father W. E. Marshall, had come to her home and after discussing her mother’s health and actions, asked her to place him in touch with an attorney who might be able to advise with respect to means to be adopted for looking after himself and her mother. Mrs. Land’s husband suggested an attorney with whom her father thereafter conferred, after which her father executed the instrument dated August 23, 1960. At the time her mother was somewhat unstable and given to temperamental outbursts and acts and conduct. Her condition seemed to be growing worse, as it did in subsequent years. Her mother had exceedingly poor business judgment and was easily swayed in business transactions.

OPINION

In her first point on appeal appellant asserts that the instrument of August 23, 1960 and the amendment of August 7, 1961 by their terms constitute as a matter of law an attempted testamentary disposition by W. E. Marshall of the community property interest of appellant in the shares of stock; therefore the court erred in sustaining appellees’ motion for summary judgment and in overruling appellant’s motion. We agree with appellant.

The instruments plainly undertake to dispose of the shares of stock, including appellant’s one-half community interest therein, by providing that after the deaths of both W. E. Marshall and appellant their daughter Erie Darnall Land shall take the corpus of the alleged trust estate absolutely, or if she be not living the granddaughter shall take absolutely, with further alternative provisions for the testamentary disposition of the property.

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413 S.W.2d 820, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-land-texapp-1967.