Mayes v. Mayes

159 S.W. 919, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 192
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 919 (Mayes v. Mayes) 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
Mayes v. Mayes, 159 S.W. 919, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 192 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the district court of Chambers county refusing to admit to probate the will of J. J. Mayes, deceased, which was offered for probate by appellant, G. C. Mayes, the executor named in said will, and its probate contested by the appellees, W. F. Mayes, Rachel Davis, joined by her husband, G. C. Davis, and Woodson Mayes.

The fourth ground upon which the contest of the will was based, and which the trial court found was sustained by the evidence, in so far as it charges that the will was procured by undue influence exerted upon the mind of the deceased by the appellant, is as follows: “Fourth. Because if the said J. J. Mayes did execute or sign, or caused to be signed or executed, the said will, he was unduly influenced to so do by the compulsion and arguments of and to avoid the impor-tunities of other persons, to wit: G. C. Mayes, Arch Middleton and his wife, Effie Middleton, Mrs. Mary Mayes, George V. Mayes, and Frank H. Mayes, acting themselves and through Ray Wallis and J. R. Davis, and yielded to such importunities and compulsion and allowed the minds of such persons, on account of the feebleness of his own, to take the place of his own mind and to guide him in the making of such will without in fact assenting himself thereto; that such impor-tunities, undue influence, and compulsion were of such a character and strength as to overcome the volition and desire of the said J. J. Mayes, and his free agency in making a will was destroyed because of his inability to resist, through weakness and fear, the insistent importunities of such other persons, and on account of his desire for peace and quiet.”

The record discloses the following facts: J. J. Mayes died on the 10th day of January, 1912, leaving surviving him his wife, 76 years old and with whom he had lived in wedlock something over 60 years; his sons, G. J. Mayes, Wm. F. Mayes, and Woodson Mayes ; and his daughters, Mrs. Rachel Davis, wife of G. O. Davis, and Mrs. Effie Middleton, wife of A. D. Middleton. The only other child having issue was Jackson Mayes, who died some years ago leaving his widow, Mrs. Mary Mayes, and two sons, George Yernon Mayes, 16 years old, and Frank Hardin Mayes, 14. years old, all of whom survive. Including these two grandchildren there survive him ten grandchildren, five boys and five girls. On the 21st day of March, 1910, he made the will offered for probate, by which he bequeathed all his property except $1 each to his children, to his five grandsons, G. C. Mayes and Joshua Mayes, sons of G. J. Mayes, who still lives, George Yernon Mayes and Frank Hardin Mayes, sons of Jackson Mayes, deceased, and Mayes Middleton, son of A. D. and Effie Mayes Middleton. The said grandsons, G. C. and Joshua Mayes, have two young sisters married to young men *920 without means; but who appear to be making a livelihood by manual labor. The other three grandchildren are daughters of Wm. F. Mayes, who together with his daughters are in moderate circumstances. None of the children of deceased have a great deal of property, except the daughter Mrs. Middleton, who with "her husband is wealthy. • Testator’s son Woodson Mayes lived with him and has been for several years in a bad state of health and is without any means at all. Deceased’s daughter Mrs. Davis, and her husband, G. C. Davis, are past middle age and have practically nothing, and she has been compelled for several years to assist in making a living by keeping boarders. G. C. Mayes is named in the will as executor, and it is provided that no bond or security shall be required of him as such executor and no action shall be had in the county court in the administration of the estate of the deceased other than the probate of the will and a return of an inventory and appraisement and list of claims. The will was witnessed by R. W. Wallis and J. R. Davis ..and Dale La Pour.

The deceased had been engaged in stock raising in Chambers county' during all of his married life. His children remained with him, all living under the same roof, until they married and had families of their own, when they would settle close by. Upon the birth of each child he would set apart to it some of the female calves, thus giving each child an interest in the herd, which increased as time passed. By the joint 'efforts of himself and children during the time that they lived with him, he had accumulated about 10,000 acres- of land. This land was mostly purchased with the proceeds of the sale of beef cattle. In the sale of such cattle no accounting was made with the children under 21 years of age for any of their cattle so sold, and no demand was made by the children for -such accounting, but the mother would sometimes call his attention to- the fact that he was selling the children’s cattle and using the money to buy land, and his reply was: “It is for their benefit. It will all come back to them.’? There was no discord in the family and there .was strong mutual affection between the father and all of the children, which continued until his death. He was fond of all his grandchildren and never showed any partiality for any one of them over the others, and all of them were dutiful and affectionate in their conduct towards him. The deceased - was in poor health for a number of years before his death. His bad health was largely due to a disease of the prostatic gland which was chronic and produced a ureamic condition, which because of its poisonous effect upon the blood tended to weaken his mental condition. He had not been able to ride horseback for a number of years before his death, and during the last four or five years of his life he walked with difficulty and was frequently subject' to fainting spells, and whenever he went out on his premises he was generally accompanied or watched by some -member of his family. He and his wife had several conversations in regard to his making a will. He proposed to her that they make a joint will; he giving her all of his property, and she giving hers to him. She would not agree to make a will of this kind, giving as her reason that the property should go to their children. Some five or six years before his death he got W. B. Gordon, a former county judge of Chambers county, to write two or three wills for him which gave his property to all his children in equal proportions. He never signed any of these wills, but returned them to Gordon with the statement that they did not suit him. In regard to these wills and the desire of the deceased as to the disposition of his property, Gordon testified: “When he would return these wills, he would tell me they did not suit him, and would not give his reasons. I do not think he ever did tell me to write a will and fix it so the children could not spend the property. I think that was the idea of it; he tried to entail the estate so it could not get out of the family. I mean by that, the idea he conveyed to me was this: This property divided up was not worth much, but if they all could come together it was a living for them all. * * * The understanding of that was that he was to have two of his family to be executors in the will, and hold it in accord, just like Jackson’s here, all hold together, but that did not seem to suit him at all, and. he neve* executed it. That is the way he wanted it, so they all could not sell it. He did not want it sold, but wanted it kept in the family; that seemed to be his idea. As to whether he wanted the grandchildren to-have it, when he told me to fix it up — well, I do not remember his ever mentioning his children to me at all; the way he said he wanted the property kept was, he wanted the property kept together, that it was not susceptible of a fair division at all.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 919, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayes-v-mayes-texapp-1913.