McMahan v. McMahan

175 S.W. 157, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 13, 1915
DocketNo. 7262. [fn†]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 175 S.W. 157 (McMahan v. McMahan) 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
McMahan v. McMahan, 175 S.W. 157, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 328 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

This case originated in the county court, and was thence appealed to the-district court, where exceptions were sustained to the appellant’s petition and the suit dismissed. Due to such action in the district court, brevity will be attained and the issues better understood by stating, first, the substance of the facts constituting appellant’s cause of action, as disclosed by her-original petition and the supplement thereto, the essential portions of which, in our own language, are as follows: Appellant was the-second wife of A. H. McMahan, who died in August, 1910, possessed of an estate of the-value of about $100,000, and “who left surviving him appellant, his widow, and six children, the appellees, all the issue of his first marriage. By a will executed before Mc-Mahan’s marriage with appellant, he bequeathed his entire estate to his children, naming three of his children (appellees) Emmett, Waul, and Earl executors under the will. The will was offered for probate, which appellant contested on the ground that the will offered had been revoked by a subsequent one which had been lost or destroyed. The will was admitted to probate in the county court. An appeal was taken to the- *158 district court. There was trial before jury, resulting in a disagreement. After the mistrial in the district court, and on March 4, 1911, a compromise settlement of their differences was had between appellant and ap-pellees, by which appellant received from the estate $2,600, and executed an agreement in writing by which, in consideration of the payment of the sum named, she agreed that the will should be probated and relinquished, as well her entire interest in the estate of her deceased husband, including any allowance for a year’s support and maintenance, her homestead rights, and any allowance in lieu thereof, or other exemptions, and on said March 4, 1911, the will was admitted to probate in the district court of Hill county. The will so admitted to probate is as follows:

“Whitney, Texas, July 6, 1909.
“Being on the eve of leaving for California and knowing that I may possibly never return, I make this, my last will and testament revoking any previous will or declaration that I may have made. In case of my death I direct that Emmett, tWaul and Earl shall take charge of everything belonging to me or their mother as fully as I could do, without bond of any sort, and manage as to them seems best, with power to sell real estate. I direct that it be held together, and the proceeds be used for the maintenance of Lewis, Oliver, Walter and Lena, till the boys shall attain to their majority, at which time X want first — that they shall deed to Lena, in fee simple, a small home, such as the one now occupied by O. B. Carver, and that she receive in addition thereto, one thousand dollars. After paying my debts then divide the remainder among you, one-sixth to each of you; out of the insurance money liquidate the annuity to Hu Gilbert of twelve thousand dollars — remember the Dickinson property belongs one-half to me, the other to Josie’s children, one share, Warren Gilbert, one share, Sallie’s boy, one and one-half shares, making the other half of seven shares.
“The Beaumont property owes me first about five hundred dollars, paid out for taxes, and lawyers’ fees — after which is owned by Warren, Josie’s children, Frank one-eighth, Sallie’s boys one-eighth and the balance to me — understand that the way I own these shares in these properties is, that I bought and .paid for these other interests, John’s, Lee’s and Hardie’s. Now, finally I say to you be.men in every sense of the word, never too proud to right a wrong, never too cowardly to submit to oppression. If you accept a trust have the courage to execute it. Never forget to be gentlemen and believe that God is over all — expect that I will have accident insurance and inquire.
“Good-bye. Your father, A. G. McMahan.”

On December 17, 1912, 21 months after the will was admitted to probate, appellant filed in the county court of Hill county an application for an allowance out of the estate of her deceased husband, for a year’s support and maintenance, and an allowance in lieu of exempt property which she did not receive and in lieu of a homestead, reciting that while her husband left a homestead which they were occupying at his death, the same could not be set aside to her, for the reason that it was the community property of deceased and his first wife, who died intestate. Such allowances as a whole would reasonably have been $6,500. The compromise settlement by the allegations of the application was fraudulently obtained and signed by appellant in ignorance of her rights. She did not discover the fraud until shortly before filing her application. By supplemental petition appellant admitted the execution of the agreement of compromise, which was pleaded in hsec verba, by appellees. The agreement, which takes the form of a conveyance of real estate and is acknowledged in the manner provided for acknowledging deeds, is lengthy, and we will not attempt to state it in full. It recites the will and its offer for probate and appellant’s contest thereof, and that in said contest she claimed of the estate of the deceased one-third of his personal property and an estate for life in one-third of all lands owned by the deceased, as well as an allowance of $1,000 for a year’s support and maintenance, the use of certain property belonging to said estate exempt by law, and the family homestead, or an allowance of $5,000 in lieu thereof. The agreement further recites the trial of the contest in the county court, resulting in judgment sustaining the will, appeal to the district court, where the case was then pending, and an agreement with the executors. The instrument concludes with the recitation that, in consideration of the payment to appellant of $2,633.33 by the executors and the payment of the costs of the litigation, appellant does “bargain, grant, sell and convey” to the executors all of her “right, title, interest and claim of whatever character, kind, quality or quantity, in and to all or any portion of the real and personal property constituting the estate of the said McMahan, deceased, owned and possessed by him at his death, * * * including my claim for a year’s allowance for support and maintenance, homestead claim and claim for exemption, * * * and here withdraw any ánd all contest heretofore filed by me against admitting to probate the above described instrument as the last will and testament of the said McMahan.” This grant was followed by the usual habendum, which in turn was succeeded by special warranty of title, and the execution of which, as we have said, was acknowledged in the manner and form provided for the acknowledgment of deeds. Upon the facts alleged by the pleading stated the district judge sustained a general demurrer and certain special exceptions, all of which challenged the jurisdiction of the county court.

[1-3] The first ground urged in support of the action of the court is that the will created an independent administration. In that connection it is settled law that an executor, acting under an independent administration, is, in the settlement of his testator’s estate, free from the control of the probate court. Runnels v. Runnels, 27 Tex. 516; Holmes v. Johns, 56 Tex. 52; Jerrard v. McKenzie, 61 Tex. 40; Haby v. Fuos, 25 S. W. 1122; Roy v. Whitaker, 92 Tex. 355, 48 S. W. 896, 49 *159 S. W. 367; Bente v. Sullivan, 52 Tex. Civ.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.W. 157, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmahan-v-mcmahan-texapp-1915.