Mills v. Mills

206 S.W. 100, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 815
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 1918
DocketNo. 7958.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 100 (Mills v. Mills) 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
Mills v. Mills, 206 S.W. 100, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 815 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This proceeding was commenced by the appellant in the county court of Hill county, Tex., and had for its object the probate of the last will and testament of Ella D. Mills, deceased. By the will all of the testatrix’s property, except $40 to be equally divided between the testatrix’s three brothers, W. L. Mills, Marshall M. Mills, and V. H. Mills, and her sister, Mrs. R. W. Frame, was devised to the appellant. The appellees, Marshall M. Mills and Mrs. R. W. Frame, joined by her husband, R. W. Frame, brother and sister of the deceased, by written pleadings, contested the probate of the will on the grounds: First, that the said Ella D. Mills did not execute the will; second, that if she did execute said will, she had not at the time of its execution sufficient mental capacity to make a will; third, that if the deceased executed said will, its execution was the result of improper and undue influence exercised over her by the appellant and his brother, V. H. Mills. Judgment in favor of the proponent, appellant here, probating the will was rendered in the county court. From this judgment the contestants, appellees here, appealed to the district court, where judgment upon a special verdict of the jury was rendered in favor of contestants, denying probate of the will, and proponent appealed to this court. There was no testimony offered in support of the pleaded issues that the deceased at the time of the execution of the will in question had not sufficient mental capacity to make a yviU> or that the same was the result of undue influence exercised over her by the appellant and his brother, V. H. Mills. The only question submitted to the jury upon trial in the district court was: “Did Ella D. Mills execute the instrument offered for probate?” This question the jury answered in the negative, and the contention of appellant in this court is, in substance, that the evidence adduced conclusively established that the will was executed by the deceased, Ella D. Mills, and that the trial court erred in not directing the jury, as requested by appellant, to answer the question submitted in the affirmative.

We have carefully considered the testimony shown by the record sent to this court, and conclude that the contention, of appellant should be sustained. The testatrix, Ella Mills, died the 30th day of April, 1915, at or near Hubbard City, Hill county, Tex., where she had lived several years, leaving surviving her one sister, Mrs. R. W. Frame, whose maiden name was Pally Mills, one of the appellees herein, and four brothers, J. H. T. Mills, the appellant, the appellee Marshall M. Mills, W. L. Mills, and V. H. Mills; the last two not appearing as parties to this controversy. The will which the appellant seeks to have probated is dated October 24, 1912, and bears the names, in the usual and proper place, of D. C. Shelton and G. C. Sharbutt as subscribing witnesses-thereto. D. C. Shelton died in 1914, some time before the death of the testatrix, Ella Mills, but G. 0. Sharbutt was living and testified in the trial of this case. The substance of his testimony is that he had been living in Hubbard City since 1911, was 28 years old, and was well acquainted with Ella Mills in her lifetime; that he was acquainted with D. C. Shelton, and that he and D. C. Shelton signed the will in question as subscribing witnesses thereto in the pres- *101 enee of each other and in the presence of the said Ella Mills at her request; that at the time he and D. O. Shelton signed the will they were in the machine shop of J. H. T. Mills and Y. H. Mills in Hubbard City; and that the testatrix, Ella Mills, signed the will there in the shop in the presence of himself and D. O. Shelton. This 'witness further testified on cross-examination that he did not remember whether the will at the time he signed it had “any heading on it or not or if anything had been cut off the top of it”; that he did not remember what was in the will, but that he recognized his signature to it as a witness; that he signed the will as a witness in October, 1912; that the only way he remembered that it was the 24th day of October was by the date of the will, and that he remembered signing the will; that when the will was found something like a year after the death of the testatrix the appellant brought it to him and said he found it; that at this time the other subscribing witness, D. O. Shelton, was dead, and had been dead eight or nine months; that he never heard of J. H. T. Mills or Y. H. Mills saying anything about the will during the lifetime of D. O. Shelton; and that he (witness) did not say anything about a will during D. C. Shelton’s lifetime. He further said that before and up to the time the will was found he was there in Hubbard City working in a grocery store; that he understood the Mills brothers had had some controversy about Ella Mills’ property, but understood they had settled it, and that, notwithstanding he was with them frequently, he did not tell them anything about a will; that J. H. T. Mills and V. H. Mills came into the shop when the will was being signed, but did not know anything about the will or what was being signed; that at the time he signed the will as a witness he was 24 years old; that he ■went to the Mills brothers’ shop often to trade with them, and that on the occasion the will was signed he was there to get their answer about a pending trade; that he, E. 0. Shelton, and Ella Mills were the only persons present when the will was signed; that the will was all written out and just needed signing when Ella Mills asked him to sign as a witness; that she signed it first, then D. O. Shelton, and then he signed it; that Ella Mills got the will out of her purse, an ordinary ladies’ purse, but that he could not tell the color of the paper the will was written on or how long the paper was; that the Mills boys were busy at work about 20 feet away at the time the will was signed; and that he had not asked them about the trade he was endeavoring to make with them. This witness further stated that he was delivery boy for the grocery store where he worked, but that he did as much work in the store as he did delivering.

The substance of the testimony of J. H. T. Mills, the appellant, is that the testatrix, Ella Mills, was about 44 years old when she died, but looked to be about 25 years old; that seven or eight days after her death he gathered up her papers, which he found in her house, and carried them to his room and. put them in a desk for safe-keeping; that he and his sister, Mrs. B. W. Erame, and her husband, found other papers belonging to the deceased buried in a glass fruit jar “below the house by the tabernacle”; that among the papers found in the fruit jar they discovered a will made by Ella Mills in which all of her property was devised to her sister, Mrs. It. W. Frame; that this will was dated in 1907; that his sister, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
206 S.W. 100, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-mills-texapp-1918.