Mitchell v. Thompson

286 S.W. 642, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 722
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 1926
DocketNo. 363.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 286 S.W. 642 (Mitchell v. Thompson) 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
Mitchell v. Thompson, 286 S.W. 642, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 722 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

This suit was brought by appellants Mrs. Helen Mitchell • and Mrs. Neva Alimón, joined by their husbands, J. W. E. Mitchell and O. E. Alimón, against D. C. Thompson, Joel Stout, Mrs. Elva Bounds and husband, John Bounds, Mrs. Annice Kennedy and husband, J. D. Kennedy, Mrs. Alice Olaunch and husband, Girt Claunch, Fred ■McGee, Eva Gillette and husband, Fred Gillette, Fay Woodward, Bonnie Belle Winn and husband, N. J. Winn, O. C. Jones, Franklin Life Insurance Company, W. R. Bollin, Mrs. Josephine Bollin, a widow, T. J. Hudson, S. B. Rutledge, and S. L. Fowler. The object of the suit was to recover 107%'acres of land situated in Johnson county, Tex., and also to set aside a judgment of the Johnson county district court partitioning said land, entered on March 11, 1908, in cause styled Helen and Neva Thompson, by D. C. Thompson, Next Friend, v. Joel Stout et al., No. 6004. It is thought the following brief statement will help to understand this case:

J. M. Stout and Jane E. Stout were husband and wife, and owned and occupied the land in controversy as their homestead, the same being their community property. J. M. Stout made a will in.favor of Mrs. Arminta Thompson, the mother of plaintiffs. He died in 1900. Mrs. Stout continued to occupy the land as her homestead until her death in 1906. She did not leave a will. No effort was made to probate J. M. Stout’s will until after the death of Mrs. Stout. Their daughter, Arminta Thompson, died in 1904, leaving two children, the plaintiffs, Neva and Helen Thompson,'and.D. C. Thompson, her husband. Mr. Stout’s will was found in his desk after Mrs. Stout’s death, and was probated by D. C. Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Stout also left other children, Mrs. Elva Bounds, Joel Stout, Mrs. Kennedy, Mrs. McGee, who died, leaving two children, Fred McGee and Alice Claunch, Mrs. Jones, who died leaving one child, Bonnie Belle Jones and Mrs. Woodward, who died, leaving Eva and Fay Woodward. All the parties died intestate except Mr. Stout.

In 1907 Neva and Helen Thompson, by D. C. Thompson, their father and next friend, instituted suit in the district court of Johnson county against the other heirs of J. M. Stout and Mrs. Stout for a partition of the land. All the parties were cited or entered appearance. The defendant minors were duly served with citations and were represented by guardians ad litem appointed by the court. On March 11, 1908, judgment was rendered finding that advancements had been made during the lifetime of their parents to Joel Stout, Mrs. Kennedy, and Sirs. McGee of their shares of the estate, and partitioning a part of the land to Mrs. Bounds, and the sale of the tracts in controversy by the court to D. C. Thompson, and partitioning the proceeds between Neva and Helen Thompson, the Woodward children and Bonnie Belle Jones. D. O. Thompson was first divested of his trust relation to the .plaintiffs, and these duties were assumed by the court and, by the court’s direction, F. E. Adams and R. S. Phillips, attorneys for the plaintiffs. S. F. Fowler and Mrs. Josephine Bollin hold the land by mesne conveyances from D. O. Thompson and Mrs. Elva Bounds. They paid the reasonable market value of the property. The Franklin Life Insurance Company has a loan of $5,000 on the S. L. Fowler tract. These parties purchased the land, and made the loan without notice of any. of the contentions relied on by appellants to impeach the title, except such as are disclosed by the title record. The court entered judgment for defendants, ap-pellees herein, on an instructed verdict; hence this appeal by plaintiffs, appellants herein.

Opinion.

Under several assignments, appellants contend that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct a verdict in their favor, and in instructing a verdict for appellees. These assignments require a consideration of the entire evidence, and so will be considered together ; and, as bearing upon the validity of the partition judgment of 1908, in cause No. 6004, as between the parties, it becomes important to determine whether or not the min- or plaintiffs in said cause réceived substantially their rights, and, as this latter question in a measure is dependent upon tie construction to be placed upon the.J. M. Stout will, and whether or not Mrs. Stout, the wife of J. M. Stout, elected to take under said will, we will first consider said will, and whether or not Mrs. Stout elected to take under said will.

That the land in question was the community property of J. M. Stout and wife is conceded by all parties. That it was the homestead of Stout and wife, occupied by them as such at the time of his death, and for many years prior thereto, is admitted by all parties. That J. M. Stout and wife each owned an undivided one-half interest in said community homestead is not questioned. It is not entirely clear from the reading of the entire will whether J. M. Stout intended to dispose of the entire title to said property, or only his interest in same. This question is at least doubtful. The presumption of law' is that he intended to dispose of only his interest. But, even if J. M. Stout did intend to bequeath to Arminta Thompson the entire interest in said property, said instrument was ineffectual to accomplish such intention, unless Mrs. Stout elected to take under said will. The burden of proof to show she did elect to take under said will was upon appellants. J. M. Stout died in 1900; Mrs. *644 Stout died in 1906. The will was not offered for probate until after Mrs. Stout’s death. In fact, it seems the family did not know of the existence of the will until after Mrs. Stout’s death, when it was found in J. M. Stout’s old trunk by Joel Stout and D. C. Thompson, and by Thompson propounded im-próbate. Outside of the testimony of Lewis and wife, there is no evidence that Mrs. Stout even knew of the existence of the will. It was not seen in her possession during her lifetime, nor found in her effects after her death, but was found in a desk belonging to J. M. Stout. Mrs. Stout did not mention the will, or discuss it with any of her relatives or friends, or act in any way to indicate an election under the will. She continued to occupy the homestead until her death, but she had this right under the law, as surviving widow, and her occupancy of her homestead did not tend to show an election to take the life estate under said will. Const, art. 16, § 52, article 3424, Vernon’s Sayles’ Statutes. The action of election must be unequivocal, and with the intention to maké an election. 40 Cyc. 1976, 1977; McClary v. Duckworth (Tex. Civ. App.) 57 S. W. 317; Mayo v. Tudor’s Heirs, 74 Tex. 471, 12 S. W. 117; Wichita Valley Ry. Co. v. Somerville (Tex. Civ. App.) 179 S. W. 674. Mrs. Stout was not required to elect under the will Before it was probated, but an election could be made before probate. 40 Cyc. 1976; Dunn v. Vinyard (Tex. Com. App.) 251 S. W. 1043. The only evidence relied upon by appellants was the evidence of Lewis and wife, who were tenants on the Stout farm in 1904. They testified, in substance, not on the trial of the partition suit in 1908, but on the trial of this cause in 1925, that Mrs. Stout in 1904 said to them that the farm was to be Mrs. Thompson’s after her death — that Mr. Stout had willed it to her. Even if she made the statements testified to by the Lewises, such evidence, we think, is of no probative force as tending to show an actual acceptance under said will. An intention to elect, no matter how often expressed, is not an election.

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Related

Brewer v. Hampton
166 S.W.2d 193 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1942)
Mitchell v. Thompson
292 S.W. 862 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
286 S.W. 642, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-thompson-texapp-1926.