Moore v. McInnis

295 S.W.2d 707, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1950
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 1956
Docket3251
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 295 S.W.2d 707 (Moore v. McInnis) 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
Moore v. McInnis, 295 S.W.2d 707, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1950 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

COLLINGS, Justice.

This is a certiorari proceeding filed in the District Court of Brown County by five of the seven children of Mrs. Gracie Ruth Wilder, to wit: Elmer Angelo Wilder, Jr., James Henry Wilder, Richard Edward Wilder, a minor, through his mother as next friend, Dan Moseley Wilder and Helen Ruth Wilder Moore, joined by her-husband. By such proceeding plaintiffs sought to establish their undivided 5/7th remainder interest in 2,283 acres of land in Brown County and to set aside a sale of their said interest made to John Mclnnis and Mitchell M. Cox by a guardian’s deed dated July 31st, 1934. Pláintiffs alleged that the remainder interest owned by them in the land was subject to a life estate of their mother, who was then thirty-nine years of age; that the value of their interest in said land at the time of the guardian’s sale was $15.00 per acre- and that the price of $1.75 per acre at which the land was sold by the guardian was grossly inadequate.

Defendants were John Mclnnis, his four sons and their wives, who have succeeded to the interest of Mitchell M. Cox, Southwestern Life Insurance Company, which has a deed of trust covering the land, and the guardian,' Elmer A. Wilder. The defendants denied that there was a gross inadequacy of consideration. They alleged that the sale was made in connection with a compromise of matters in controversy and also urged the defenses of limitation, estoppel and res judicata. The case was tried before a jury. At the close of the evidence the court, upon motion presented by defendants, instructed a verdict in favor of the defendants. Plaintiffs have brought this appeal.

The land, involved was the property of L. P. Baugh, who was the father of Grácie Ruth Wilder. Appellants are children of Gracie Ruth Wilder and grandchildren of L. P. Baugh, deceased. In July of 1913 the will of L. P. Baugh was probated in which a life estate in 2,400 acres of land was devised to his daughter, Gracie Ruth Wilder, with remainder to her children. The will provided that in the event Gracie Wilder should sell her life interest in said land that the title thereto would revert to Daniel Baker College of Brownwood, Texas, and the First Methodist Church of Brownwood, Texas, in equal parts. On May 2, 1922, Gracie Ruth Wilder, joined by her husband, Elmer A. Wilder, conveyed the land to Mitchell M. Cox and John Mclnnis, reserving only a mineral interest, for a cash consideration of $12,000. At that time Gracie Ruth Wilder was the mother of two children, Sarah E. and Bonnie Jean Wilder, then three years old and four months old, respectively. The guardian of the estate of the two children at the same time sold to Cox and Mclnnis the remainder interest of said two minor children for a consideration of $12,000.

Soon thereafter Cox and Mclnnis brought suit in the District Court of Brown County, Texas, against Daniel Baker College and the First Methodist Church of Brownwood to quiet their title to said land. Both of said defendants disclaimed any interest therein. Judgment was thereupon entered by the District Court decreeing title to said land to be in Cox and Mclnnis against the college and church.

On July 31, 1930, the Brown County Water District in cause No. 2819, on the docket of the County Court of Brown County condemned 143.8 acres of said land at an adjudged value of $4,348.60. At the time the condemnation suit was brought, four more children had been born to Gracie Ruth Wilder, including all plaintiffs and appellees herein except Richard E. Wilder. It was found by the court in the condemnation proceeding that the title to the land taken was in dispute between Cox and Mclnnis on the one hand and Gracie Ruth Wilder and her children, *709 Helen Ruth Wilder, Elmer Angelo Wilder, James H. Wilder and Dan M. Wilder and any unborn children of Gracie Ruth Wilder on the other hand. The court decreed that the sum of $4,348.60 be paid into’ the registry of the court and there remain until the ownership thereof be determined. Thereafter Richard E. Wilder was born on July 8, 1933. ■

Cox and Mclnnis then filed suit in the District Court against Gracie Ruth Wilder and her husband and the other appellants herein for recovery of the entire $4,348.60. The basis of the claim of Cox and Mclnnis to the entire fund was the terms of the will of L. P. Baugh. The will prohibited the sale by Gracie Ruth Wilder of her interest therein and further provided:

“ — and should she at any time sell, assign, transfer, encumber her said interest so devised to her, then it is my will and I hereby stipulate and provide that said interest shall at once cease and be forfeited and that she shall enjoy no further interest or right in said property and that said property shall, in such event, vest in and be then divided between the Daniel Baker College of Brownwood, Texas, and the First Methodist Episcopal iChurch South of Brownwood, Texas, in equal Parts.” (Emphasis ours.)

Cox and Mclnnis were contending that when Mrs. Gracie Rrtth Wilder sold her life estate in the land in violation of the will, that said property which meant the land, vested in Daniel Baker College of Brownwood, Texas, and the First Methodist Church of Brownwood, and that Cox and Mclnnis had acquired the title of the college and the church. Judgment was rendered in that case on March 25th, 1933, decreeing that $1,242.55 of the fund, plus interest, be paid to Cox and Mclnnis without restriction and that the remainder of said fund in the amount of $3,106.15, in which Cox and Mclnnis had a life estate, and the five minors the -remainder interest, be paid to the said Cox and Mclnnis upon their execution of a deed of trust securing their obligation to repay said sum to the five minor children upon the termination of the life estate of Gracie Roth Wilder. Both parties appealed from said judgment to the Court of Civil Appeals at Austin, Texas. While the appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals was pending, Elmer A. Wilder was appointed guardian of the estate of the five minor children who are appellants in this case. An inventory and appraisement was filed by the guardian in said cause which valued the minors’ interest at $4,500, the interest being described as an undivided %th interest in remainder in approximately 2,402 acres of land situated in Brown County, Texas— to take effect upon the death of Gracie Baugh Wilder. The said inventory and ap-praisement further set out that 143.8 acres of said land had been condemned by the ■Brown County Water Improvement- District in the County Court of Brown County and that the sum of $4,348.60 had been deposited in the registry of such court as the value of the land determined under the condemnation proceedings and that the title to such' fund was in controversy and was being adjudicated in cause No. 6136 on the docket of the District Court of Brown County, Texas, which cause was then on appeal in the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third Supreme Judicial District at Austin, Texas, Mclnnis v. Brown County Water Improvement District No. 1, 45 S.W.2d 1118; that the estate in remainder of the five minor children was subject to diminution in the event of the birth of any other child or children to Gracie Baugh Wilder.

On July 31, 1934, Cox and Mclnnis and Elmer A. Wilder, as guardian of the estate of the minors who are parties to this suit, entered into an agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W.2d 707, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-mcinnis-texapp-1956.