Munger v. Richards

87 S.W.2d 797
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 25, 1935
DocketNo. 1498.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 87 S.W.2d 797 (Munger v. Richards) 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
Munger v. Richards, 87 S.W.2d 797 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

LESLIE, Chief Justice.

The purpose of this suit appears to be to secure a judicial construction of certain provisions of the will of J. B. Wilson, deceased. It was instituted by the trustees of his estate, viz., Roy Munger, J. R. Richards, J. Fred Schoellkopf, George R. Pattullo, and H. Ben Smith, against Fay Wilson Munger and husband, Roy Munger, Lucile Pattullo and husband, George R. Pattullo, Bess Schoellkopf, and husband, J. Fred. Schoellkopf, Mabel Richards and husband, J. R. Richards, Geraldine Smith and husband, H. Ben Smith, Wilson Schoellkopf, J. Fred Schoellkopf, Jr., J. Fred Schoellkopf III, Ann Craddock Schoellkopf, Mary Munger, Fay Munger, Jack Munger, and Patrick John Smith. The last six are the greatgrandchildren of J. B. Wilson, deceased, and they are the appellants in this suit.

J. B. Wilson left surviving him his wife, who is not interested in this litigation, and the following five daughters: Fay Wilson Munger, Lucile Pattullo, Bess Schoell-kopf, Mabel Richards, and Geraldine Smith.

All the defendants, not minors, waived service of citation and reqüested a construction of the will sought for in the plaintiffs’ petition. The defendants Mary Munger, Fay Munger, J. Fred Schoell-kopf III, and Ann Craddock Schoellkopf, greatgrandchildren of J. B. Wilson, deceased, answered first by general demurrer to the plaintiffs’ petition, expressly insisting that “plaintiffs’ petition is insufficient in law and states no ground for the instructions and relief prayed for.” Subject to that plea they denied the allegations of fact contained in the petition and especially alleged that they were not bound by the terms of a decree theretofore entered in cause No. 60104-D, styled Munger v. Munger, the judgment in which cause was appealed fo the Court of Civil Appeals at Dallas and affirmed with modification, etc. These defendants prayed that plaintiffs’ suit be dismissed, etc. No order shows the ruling of the trial court on the general demurrer, but if it should have been sustained, the record would reflect fundamental error.

Defendants Patrick John Smith and Jack Munger, also greatgrandchildren of *798 J. B. Wilson, deceased, by their answer assert that the judgment in said cause of Munger v. Munger is binding upon all after-born parties interested in the subject-matter of the litigation, including themselves, as well as those who might become interested in the trust estate of J. B. Wilson, deceased, etc. This contention is predicated upon the theory of virtual representation of the greatgrandchildren by persons who were parties to the original suit of Munger v. Munger. In fact, these defendants “request the court to instruct the trustees in answer to question No. 1 (hereafter set out) that said judgment (Munger v. Munger) as modified and affirmed is binding upon each of the defendants in this suit.”

The defendant Fay Wilson Munger, daughter of J. B. Wilson, answered setting up certain reasons why it would be convenient and advantageous to her to have the will construed in accordance with the práyer of the plaintiffs’ petition. Since she does not appeal from the judgment of the trial court, the contentions set up in her answer call for no further consideration.

In response to the pleadings and the testimony of the various partiés, a judgment was entered by the trial court, and it is from that judgment that the above-named appellants now appeal. Jack Munger and Patrick John Smith prosecute their appeal through their guardian ad litem, James P. Swift, and J. Fred Schoellkopf, Ann Craddock Schoellkopf, Mary Munger, and Fay Munger prosecute their appeal through J. D. Fouraker, their guardian ad litem.

This will has previously been before the courts for judicial construction. In a large measure, if not entirely, the subject-matter has been adjudicated. See Munger et al. v. Munger (Tex.Civ.App.) 298 S.W. 470, 475. The general facts of the case now before us are rather fully stated In that opinion, and the provisions of the will material to this appeal are set out in full in that opinion and will not be here restated.

It will be observed that the judgment of the trial court in the cause of Munger v. Munger was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals at Dallas with the modification of the judgment of the trial court in the particular indicated by the following sentence from that opinion: “We therefore hold that the words ‘issue’ and ‘surviving issue’ were employed in the sense of descendants.”

At the time the judgment in said cause was, rendered, none of these appellants, minors and greatgrandchildren of the testator, J. B. Wilson, were in being, except Fay Munger who was in being, but who was not expressly named as a party in that suit. One question now sought to be presented to this court, is whether or not the former judgment is binding on said greatgrandchild Fay Munger, and also on said after-born greatgrandchildren of the testator.

At the conclusion of the plaintiffs’ petition in the instant case, and as a part thereof, the following questions are propounded with a prayer for the court’s answer and instructions relative thereto:

“First: Is the judgment and conclusions of law of the 95th District Court, rendered in cause No. 60104 — D, styled Munger vs. Munger, et al., as modified and affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth Supreme Judicial District, and numbered 9903 on the docket of said Court of Civil Appeals, binding upon all after-born parties interested or who might become interested in the trust estate of J. B. Wilson, deceased, and upon Fay Munger, a minor, in being at the time of the rendition of said judgment but not a party to said suit in which it was rendered, as well as upon those in being and parties to said suit ?
“Second: Upon the death of any of the daughters of J. B. Wilson without issue, shall the corpus of the trust estate be held intact by the trustees and the net income thereof be thereafter paid to the surviving daughters of the said J. B. Wilson, deceased, or shall a partial distribution of the corpus of the trust estate at that time be made?
“Third: Upon the death of any of the daughters of J. B. Wilson, deceased, leaving issue, shall the trustee distribute to the surviving descendants of said daughter her proportionate share of the corpus of said estate, and shall such distribution be per stirpes or per capita?
“Fourth: Upon the final termination of the trust estate by the death of the last of the daughters of J. B. Wilson, deceased, shall the final distribution of the corpus remaining in said trust estate be made to the surviving descendants of said daughters per stirpes or per capita?
*799 “Fifth: Trustees further pray that the court instruct them fully as to such other matters as it may deem pertinent or necessary under the premises.”

Among- other things, the judgment of the trial court is to the effect that the original judgment in Munger v. Munger as modified and affirmed by the Dallas Court of Civil Appeals “is not binding upon the minor Fay Munger who was in being at the time of the rendition of said judgment, but not a party to said suit in which it was rendered nor upon the parties born after the rendition of said judgment and are interested, or who might become interested in the trust estate of J. B.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W.2d 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munger-v-richards-texapp-1935.