Patty J. Ragan, R. F. Dees, Ben Dees, Ann Golding Stelle, Ben Golding, Grace Maxine Hedgecoke v. in Re: the Ben Golding Trust Created Under the Last Will and Testament of Ben Golding Dated August 18, 1953, Amarillo National Bank, Amarillo, Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 2004
Docket07-03-00376-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Patty J. Ragan, R. F. Dees, Ben Dees, Ann Golding Stelle, Ben Golding, Grace Maxine Hedgecoke v. in Re: the Ben Golding Trust Created Under the Last Will and Testament of Ben Golding Dated August 18, 1953, Amarillo National Bank, Amarillo, Texas (Patty J. Ragan, R. F. Dees, Ben Dees, Ann Golding Stelle, Ben Golding, Grace Maxine Hedgecoke v. in Re: the Ben Golding Trust Created Under the Last Will and Testament of Ben Golding Dated August 18, 1953, Amarillo National Bank, Amarillo, Texas) 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
Patty J. Ragan, R. F. Dees, Ben Dees, Ann Golding Stelle, Ben Golding, Grace Maxine Hedgecoke v. in Re: the Ben Golding Trust Created Under the Last Will and Testament of Ben Golding Dated August 18, 1953, Amarillo National Bank, Amarillo, Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

HEDGECOKE V. AMARILLO NATIONAL
NO. 07-03-0376-CV


IN THE COURT OF APPEALS


FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS


AT AMARILLO


PANEL C


MAY 24, 2004

______________________________


GRACE MAXINE HEDGECOKE, et al.,


Appellants



v.


AMARILLO NATIONAL BANK, as Trustee of the BEN GOLDING TRUST, et al.,

Appellees

_________________________________


FROM THE 181ST DISTRICT COURT OF POTTER COUNTY;


NO. 86,424-B; HON. JOHN BOARD, PRESIDING
_______________________________


Memorandum Opinion
_______________________________


Before JOHNSON, C.J., and QUINN and REAVIS, JJ.

Appellants Grace Maxine Hedgecoke, Sallye Elizabeth Hedgecoke Hand, Patty J. Ragan, Jamie Broom Garland, Amy Melton, Lori Hill, Risa Lee Jones, and Tina Freeman, individually and as executrix of the estate of James Greer, (collectively referred to as Hedgecoke) contest the summary judgment granted in favor of appellees Ben Golding, Ann Golding Stelle, Doyle Bunch II, Kay Lynn Bunch Gregory, Doyle Raymond Bunch III, John Scott Gregory, and Becky Jane Gregory (collectively referred to as Golding) and construing the will of Ben Golding. Appellee Amarillo National Bank (ANB), as trustee of the Ben Golding Trust, instituted the lawsuit. The other parties to the litigation are grandchildren and great- grandchildren of Ben Golding. In challenging the summary judgment, Hedgecoke contends that the trial court erred 1) generally in executing it, 2) in denying recovery on grounds unspecified in the motion for summary judgment, and 3) in failing to award them attorney's fees. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

Background

Ben Golding died in 1957 with a will that provided for the creation of a trust. His wife Sallye was designated as the initial recipient of the income to accrue. On her death, the income was to be distributed to his children and others. Who those others are forms the basis of the dispute before us. Hedgecoke reads the will as including great-grandchildren within that group. Furthermore, at one time, ANB distributed such income to various of the great-grandchildren. It stopped doing so and instead initiated suit for a declaratory judgment construing the terms of the will. (1) Golding and Hedgecoke were made parties to the action.

Golding eventually moved for summary judgment and requested the court to construe the will as excluding great-grandchildren from the class of income beneficiaries. The trial court denied the motion. However, Golding tendered a "renewed" motion, and it was granted.



Issue One - Construction of the Will

The standards applicable to the review of motions for summary judgment are well settled and need not be reiterated. Instead, we cite the parties to Nixon v. Mr. Property Management Co., 690 S.W.2d 546, 548-49 (Tex. 1985) and Kimber v. Sideris, 8 S.W.3d 672, 674 (Tex. App.-Amarillo 1999, no pet.) in lieu of their explanation.

The primary ground for summary judgment was Golding's contention that the will was unambiguous and did not provide for the descendants of grandchildren (i.e., great-grandchildren) to be income beneficiaries. This contention was based on the following provisions of the will:

B. Should my wife not survive me, or after her death, my Trustees shall pay to my children equally for life all of the income of this trust estate. At the death of any of my children, if such deceased child leaves no children him surviving, the income from this trust shall then be divided among my surviving children. If, however, such deceased child leaves children him surviving, such children shall take equally that part of the income previously allotted to their parent. Provided, however, that after the second of my children has died, the shares of my deceased children shall be divided equally among their children so that after the death of the last of my children all of my grandchildren, or the survivors of them, will share equally in the income of this trust estate.



C. This trust shall terminate at the death of the last of the class composed of my wife, my children and my grandchildren living at my death. The assets of this trust, including accumulated income, shall be distributed in fee to the surviving children of my grandchildren on the termination of this trust . . . .



Yet, Hedgecoke disagreed with Golding. They argued that the phrase "or the survivors of them," appearing in the last sentence of paragraph B, referred to the descendants of the grandchildren and meant that the great-grandchildren were to share in the income. To support this view, Hedgecoke also relied upon extrinsic evidence purportedly addressing the intent of Ben Golding.



In construing a will, the court must focus on the intent of the testator. San Antonio Area Foundation v. Lang, 35 S.W.3d 636, 639 (Tex. 2000). Furthermore, that intent must be garnered from the will, not the will from the intent. Id. at 640. In other words, the requisite intent must be ascertained from the language found within the four corners of the document, and the court should focus not on what the testator intended to write but the meaning of the words actually written. Id. at 639; Estate of Dillard, 98 S.W.3d 386, 391 (Tex. App.-Amarillo 2003, pet. denied). Moreover, only when the words used in the will are susceptible to more than one reasonable construction may extrinsic evidence be admitted to determine the requisite intent of the testator. (2) That evidence may consist of the testator's situation, the circumstances surrounding execution of the will, and other indicia enabling the court to place itself in the shoes of the testator at the time the document was executed. San Antonio Area Foundation v. Lang, 35 S.W.3d at 639; Estate of Dillard, 98 S.W.3d at 392. But, again, this exception applies when the words of the instrument are susceptible to interpretation in two or more reasonable ways and those interpretations conflict with each other. San Antonio Area Foundation v. Lang, 35 S.W.3d at 641. If that should not occur, then the court can look no further than to the instrument itself when divining intent.

Regarding the phrase "or the survivors of them" appearing in paragraph B, we immediately note that it served as a component in defining the class of income beneficiaries. Yet, those words were not the only ones used by the testator in defining it. Indeed, the testator expressly demarcated its scope in paragraph C. See Eckels v. Davis, 111 S.W.3d 687, 694 (Tex. App.-Fort Worth 2003, pet.

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Patty J. Ragan, R. F. Dees, Ben Dees, Ann Golding Stelle, Ben Golding, Grace Maxine Hedgecoke v. in Re: the Ben Golding Trust Created Under the Last Will and Testament of Ben Golding Dated August 18, 1953, Amarillo National Bank, Amarillo, Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patty-j-ragan-r-f-dees-ben-dees-ann-golding-stelle-ben-golding-texapp-2004.