Peareson v. McNabb

190 S.W.2d 402, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 567
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 17, 1945
DocketNo. 11690.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 402 (Peareson v. McNabb) 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
Peareson v. McNabb, 190 S.W.2d 402, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 567 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This case originated by the filing in the County Court of Fort Bend County, Texas, by D. R. Peareson, of an application to probate the will of Mrs. Margaret Holli-mon, dated October 17, 1940, and have himself appointed as independent executor thereof, he having been so designated by its terms. A. D. McNabb filed in that court a contest thereof, and appealed to the District Court from a judgment of the County Court admitting such declared-upon will to probate and appointing applicant-Peare-son independent executor thereof, in accordance with the stated provisions of the instrument.

In the district court, Mrs. Gloyd Foer-ster and Miss Charlien McNabb were permitted to intervene as contestants. The contest was based alone on alleged mental incapacity and alleged super-inducing insane delusions on the part of testatrix.

A trial before the jury resulted in a finding returned November 7, 1944, that testatrix was not of testamentary capacity when she executed the described instrument. Judgment was rendered on the verdict on November 9, 1944, that the will be denied probate. The court adjourned on November 10, 1944. No motion for new trial was filed.

Proponent filed in the trial court in due time an approved appeal-bond, and has filed in this court an original transcript, state- *403 mcnt of facts, and a supplemental transcript.

The controlling over-all question in this court is whether the trial court committed an error of law that “amounted to such a denial of the rights of the appellant as was reasonably calculated to cause and probably did cause the rendition of an improper judgment” against him. Rule 434, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.

Not'only was the appealed-from judgment entered upon the sole finding of the jury that Mrs. Hollimon did not have testamentary capacity when she executed the instrument involved on October 17, 1940, but, as further indicated, the finding of that incapacity had itself been wholly based, in turn, upon allegations of the contesting appel-lees that the lady was at that date suffering from a number of “insane delusions,” which had for many years prior to that date continuously and increasingly afflicted her, which disabling mental condition had originated in 1895, when she was only 26 years old, and had so unabatingly continued until her death on December 16, 1943 — • three years after her execution of the rejected will.

So that, from its inception to its close, thlis case had to do with that distinctive type of a will contest — that is, one in which testamentary incapacity of the specific kind so declared upon in this instance was the only question of fact alleged or found. It is perforce, therefore, completely differentiated from one of another sort, in which other elements of contest, such as undue influence, were present.

There were many witnesses on both sides of such single controversy on the facts, 30 for the appellants and 24 for the appellees, together with much documentary matter admitted, the originals of some of which have been brought up with this record.

One of such witnesses for the appellant, Dr. W. J. Johnson, testified as an expert only, in response to a greatly extended hypothetical question propounded to him by the appellees, under many objections to the question itself, along with protests against the receipt of his answers thereto, by the appellant, the substance of which involved a long-drawn-out inquiry the appellees themselves characterized as “a fair statement of all material facts in evidence and assumed to be true for the purpose of a hypothetical question.”

Appellant attacks the court’s charge on testamentary capacity as applied to the alleged “insane delusions” before it, the court’s admission and refusal of a vast number of evidentiary offerings, and the entire construction, sufficiency, and receipt by it of Dr. Johnson’s answer to the hypothetical question so propounded to him; he further challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the pleadings of the appellees, as well as the jury’s implied findings upon any one or all of their declared-upion delusions, and asserts that the verdict was without any legally admissible evidence to support it, alternatively adding that, if there was any proper'support for it at all, the verdict in toto was so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as a whole as to be clearly wrong —to the degree that this court should set it aside.

The trial court’s criticised charge on testamentary capacity, as applied to the pleadings and evidence before the court, was this:

“To make a valid will, the person making the will must have testamentary capacity, and must not, at the time of the execution of the will, be laboring under an insane delusion, which influenced the person executing such will to dispose of her property in a way which she would not have disposed of it but for the insane delusion.
“You are charged in connection with the term ‘testamentary capacity’ that a person, to have testamentary capacity, as that term is used in this charge, is meant that such person at the time of the execution of the will, must have had sufficient mental ability to understand the business in which she was engaged, the effect of her act in making the will, and the nature and extent of her property; she must be able to know her next of kin and the natural objects of her bounty and their claims upon her; she must have memory sufficient to collect in her mind the elements of the business about to be transacted and to hold them long enough to perceive at least their obvious relation to each other and to be able to form a reasonable judgment as to them.
“You are further charged that by ‘insane delusion’ is meant the belief of a state of supposed facts which no rational person would believe.”

This court is unable to uphold appellant’s objections to the quoted charge; to the contrary, it finds no fault with that statement of the law when applied to the pleadings and evidence before the court, holding that it squares with the authoritative *404 deliverances of our Texas courts especially, as well as those of sister states, upon the legal equivalent of the same sort of case. Morris v. Morris, Tex.Com.App., 279 S.W. 806; Breeding v. Naler, Tex.Civ.App., 120 S.W.2d 888, error dismissed; Prather v. McClelland, 76 Tex. 574, 13 S. W. 543; Rodgers v. Fleming, Tex.Com.App., 3 S.W.2d 77, reversing Rodgers v. Fleming, Tex.Civ.App., 295 S.W. 327; Vance v. Upson, 66 Tex. 476, 1 S.W. 179.

Neither can appellant’s claims that the jury’s verdict was either without any evidence to support it, without sufficient evidence, or so against the preponderance of the testimony as a whole as to be clearly wrong, be sustained.

On the contrary, there can be no substantial doubt in this court’s mind, assuming as it does — for the moment — there was a justiciable controversy before the court over them, that the evidence was amply sufficient to sustain some if not all of the declared-upon delusions.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 402, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peareson-v-mcnabb-texapp-1945.