Peyton v. Peyton

271 S.W.2d 493, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 16, 1954
Docket14847
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 271 S.W.2d 493 (Peyton v. Peyton) 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
Peyton v. Peyton, 271 S.W.2d 493, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2111 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

This appeal is from an order of receivership, the main suit involving the estate of W. M. Peyton, Sr., who died, testate, in 1945; concerning which properties Norman Francis Peyton, plaintiff, and Wm. Marcus Peyton, Jr., defendant, are rival claimants. Estimated value of the subj ect matter herein is $3,000,000, having an income in early 195S of $15,000 per month. Emory H. Wylie was appointed as such receiver after a prolonged hearing, upon approval of $50,000 bond, with ample powers relative to administration of the assets in controversy until further orders of court; defendant W. M. Pey-ton, Jr., being in the same order enjoined •from any connection with the properties pendente lite. Facts leading up to the instant litigation are out of the ordinary, and, though extensive in scope, must first be stated; plaintiff hereinafter being sometimes referred to as Norman and defendant as Marcus.

W. M. Peyton, Sr., was killed in an automobile accident on March 14, 1945; at the *495 tíme a resident of Mexia, Limestone County, Texas. In January 1931 he had married a Miss Louise Clemments óf New Orleans. She brought into the family a child, Norman Gonzales, who had been cared for and raised by her practically since his birth; the Peytons legally adopting Norman, then a boy aged 16, at Mexia in 1942. Earlier and in April 1932, at Baylor Hospital, Dallas, Mrs. Louise Peyton ostensibly gave birth to a boy baby (now William Marcüs Peyton, Jr.), representing him to her husband as a child born of their marriage; Mr. Peyton until his death continuing to regard Marcus as a natural son and having no cause reflected by the record to believe otherwise. In September 1944 the Peytons obtained a judgment of divorce in the District Court of Limestone County, the decree reciting that Marcus “was born of said marriage relationship”,' adjudging custody of the child to W. M. Peyton for nine'months of the year for purpose of its education, to Mrs. Peyton for the summer months; and awarding her in property settlement the sum of $7,500 per year, income tax free, out of the husband’s property, recited as separate.

The last will of W. M. Peyton, Sr., duly probated in the County Court of Limestone County, Texas in 1945, gave to the adopted son Norman the sum of $1,000 when 21 years of age (now paid) and provided that same “shall be all that he shall receive from my estate.” Peyton’s property of every kind, real, personal or mixed, was then left in trust to W. W. Mason and H. L. Kidd of Mexia and H. W. Register of Cor-sicana, as the testator’s Trustees and Executors without bond, for them to absolutely handle and control until Marcus attained the age of 25 years, when the estate should be turned over to said beneficiary in fee simple. Other parts of such will provided for the succession of Trustees, for regular sums to be paid “my said son” Marcus for his comfort, maintenance, support and education, even to exhaustion of the corpus if necessary; that should Marcus die before arriving at 25 years of age, the estate would ■go to his children, if married; if not, then to George and Patricia Peyton, son and daughter of Bailey Peyton. In 1952, Marcus, 20 years of age and married, secured removal of disabilities as á minor by order of the District Court of Limestone County; and becoming dissatisfied with the trust provisions of said will and management of the estate by the named Trustees (Wallace Welch, a successor), on or about February ;17, 1953 mailed to these Trustees a letter stating in part: “ * * * Having had my disabilities removed, and joined by my wife, Bonnie Bonner Peyton, I do hereby advise you that I hereby renounce, reject, refuse, and disclaim any and all rights, benefits, or interests that may have been, or have been, or were intended to be provided for me by the trust set forth in the will of my said father, William Marcus Peyton, deceased, wherein you were named trustees and executors. My purpose in so doing is to prevent the vesting of any rights, benefits, or beneficial interests in myself under such trust, or if any such rights, benefits, or beneficial interests therein shall have vested in me by virtue of the fact that I was a minor and thereby subject to disabilities as such, to disclaim the same and cause such testamentary trust to fail, and to divest .myself of any such rights, benefits, or beneficial interests. My further purpose is, by virtue of the failure of such trust, to cause those properties which were devised or bequeathed to you as trustees under and by virtue of the will of my said father, William Marcus Peyton, deceased, to revert or return to you as executors of my father’s estate only, and thereupon to descend or pass by law to me as his sole heir and next of kin.” At the same time demand was made of the trustees for immediate delivery to Marcus of all properties “coming to you from the estate of my said father, William Marcus Peyton, deceased * * * pursuant to the laws of the State of Texas.”

Prior thereto, by a writing drawn by the then attorneys for Marcus (Messrs. Mc-Cord, Durant and Witts), dated January 25, 1953, consideration $500 paid, Norman Pey-ton, appellee, then living at Las Vegas, Nevada, assigned, sold, and conveyed to Marcus all right, title and interest in and to the trust estate left by W. M. Peyton, Sr., which he might have, or become en *496 titled to; a preliminary recital of the instrument being: “Fully conscious of the fact that I have no further interest in or to any of the properties left by my adoptive father, William Marcus Peyton, deceased, if the trust aforesaid exists or continues to its full term, being now advised by my adoptive brother, William Marcus Peyton, Jr., that he intends to disclaim, reject, and renounce any or all rights, benefits, or beneficial interests to which he may be entitled under such trust set forth in the will of my adoptive father, William Marcus Peyton, deceased, but that he will not do so except fpr first having obtained this .release and surrender from me, realizing furthermore that as a result thereof I might claim an interest in any properties thereby reverting to the estate of my said adoptive father, William Marcus Peyton, deceased, or the Executors thereof, as intestate property under the laws of descent and distribution of the State of Texas, and intending by this instrument to forego and surrender any and all such rights which I might thereby have or acquire, * *

Subsequent to date of above instrument, and intervening February 17, 1953, there is testimony to the effect that Mrs. Louise Peyton,' having learned of the steps taken to dissolve the Trust created by Peyton’s will, made the following disclosure, first to the wife of Marcus and then to him: That at time of her marriage to W. M. Peyton, Sr., she was incapable of bearing a child; that she was not the mother, nor was Peyton the father of the infant born at Baylor Hospital on April 21,' 1932; it having been born to another “Mrs. Peyton” on the same date, turned over to Mrs. Louise Peyton and presented,1 as his son, to W. M. Peyton, who accepted the boy as such; with no information thereafter to the contrary. 1 The named attorneys for Marcus, when apprised of above turn of events, advised him that another assignment was necessary for signature by Norman, providing for a consideration adequate to the radically changed conditions.

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Bluebook (online)
271 S.W.2d 493, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 2111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peyton-v-peyton-texapp-1954.