Ransome v. Bearden

50 Tex. 119
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 50 Tex. 119 (Ransome v. Bearden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ransome v. Bearden, 50 Tex. 119 (Tex. 1878).

Opinion

Gould, Associate Justice.

he questions involved in this case grow out of the rulings of the court in sustaining exceptions to a petition attacking the will of Jeremiah Jackson, probated on the 30th of April, 1866, in the County Court of Wood county, as a forgery. The original petition was filed January 13, 1875, by E. W. E. Ransome, for himself and as agent for sundry other persons named, heirs of said Jackson. On March 1, 1876, these other parties withdrew from the suit. Susan A. Ransome, of Harris county, Georgia, alleged to be the sister and sole heir of deceased, became a plaintiff, and the suit proceeded in the name of E. W. E. Ransome and said Susan A. Ransome. There were exceptions, general and special, to the amended petition; the second exceptions embracing, among other matters, the defense of limitation, and that the petition did not show what particular fraudulent acts they had lately discovered. The court sustained the exceptions, and plaintiffs again amended. As finally amended, the petition disclosed that E. W. E. Ransome was the son of Susan A. Ransome, and that his sole interest in the estate was by transfer from his mother of all her right to the personal property of the estate. It charged that Jackson died in 1865; that the defendant Bearden was appointed administrator of his estate, and afterwards, in April, 1866, he presented to the County Court, and caused to be probated, a forged will, knowing that it was not written or signed by Jackson, but was forged, and under which he, claiming as devisee, had proceeded to dispose of the estate; that soon after the probate of said will it was, by some person, taken from the county clerk’s office of Wood county or destroyed, and that [125]*125plaintiffs neither did discover, nor could they by reasonable diligence have discovered, the forgery, until within two months before suit brought; that plaintiff Susan is a very ignorant woman, unable either to read or write, and with no acquaintance in Wood county, except the defendant; that several months after the probate of the will defendant visited the residence of said Susan A. Ransome, in the State of Georgia, and informed plaintiffs that the said Jackson was dead, and that he bequeathed a portion of his property to some freedmen, formerly his slaves, and the balance to him, the said Bearden; that said plaintiffs were well acquainted with defendant, and had been many years prior to the death of said Jackson, and, knowing the affection said Jackson had for his former slaves, plaintiffs believed said information given them by said Bearden in regard to the disposition of said estate by said Jackson, which information was false, and caused them for some time to neglect the investigation of the facts in regard to the will and pi’obate of same. The petitioners allege repeatedly that they used due diligence in investigating the facts; that they used all the diligence that an intelligent and prudent man could use in investigating the acts of said Bear-den in the making and probate of said will, but were not able to discover that said will was spurious and forged until within two months before suit brought; but nowhere do they state what acts of diligence were exercised, or what particular facts were discovered, leading them to a knowledge of the forgery.

The petition as amended was again excepted to specially, thus: “ That there is no sufficient ground averred for want of knowledge by S. A. Ransome, the heir at law, of the right of action of plaintiff against defendant, in the use of any diligence to ascertain her rights, or a knowledge of the facts necessary to enable her to file her suit against defendant.” The exceptions further objected to the right of E. W. F. Ran-some to sue, and objected to the amended petition as contradictory of plaintiff’s former pleadings. The court sustained the exceptions “for the following, among other, reasons”: [126]*126“ Because one of the plaintiffs, E. W. E. Ransome, is not shown to have been such an interested party, at the date of the probate of the alleged will, as, in the contemplation of the statute, is entitled to institute this suit; he being a mere donee without value, and it being contrary to the policy of the law that he should have the right to set aside the judgment of the Probate Court, probating the will, for the want of knowledge on his part of the alleged fraud, when the same might have been known to the parties really interested in the estate at the date of the probate; because, by reason of the above, there was a misjoinder of the parties; and because there were no sufficient allegations, both of fraud upon the part of the defendant and also of concealment of the same, sufficient to prevent the running of the statute of limitations in such cases made and provided.” “ Whereupon the plaintiff' failed to ask leave to amend, and the cause was dismissed.”

The statute in force at the time this suit was brought, as well as the former statute, allows any person interested in a will to contest its validity by commencing suit within four years after its probate. (2 Paschal’s Dig., art. 5542; 1 Paschal’s Dig., art. 1262.) Sections 5543 and 5544 are as follows: “In addition to the suit allowed by the preceding ' section, a suit may be commenced by an heir, or legatee, or devisee under a former will, or other person interested in the estate, to set aside a will on the ground of forgery or fraud, at any time within two years after the discovery of such forgery or fraud.” Section 5544: “ Infants, persons of unsound mind, married women, and persons imprisoned under the sentence of a court for a term of years less than life, and the representative of such persons, shall have seven years within which to commence either of the suits mentioned in the two preceding sections, after the removal of their respective disabilities, or after the death of the person dying under such disability.”

Our opinion is, that the court did not err in deciding that [127]*127B. W. B. Ransome was not a “ person interested in the estate ” so as to be entitled to bring suit to contest the validity of the will within two years after the discovery of the forgery. He was only interested through a transfer from his mother of a part of her interest. The statute makes no mention of assignees, donees, or purchasers from heirs, and by this silence, as well as by the use of the expression “representative of such person,” seems to exclude them. The very liberal provisions which it makes in favor of the heirs, &c., were not, we think, designed to extend to a mere donee of an heir. As B. W. B. Ransome showed no right to sue, the case was rightly dismissed as to him.

But Susan A. Ransome sued as heir, and she brought her suit, as she alleges, in the language of the statute, within two years after the discovery that the will was forged.

We are inclined to the opinion that the statute giving a fixed time, after the discovery of the forgery or fraud, within which the heir may sue to set aside the will, must not be construed as allowing the heir this additional time if only by his own fault and by the failure to use ordinary diligence he has remained in ignorance of the forgery.- In California, (and there are similar statutes in other States,) the period of limitation to actions for relief on the ground of fraud is three years; but it is provided, that the cause of- action, in such case, is not to be deemed to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the fraud. (See case of Broderick’s Will, 21 Wall., 504; Boyd v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sherman v. Sipper
152 S.W.2d 319 (Texas Supreme Court, 1941)
McBurney v. Daughety
19 S.W.2d 113 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1929)
Dickson v. Dickson
5 S.W.2d 744 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1928)
Dickson v. Dickson's Estate
286 S.W. 295 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1926)
Chicago, R. I. & G. Ry. Co. v. Duncan
273 S.W. 908 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
Herndon v. J. T. Robison Commissioner of General Land Office
270 S.W. 159 (Texas Supreme Court, 1925)
Allen v. Pugh
89 So. 470 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1921)
Vanden Berg v. Vos Vercade
173 N.W. 332 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1919)
Texas Harvester Co. v. Wilson-Whaley Co.
210 S.W. 574 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1918)
Raley v. D. Sullivan Co.
159 S.W. 99 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1913)
Gilmore v. O'Neil
139 S.W. 1162 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1911)
Mounger v. Daugherty
138 S.W. 1070 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1911)
Boren v. Boren
85 S.W. 48 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1905)
Pitman v. Holmes
78 S.W. 961 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1904)
Luter v. Hutchinson
70 S.W. 1013 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1902)
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Mitchell
40 L.R.A. 209 (Texas Supreme Court, 1898)
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Gay
25 L.R.A. 52 (Texas Supreme Court, 1894)
Calhoun v. Burton
64 Tex. 510 (Texas Supreme Court, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Tex. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ransome-v-bearden-tex-1878.