Ripley v. Dearing

153 S.W.2d 243, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 646
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 18, 1941
DocketNo. 5799
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 153 S.W.2d 243 (Ripley v. Dearing) 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
Ripley v. Dearing, 153 S.W.2d 243, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 646 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice.

The County Court of Upshur County on November 11, 1935, in cause No. 1861 on its probate' docket, admitted to probate as the will of Arthur G. Dearing, an instrument in the form of a letter which reads:

“Gainesville, Texas

June 20 -97

My dear Ena.

I rec’d your most welcome letter yesterday evening and you do not know how glad I was to get it, although I hardly expected it would be there but I went for it just the same. We are going to start out threshing about the middle of this week if the weather is good, but I am going to try very hard to get to the P. O. every Sunday morning. My cold is nearly well and my finger also. No my dear girl my castles are not all going to fall if I can help it, the one we laid for September must not fall you must keep that fresh in your memory. I hope there will nothing to that one it would nearly kill me. If there should anything happen to me that I would be liable to die my body would be send to Gladewater. I will talk to Boon Wheelock about it tomorrow. I am glad you spoke about it in your letter but I hope and pray that no such thing may happen to either of us for I wouldn’t give you up. I wouldn’t want to live any longer if you should die. Of course we dont know how quick we may be taken away but you must not think of it any more than you can help. If I should die first — I want you to have all I have got, which is not much, for I have been working for you for the past two or three years. My dear girl must not believe in dreams at all for they hardly ever prove true. I don’t remember of having but one that came anywhere near it, and you know what that was. I am glád you think more' of me than you do of those others. You can’t think too much of me. I appreciate it all and love you with all my heart in return. It has been fearful warm today. I dread the threshing season some but my work wont be very hard for I have a good fireman he does (or will do) most of the running when we are standing and I will do it on the road. I weight 138# now 5 more than when I left home. If I keep on through the summer I will be all right. You must not work too hard in that cotton. Tell Little Linda howdy I would like to have her ‘come to Dearing,’ ever so much. Write as soon as you can and dont forget the one who loves you dearly.

Arthur

P. S. Tell Hick I will send his hone right away.

A.”

His surviving widow, Mrs. Bridget Dearing, appellee herein, was granted letters testamentary, and on November 27, 1935, her oath and bond and the inventory and appraisement were approved. Arthur G. Dearing died November 2, 1931. Appellee filed on October 29, 1935, her application for probate of the alleged will.

Thereafter, on October 27, 1937, Geo. A. Ripley, one of the appellants herein, claiming to have acquired by purchase from brothers and sisters of deceased certain mineral interests under land belonging to deceased’s estate, filed his application in the District Court of Upshur County for a writ of certiorari. On the same day a writ of certiorari issued to the county court. In pursuance to such writ, the transcript of all the probate proceedings theretofore had in the county court were duly filed in the district court on December 14, 1937, taking No. 7091 on the docket of the latter court.

Thereafter, on July 14, 1938, R. A. Graddy, the other appellant herein, claiming an interest in certain minerals, filed suit in the county court in which he named Ripley, certain alleged heirs of deceased, appellee, and others, as defendants. In the third amended original petition filed on August 7, 1939, in his suit styled R. A. Graddy et al. v. Bridget Dearing et al., No. 3216, in which Ripley joined Graddy as a party plaintiff, they sought to vacate and set aside above-mentioned probate orders theretofore entered in cause No. 1861, Re Estate of Arthur G. Dearing, Deceased. To the judgment entered in [245]*245the county court which denied relief prayed for, Graddy and Ripley perfected’ an appeal to the district court, being docketed as No. 7534 in the latter court. No useful purpose will be served to detail the various pleas and, pleading had respectively in causes No. 7534 and No. 7081 prior to the time they were consolidated by the court. In the original petition under the consolidated causes, upon which trial was had, Ripley and Graddy alleged that they each owned an individed ½ and Mrs. Bridget Dearing an undivided ½ interest in the minerals under certain land owned by deceased at the time of his death; and that she and the other named defendant heirs owned the surface rights. And for grounds to vacate and annul the judgment of the probate court which admitted the instrument to probate as the will of Arthur G. Dearing, they followed the allegations set up in Ripley’s application for writ of certiorari to the following extent: (1) Said letter was not in the handwriting of Arthur G. Dearing and was not wholly written by the deceased; (2) that the instrument was not executed and published with the formality required by law necessary to the execution of a will; (3) the letter was not intended as a will by the deceased and the language used was not subject to such construction; (4) the letter was not signed by the deceased nor addressed to nor intended for Bridget Dearing; (5) that Bridget Dearing should not be permitted to probate said instrument as the last will and testament of Arthur G. Dearing as against him (Ripley) because: (a) after Dearing died and before he (Ripley) purchased his claimed mineral interests from heirs of the deceased, Ripley visited Mrs. Bridget Dearing at her home and made inquiry about the brothers and sisters of her deceased husband and as to whether or not her husband had died intestate; (b) that she informed Ripley prior to his purchase that her husband had died without leaving a will; (c) that believing and relying upon such representations so made to him, he thereupon purchased from the brothers and sisters of deceased his claimed mineral interest and had paid a valuable consideration for same; and (d) that by reasons aforesaid Bridget Dearing is now es-topped to claim any title whatsoever under any will of deceased and is now estopped from probating the purported will as .against him (Ripley). Their petition contained the further allegations that -had been set up in county court cause No. 3216 which Graddy had filed, namely, (6) that said letter, if a will, upon its face clearly shows it was conditional and contingent upon the ■ death of Dearing while away from home and prior to the death of Bridget Dearing, and further contingent upon his death prior to his then contemplated marriage to the addressee, neither of which contingencies happened. In their prayer they asked that the judgment theretofore entered admitting the letter to probate as the will of deceased and all other orders in probate be annulled and vacated; that the cause No. 1816 in probate be dismissed; and said letter be declared and adjudged to be not the last will and testament of Arthur G. Dearing.

The trial court sustained defendants’ exceptions to that paragraph in the consolidated petition wherein plaintiffs had pleaded the matters in estoppel above detailed. Defendants contend now as they did then that such allegations of estoppel raise a question of title to real estate over which the probate court did not have jurisdiction, and over which the district court did not have jurisdiction on this appeal from that court. This action of the trial court is sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.W.2d 243, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ripley-v-dearing-texapp-1941.