Rudersdorf v. Bowers

112 S.W.2d 784, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1448
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 22, 1937
DocketNo. 10460.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 112 S.W.2d 784 (Rudersdorf v. Bowers) 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
Rudersdorf v. Bowers, 112 S.W.2d 784, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1448 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinions

CODY, Justice.

This is a will contest. At this time the sole ground urged for setting aside the probate of the will is that the testator was without testamentary capacity. Only two assignments of error are urged: First, that the court erroneously instructed a verdict in favor of proponents; second, that’ the court erroneously sustained proponents’ objection to the hypothetical question of contestants to their witness Dr. Stafford. Contestants are here plaintiffs in error, and proponents are defendants in error.

The testator, Earnest Seaburn, was a bachelor, 78 years old at the time of his death, August 26, 1934. He lived at Quintana on the Gulf, four miles from Freeport. , Prior to his mother’s death in 1909, he had lived with her. The Coveny family, to members of which he left $15,-500, lived just across the street. After his mother’s death he took his meals there. He lived at their home after an illness in 1928. He still lived with them at the time of Mrs. Coveny’s death during Christmas, 1931. After her death Mr. Coveny moved to Galveston where hi's daughters lived. Testator continued to reside in the Coveny home in Quintana, and frequently visited the family in Galveston, spending several days at a time. They would visit him at Quintana. He used to write them to visit him. To a grandniece -of whom he was very fond, who was the daughter of A. S. *786 Bowers, testator left $5,000. This grandniece would drive down from Houston on Sundays and see him. To A. S. Bowers, his nephew, testator left two-thirds of his residuary estate. To Mrs. Mary Bowers Chilton, a niece, testator left a third of his residuary estate. The beneficiaries of the will referred to are defendants in error. Miss Erna Seaburn and Mrs. Hudgins were also his nieces, and resided at Vekasco, which is four miles from Quintana. To them he left $3,500, and $2,000, respectively. Mrs. Rudersdorf and Mrs. Aycock were also nieces, and his only heirs at law not made beneficiaries under his will. There is no evidence that they ever at any time visited him. At his death testator had $300 in the bank, securities, of the face value of $23,850, and an undivided one-third interest in 6,764 acres of grazing lands in Brazoria county, which seem to have been under oil leases. The will was executed August 11, 1931, conformable to statutory requirements.

It is charged by defendants in error, not denied by plaintiffs in error, and apparent from the record, that, of the dozen or more witnesses called by plaintiffs in error to show lack of mental capacity, .only three, other than those whose conclusions were by the court ordered stricken from the record and of which action no complaint is made, stated that testator was of unsound mind. These were J. L. Kramer, W. D. Vinson, and G. C. Hardeman. Kramer testified that he was employed by testator as a personal attendant for a week in 1931, from January to June of 1932, from September, 1932, to July, 1933; that he chauffeured, cooked, and kept house for testator. That testator drank at times and he had seen him cry a couple of times. That testator disliked two men for their activities connected with a dredging project which threw deposits close to his home. That he was sometimes afraid at night. Also that he was afraid some one would steal water out of the cistern at his beach house, and had the faucet locked. That testator went to the barbershop and “cussed different ones out.” That testator bought the groceries for the two of them until he got sick in 1932; that he selected his purchases and knew the prices; that he never saw him in a mental condition that he couldn’t go where he wanted to. That he went to the bank and transacted business like anyone else. That he had sufficient mentality to, and did, make the contract for the witness’s personal services. That he was not crazy. That he drove bargains for his money; he did his own trading at the drugstore and market, and was a discriminating purchaser; That he would read his newspaper and “rave” about what was in it. (It seems testator didn’t like the Republican Administration, particularly President Hoover.) That testator frequently had witness to cash checks for him, and always knew the correct amount of change that was due him.

W. D. Vinson, who also testified that testator was of unsound mind, was an insurance man, and had known testator for twenty years. In 1929 or 1930, he tried to sell testator an annuity, and testator declined it, and said he had money in building and loan and “couldn’t get a damn cent out of it,” and that he had lost confidence in the government and financial institutions. He said he knew that testator was sane enough that, had he entered the contract, it would stand.

G. C. Hardeman, justice of the peace, had known testator since 1925. He took his acknowledgment to instruments at various times. He testified that he was not the same after his return ' from the hospital in 1929, and witness would say he was of unsound mind. That he was a man of fixed ideas and opinions and enjoyed arguments. That he knew how to transact business at the store. That he last took testator’s acknowledgment some months before the trial to a mineral lease. That he was convinced by testator’s acts and words that he knew the purpose'of the various instruments he acknowledged, and that witness knew companies and third persons were paying out money on the strength .of such instruments, and that they would not be legal if testator were of unsound mind. That he testified testator was of unsound mind because of his arguments; that testator was not insane; and that so-far as he knew the leases and contracts acknowledged before him were valid. .

When Miss Erna Seaburn, one of the contestants, qualified as administratrix de bonis non on June 13, 1929, in the estate of W. O. Seaburn, she obtained testator as a surety on her bond for the principal amount of $30,000. On January 8, 1929, -when sureties were required for a receiver’s bond in- a suit pending in the district court of Brazoria county, styled Erna Seaburn et al. v. B. M. Jamison et al., the testator, was obtained as a surety, the bond being for $25,000. It was payable, among *787 others, to Mrs. Aycock and Mrs. Ruders-dorf, who are contestants. The remaining contestants were plaintiffs in the cause. On December 12, 1930, the contestants, and others, joined with testator in executing a contract with the Rycade Oil Corporation. On July 20, 1934, three years after the execution of the will and a few weeks before testator’s death, contestants, and others, jpined with testator in entering into a contract with the Rycade Oil Corporation and the Amerada Petroleum Corporation, making various alterations in outstanding mineral lease contracts. Contestants’ witness Hardeman, whose evidence is reviewed above, took testator’s acknowledgment.

In connection with the drafting of the will, the attorney for the First National Bank of Houston, named as executor, and its trust officer, went to Freeport in the first part of February, 1931, for the purpose of meeting testator and getting the necessary instructions. They were introduced to testator in the Freeport bank, and went with him over to the Tarpon Inn porch, where they had a two-hour conference. The attorney testified that he told in an intelligent manner what disposition he wanted made of his property, and that he thought him of sound mind. An original and copy of the will w.ere sent to testator from Houston after they were there prepared, which testator later executed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.W.2d 784, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rudersdorf-v-bowers-texapp-1937.