Scott v. Townsend

159 S.W. 342, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1408
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 22, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 342 (Scott v. Townsend) 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
Scott v. Townsend, 159 S.W. 342, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1408 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinions

On January 2, 1912, an instrument in writing bearing date September 29, 1909, executed by Winfield Scott, now deceased, and duly attested by two subscribing witnesses, was admitted to probate in the county court of Tarrant county as the last will and testament of the deceased. The application for the probate of the instrument was filed by A. B. Robertson and Mrs. Elizabeth Scott, surviving wife of the deceased, who were named in the will as executor and executrix, respectively. On the same day the will was probated A. B. Robertson and Mrs. Elizabeth Scott were appointed independent executors of the will without bond, and appraisers were appointed to appraise the property belonging to the estate. No opposition was offered to these proceedings, but Mrs. Georgia Scott Townsend, daughter of the deceased, joined pro forma by her husband, John R. Townsend, instituted a suit in the county court against Mrs. Elizabeth Scott, A. B. Robertson, Winfield Scott, Jr., a minor, and Winfield Scott Townsend, minor son of Mrs. Georgia Scott Townsend, to set aside the order probating the will and to annul the will. In their first amended original petition filed March 15, 1912, they alleged that the execution of the purported will was procured by undue influence upon the testator, exerted by Mrs. Elizabeth Scott, hereinafter designated contestee, and upon the further ground that at the time of the execution of the will the testator was mentally incapable of appreciating and understanding the force and effect of the instrument. A guardian ad litem was appointed for each of the minor defendants. The defendants Mrs. Elizabeth Scott and A. B. Robertson and the guardian ad litem for Winfield Scott, Jr., filed a general demurrer and general denial to the petition. The guardian ad litem for defendant Winfield Scott Townsend entered his appearance with the allegation that he was not sufficiently informed in the premises to answer the merits of the cause, and therefore submits all matters in controversy to the court with the prayer that such orders be made as law and equity may direct. On March 16, 1912, the suit was tried in the county court, and judgment was there rendered that the plaintiffs take nothing. Plaintiffs excepted to the judgment and prosecuted an appeal to the district court of Tarrant county. In that court plaintiffs filed their third amended original petition on May 28, 1912, praying for the same relief as sought in their first amended original petition.

The following were the grounds, alleged in that petition for setting aside the will:

"Plaintiff avers that said pretended last will and testament of Winfield Scott, deceased, is void, not binding, and should be so declared; that the probate thereof is void, and should be annulled and set aside for these reasons, viz.: That the execution of said will was procured by Mrs. Elizabeth Scott, through undue influence exerted by her over the said Winfield Scott, and the execution of said will was a direct and immediate result of such influence so exerted by said Mrs. Elizabeth Scott over the said Winfield Scott, and operating on and controlling him at the very time of the execution of such will, in this, to wit: That the said will did not and does not represent the wish, desire, judgment, or will of the said Winfield Scott as to the disposition of his said estate, but does represent the wish, desire, and will of the said Mrs. Elizabeth Scott; that he did not execute the said will voluntarily and as his free and willing act, but was compelled, required, driven, and morally coerced to execute the same through the undue influence, domination, and command of the said Mrs. Elizabeth Scott; that for the purpose of depriving the plaintiff herein of the portion of the estate of her said father which she would have received but for said will, and in order to practically disinherit her, the said Mrs. Elizabeth Scott fraudulently induced, forced, commanded, and coerced the said Winfield Scott into so executing said will; that said Winfield Scott was unable to resist or overcome the said undue influence of the said Mrs. Elizabeth Scott, as aforesaid, and as the direct and proximate result of such conduct and undue influence so brought to bear upon him, and operating on and controlling him at the time of the execution of said will, he so executed the same, when otherwise he would not have done so. And plaintiff *Page 346 further avers that in order to obtain and maintain the domestic peace with said Mrs. Elizabeth Scott, and to avoid an open and public rupture of domestic relations with her, and to escape social embarrassment and to maintain social standing, which otherwise would have been brought about, and would have occurred through and by her acts, said Winfield Scott was induced, compelled, and forced to so execute said will.

"Said Mrs. Elizabeth Scott, as a part of her plan to procure said will as it was executed, and as a part of her scheme to cut plaintiff off from her just share of her father's estate, and to deprive her of her benefits in said estate as such heir, fraudulently pretended to said Scott, and agreed with him prior to the execution of his said will as aforesaid, to herself execute a will, the particular provisions and details of which are unknown to plaintiff, but are well known to the defendants; that though so pretending and so agreeing for such purposes she nevertheless failed, refused, and omitted so to execute such will after having so induced and procured the said Winfield Scott to execute his will aforesaid. That said Mrs. Elizabeth Scott, in order to accomplish the disinheritance of plaintiff, and to prevent her from receiving her just share of the estate of her said father which she would have otherwise received, by the means and in the ways hereinbefore shown in this pleading procured said Scott so to execute his will as to make the said Winfield Scott, Jr., and herself the chief beneficiaries, and to obtain for them the great bulk of the estate of the said Winfield Scott, and thereby and in these ways aiding her to overreach said Winfield Scott, overthrow his judgment, destroy his real wish, and subvert his judgment and wishes to her own views and purposes, but for which acts and conduct of said Mrs. Elizabeth Scott plaintiff would have received a large portion of the estate of said Winfield Scott, deceased, and would have received the share thereof to which she was entitled as an heir.

"That the said Winfield Scott, at the time of the execution of said will, was in a perturbed and disordered nervous condition, which greatly preyed upon his mind, rendering him easily susceptible to the pressure so exerted upon him by the said Mrs. Elizabeth Scott, as above shown.

"That the said Winfield Scott, deceased, did not comprehend or understand the terms and provisions of the said will as aforesaid, and at the time of the execution of such will by him was not mentally capable of understanding it; that he did not understand or appreciate the manner and way in which lie was disposing of and distributing his said estate, as was undertaken by the said pretended will to be done, nor was he of sufficient mental capacity to so understand. Plaintiff further avers that the said Winfield Scott, deceased, at the time of the making by him of the said will as aforesaid, on, to wit, September 29, A.D. 1909, did not have sufficient mental capacity to make the said will."

All the defendants except the guardian ad litem for Winfield Scott Townsend filed an answer to that petition consisting of special exceptions and general denials and special pleas.

The suit was tried in the district court before a jury and on June 5, 1912, judgment was rendered setting aside the order of probate rendered by the county court and decreeing the will null and void. From that judgment the defendants A. B. Robertson and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 342, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-townsend-texapp-1913.