Shropshire v. Salyer

110 S.W.2d 917, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1282
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 1937
DocketNo. 4821.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 110 S.W.2d 917 (Shropshire v. Salyer) 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
Shropshire v. Salyer, 110 S.W.2d 917, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1282 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

FOLLEY, Justice.

On the 17th day of May, 1934, Charlotte Pool Shropshire executed a will. In this will she devised all of her property, consisting of real estate in Floyd, Hale, and Hockley counties, to her two minor children by her second marriage. These two children were Betty Lou Shropshire and David Shropshire. To a child of a former marriage, Billie Pool, she bequeathed the sum of $10. She named her brother, M. H. Salyer, the appellee herein, as independent executor of said will. She also made him trustee of some of the property devised to the daughter, for him to keep the same in trust until said daughter reached the age of thirty years. The property devised to the Shropshire children was, under the 'terms of the will, to pass to the appellee in case of their death before they reached the age of twenty-one. The appellee was also appointed by said will as the personal guardian of the Shropshire children. The second husband of the testatrix, the father of the Shropshire children, had died before the will was made.

This will was offered for probate in the county court of Lubbock county, Tex., and the appellant, J. E. Shropshire, who is the paternal grandfather of the two Shropshire children, filed a contest in said court. The will was probated by the county court and the appellant appealed to the Ninety-Ninth district court of Lubbock county, Tex. There the cause was tried de novo. The appellant in the district court alleged that the will of May 17, 1934, had been revoked by an instrument written by the testatrix some time in September, 1935. This writing was alleged to be in the form of a letter from the testatrix to Mrs. Ruby Helm, a sister-in-law of the testatrix, and the daughter of appellant. The appellant asked that such letter be probated as the last will and testament of Charlotte Pool Shropshire. In the alternative, he asked that in the event such instrument was not a will that it be held to revoke the will of May 17, 1934. This letter was shown to have been lost, but parol evidence was offered from four witnesses to prove its contents. Mrs. Helm testified she received such letter and that she afterwards gave it to her mother, Mrs. J. E. Shropshire, the wife of appellant, who, in turn, mailed it to M. J. Baird, an attorney at Sherman,. Tex. Such1' attorney had represented the appellant in the contest in the county court. He appeared in the district court only as a witness. He stated he received such letter and that it was signed by Charlotte Pool Shropshire. Such letter was lost-after he received it and he was never able to find it. He stated, however, that he remembered its contents. The four witnesses who testified as to the contents of the letter were Mrs. Ruby Helm, Mrs. J. E. Shropshire, M. J. Baird, and Mrs. WL. Odom, who was a neighbor of the appellant in Hale county. The effect of the letter, according to the testimony of these witnesses, was that Charlotte Pool Shropshire declared that the will of May 17, 1934, was not her will any longer and she was going to make a new will. The court, after hearing the testimony, gave a peremptory instruction against the appellant and in favor of the appellee, allowing the will of May 17, 1934, to be probated. He also appointed the appellee as the guardian of the two minor Shropshire children, in accordance with the terms of the will. From such judgment, the appellant has appealed to this court.

The appellant assigns as error the action of the trial court in giving a peremptory instruction, and in the court’s refusal) to submit the question of revocation to the jury. He asserts that the testimony in regard to the letter sufficiently raised the question of the revocation of the 1934 will in such manner that' such issue should have been passed on by the jury.

The testimony shows that the appellee, M. H. Salyer, had possession of the 1934 will at .the time the purported letter of September, 1935, was written. He lived at New Castle, in Young county, Tex. The letter in question was supposed to-have been written by the testatrix while she was visiting her brother at New Castle, or just after she had returned to Floy-dada, Tex., where she visited her foster mother, or aunt. The testimony was somewhat conflicting on this point. All the- *919 witnesses, however, testified substantially the same in regard to the ¡contents of the letter. With reference to that portion of the letter which the appellant asserts was a revocation of the prior will, the witness M. J. Baird testified as follows: “She also stated in the letter she wanted it understood that the will she had prior thereto made and in possession of her brother at New Castle was not her will any longer. She said she couldn’t destroy it because it was in his possession, but it didn’t express her wishes any longer and wasn’t her will, and she stated that she would probably make a formal will’later, another one. She also stated that she wanted her two children, of which Mr. J. E. Shropshire was the grandfather, in case of her death, she wanted them to' have charge of her children, and to have the management' of her property, ' whatever was left to the children. She also stated in the letter that she was making some arrangements to locate in Lubbock.”

Mrs. Ruby Helm testified with reference to the contents of the letter as follows: “She said she had made a will and her brother had it willing everything to her brother and it was her will no longer and she was going to change it, and she wanted the children and property to go to Mr. and Mrs. Shropshire, my father and mother, and that is practically all. The property was to go to her two children.”

Mrs. Odom testified in regard to the. letter as follows: “She just said she was going to change her will as the one she had made wasn’t her will any longer and she wanted to change it if anything happened to her to give possession of the children and property to Mr. and Mrs. Shropshire.”

Article 8285 of the Revised Civil Statutes sets out the manner in which a will may be revoked in the following language: “No will in writing, made in conformity with the preceding articles, nor any clause thereof or devise therein, shall be revoked, except by a subsequent will, codicil or declaration in writing, executed with like formalities, or by the testator destroying, canceling or obliterating the same, or causing it to be done in his presence.”

It is evident from the above statute that a “declaration in writing,” if executed under the formalities above set out, is sufficient to revoke an existing will.

We think the most outstanding case of this character is the case of Brackenridge et al. v. Roberts et al., 114 Tex. 418, 267 S.W. 244, 246, 270 S.W. 1001, in which the Supreme Court of Texas has written extensively upon the subject of revocation. In that case the testator, on his deathbed, wrote a pencil memorandum in which he revoked all wills prior thereto. In that case the purported instrument was lost and never produced in court. Its contents, however, were testified to by an attending nurse and one other witness, each of whom could only remember the beginning of the instrument, which was in substance that it revoked all prior wills. Each testified that she saw the signature of the testator at the bottom of the writing. In discussing that case, Judge Pierson, speaking for the Supreme Court, said:

“The court, as requested, by plaintiffs in error, should have submitted to the jury for its determination the question as to whether or not Mr. Brackenridge intended the writing testified to by Mrs. Mitchell and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.W.2d 917, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shropshire-v-salyer-texapp-1937.