Sowell v. Heins

466 S.W.2d 862, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2553
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 1971
DocketNo. 17604
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 466 S.W.2d 862 (Sowell v. Heins) 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
Sowell v. Heins, 466 S.W.2d 862, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2553 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

CLAUDE WILLIAMS, Chief Justice.

First National Bank in Dallas, in its capacity as independent executor of the will of Viola C. Fraser, deceased, brought this action seeking a judicial construction of a portion of the will. The only question presented for determination is whether or not Mrs. Fraser died intestate as to a part of the property she owned at the time of her death and which was the subject of a trust created in the will.

The facts are brief and undisputed. Mrs. Viola Fraser died in November of 1969 and her will and codicil were duly admitted to probate. No one questions the validity of the will itself. In the instrument Mrs. Fraser left one-half of her total estate, other than a few specific bequests, to her only daughter, Pemela Fraser Heins. The remaining one-half of her estate was left to the First National Bank in Dallas, as trustee, for the use and benefit of named beneficiaries. One-third of the trust was to be held for the benefit of two nieces of the testatrix. No question is presented in this litigation concerning the validity of this portion of the trust estate.

The remaining two-thirds of one-half of the estate is the subject of controversy. The material portions of Paragraph III of the will dealing with this part of the trust •estate read as follows:

“The other one-half (¾4) of this my estate I Give, Devise and Bequeath to the FIRST NATIONAL BANK IN [863]*863DALLAS, DALLAS, Texas, or its successor, IN TRUST, without bond, for the benefit of the hereinafter named parties.
“It is my desire and I direct that in this connection, two-thirds (⅜) of this trust be used for the maintenance and medical care of my mother, MARY COLEMAN CLARKE, my sister, CLEO CLARKE SOWELL, and her husband, GEORGE P. SOWELL, for as long as they live, with the right to exhaust the same if need be. It is my desire and I direct that this portion of the trust estate shall include my house and lot at 224 Lisa Lane ‘Kurtwood’, Palestine, Texas, which is to be used by my mother and sister and her husband as their home for as long as they live.
“Should any of these beneficiaries request the Trustee to do so, monthly allowances from the trust shall be made for the benefit of my mother, MARY COLEMAN CLARKE, my sister, CLEO CLARKE SOWELL, and her husband, GEORGE P. SOWELL. This shall apply to their personal needs as well as to the maintenance of my home at 224 Lisa Lane ‘Kurtwood’, Palestine, Texas.
“At the death of all three of the aforementioned parties, the house and lot mentioned herein shall go to and be the sole property of my niece, LINDA HAWKINS, if she be then living, otherwise to the parties designated in her will as their property.”

The will further provided that the trust estate therein established should be administered under certain terms and conditions, including the following:

“A. My Trustee shall use the income from the trust portions for the respective beneficiaries. If at any time and from time to time during the life of this trust, the income payments provided for herein plus income which the beneficiaries shall have from other sources, shall in the discretion of my Trustee be inadequate for the needs and comforts of such beneficiaries, my Trustee is authorized to pay out for the benefit of said beneficiaries so much of the principal of that trust portion as may be necessary for such purpose; and this without liability to any person interested directly or contingently as a beneficiary under this Will.”
“F. * * * it is my wish and I direct that any of the beneficiaries of this trust who have reached their majority, may upon request to the Trustee each receive during any one year, five per cent (5%) of the principal of his interest in the trust estate, or the sum of $5,000.00, whichever is greater; and this right of withdrawal is not cumulative.”
“J. Anything in this Will to the contrary notwithstanding, no trust created hereunder shall continue beyond twenty-one (21) years after the death of the last to die of those beneficiaries who were living at the time of my death; and upon the expiration of such period all trusts shall terminate and the assets thereof shall be distributed outright to such persons as are then entitled to the income therefrom and in the same proportions; but if no person is then entitled to a specific portion of income, then to the then living income beneficiaries, per stirpes.”

Mary Coleman Clarke, mother of the testatrix, Cleo Clarke Sowell, sister of the testatrix, and her husband, George P. Sow-ell, and Linda Hawkins, niece of the testatrix, contend that the trust provision above quoted was a devise of a fee simple interest in said portion to them, and alternatively, that upon the death of the survivor of Mary Coleman Clarke, Cleo Clarke Sowell and George P. Sowell, the unabsorbed remainder would pass to Linda Hawkins.

[864]*864Pemela Fraser Heins, the daughter of the testatrix, contends that Viola Fraser died intestate as to the remainder interest of the two-thirds of one-half of the trust created in the will, except as to the home known as 224 Lisa Lane “Kurtwood”, Palestine, Texas.

The trial court entered its declaratory judgment wherein it was decreed that “under the terms of the Will of Viola C. Fraser, none of the said Mary Coleman Clarke, Cleo Clarke Sowell and George P. Sowell is, or shall become vested, with title or right of possession or right of testamentary disposition to the corpus of the two-thirds of one-half of the Estate placed in trust for their benefit under Paragraph III of said Will; nor is the said Linda Hawkins vested with any title or right of possession therein; that upon the death of the last to die of the said Mary Coleman Clarke,.Cleo Clarke Sowell and George P. Sowell, the unabsorbed remainder, if any, of said portion of the Trust, shall vest as follows:

“The house and lot at 224 Lisa Lane ‘Kurtwood’, Palestine, Texas, in the said Linda Hawkins, if she be then living, otherwise to the parties, if any, designated in her Will to receive the same; and all the rest, remainder and residue of such unabsorbed remainder in the legal heirs of the said Viola C. Fraser, according to the statutes of descent and distribution then in force.”

Mary Coleman Clarke, Cleo Clarke Sow-ell, and Linda Hawkins perfected their appeal from the judgment and, in two points of error, contend that the court erred in denying to them title, right of possession, or right of testamentary disposition in the corpus of the two-thirds of one-half of the estate placed in trust and holding that the remainder of the trust estate vested in the legal heirs of Viola C. Fraser. The essence of their contention is that there is a presumption of law that the gift of income from a fund without limitation and without disposition of the remainder will act to pass title to the fund itself. They argue that the benefits of the two-thirds of the one-half trust estate have been devised to them to the extent that, in effect, it amounts to a devise of the title to said trust portion in fee simple. In taking this position they concede that the limiting words of the trust “for as long as they live” would support the trial court’s interpretation of the trust estate.

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Bluebook (online)
466 S.W.2d 862, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sowell-v-heins-texapp-1971.