The Estate of Jo Ann Mary Ellen Merck Myers v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 23, 2025
Docket02-25-00189-CV
StatusPublished

This text of The Estate of Jo Ann Mary Ellen Merck Myers v. the State of Texas (The Estate of Jo Ann Mary Ellen Merck Myers v. the State of Texas) 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
The Estate of Jo Ann Mary Ellen Merck Myers v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-25-00189-CV ___________________________

ESTATE OF JO ANN MARY ELLEN MERCK MEYERS, DECEASED

On Appeal from the Probate Court No. 2 Denton County, Texas Trial Court No. PR-2023-01194-B

Before Bassel, Womack, and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Wallach MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal arises from a judgment entered in a probate case. Appellants

Keelye Joellen Ringley and Connor Lachlan Ringley, 1 acting pro se, assert that the

judgment is void because it was signed after the probate court’s plenary power had

purportedly expired. Because we conclude that Appellants’ challenge is based on a

faulty premise, we affirm the probate court’s judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

Jo Ann Mary Ellen Merck Meyers, Keelye’s mother, died in May 2023. At the

time of her death, Meyers’s assets included a house located at 9608 Ironwood Drive,

Frisco, Texas, and a 2011 Toyota Highlander.

On August 29, 2023, Keelye filed in the Denton County deed records an

affidavit of heirship in which she averred—incorrectly—that Meyers had died

intestate and that she was Meyers’s sole heir. She also filed an affidavit of heirship for

motor vehicles with the Texas Department of Transportation so that she could obtain

a title certificate in her name for the Toyota Highlander.

That same day, Appellee Donna M. Barry, whom Meyers’s will named as the

independent executor of her estate, filed an Application for Probate of Will and

Issuance of Letters Testamentary in the probate court. Appellants both contested the

1 Because Appellants share the same surname, we will use their first names to refer to them individually and will refer to them collectively as “Appellants.” See Beard v. Beard, No. 12-21-00217-CV, 2022 WL 3012442, at *1 n.1 (Tex. App.—Tyler July 29, 2022, no pet.) (mem. op.).

2 probation of the will, which directed that the bulk of Meyers’s estate be divided

equally among five charitable organizations. The trial court referred Barry, Appellants,

and the five charities named as residual beneficiaries under Meyers’s will to mediation

to resolve the will contest.

The mediation was successful, and the parties entered into a Mediation

Settlement Agreement (MSA). In pertinent part, the MSA provided that Appellants

agreed to the will’s being admitted to probate and to Barry’s serving as the

independent executor; the specific bequest to Keelye in the will would be increased

from $10,000 to $35,000; Appellants agreed that they had “no other right, title, or

interest in any assets of [Meyers’s] [e]state”; and “[t]he remaining assets of the [e]state

[would] pass in accordance with the [w]ill.”

On April 29, 2024, the trial court signed an Agreed Order Granting Joint

Application to Approve Mediation Settlement Agreement (the MSA Order).

Contemporaneously with the MSA Order, the trial court signed an order admitting

Meyers’s will to probate, naming Barry as the estate’s independent executor, and

authorizing letters testamentary.

Notwithstanding her agreement in the MSA that she had “no . . . right, title, or

interest in any assets of [Meyers’s] [e]state” other than the agreed upon

$35,000 specific bequest, Keelye claimed that she owned the Ironwood property and

the Toyota Highlander by virtue of the affidavits of heirship that she had filed. Based

3 on her misguided belief that she owned these assets,2 Keelye repeatedly interfered

with Barry’s efforts to sell the Ironwood property and took possession of the Toyota

Highlander.

Because of Keelye’s continued interference with her efforts to administer

Meyers’s estate, Barry filed an application for injunctive relief and a petition for

declaratory relief to quiet title to the Ironwood property and the Toyota Highlander.

After previously having granted Barry a temporary restraining order (TRO) preventing

Keelye from, among other things, entering upon or coming within 1,000 feet of the

Ironwood property or impeding Barry’s efforts to market and sell the Ironwood

property, the probate court held a bench trial in January 2025 on Barry’s petition for

declaratory relief as well as Keelye’s various challenges to the TRO and the myriad of

claims that she had asserted against the estate. In March 2025, the probate court

2 Although affidavits of heirship are commonly used as title-curative instruments in Texas, such an affidavit does not in and of itself effectuate a title transfer or conclusively establish matters of heirship or title. See Nowlin, 11 Texas Practice: Texas Methods of Practice §§ 7:4, 7:5 (2025 ed.); see also Tex. Est. Code Ann. § 203.001(a), (b); cf. In re Est. of Allen, 407 S.W.3d 335, 341–42 (Tex. App.—Eastland 2013, no pet.) (affirming the trial court’s finding that the surviving wife of a testator was not in default for failing to present will to probate as muniment of title within four-year statute of limitations where wife testified, inter alia, that she had mistakenly believed that an affidavit of heirship that she had filed had transferred all property to her in the same manner as a will). Rather, an affidavit of heirship is merely prima facie evidence of the facts averred therein and may be rebutted in a proceeding to declare heirship or in a suit involving title to property. See Tex. Est. Code Ann. § 203.001(a). Because Meyers died leaving a lawful will, all property devised by the will—including the Ironwood property and the Toyota Highlander—vested in the devisees immediately upon her death. See id. § 101.001(a)(1).

4 signed a judgment quieting title to the Ironwood property and the Toyota Highlander

in the estate’s favor, dissolving the TRO, and ordering that Keelye take nothing on

her claims.

This appeal followed.

II. DISCUSSION

In what amounts to a single issue,3 Appellants contend that the probate court’s

March 2025 judgment is void because it was signed after the probate court’s plenary

power had expired. We disagree.

Appellants’ argument is based on their mistaken belief that the MSA Order

triggered the thirty-day expiration of plenary power under Texas Rule of Civil

Procedure 329b. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 329b(d), (f). But as this court has previously

explained, probate proceedings are an exception to the “one final judgment rule” and

may give rise to multiple appealable orders. In re Est. of Heffner, No. 02-21-00419-CV,

2023 WL 3876760, at *5 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth June 8, 2023, pet. denied) (mem.

3 In their brief, Appellants enumerate four appellate issues and a plethora of subissues. But the thrust of the arguments raised in these various issues is that the trial court’s plenary power terminated thirty days after the MSA Order was entered and that, therefore, all “findings, rulings, orders[,] and judgments” issued by the probate court after that date—including the March 2025 judgment—are “VOID and of no legal effect.” Accordingly, we will treat Appellants’ issues as a single complaint. See Espey v. Crown Mins. Co., No. 09-93-053-CV, 1994 WL 503969, at *3 (Tex. App.— Beaumont Sept.

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