Von Rosenberg v. Wickes

109 S.W. 968, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 455, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 608
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 29, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 109 S.W. 968 (Von Rosenberg v. Wickes) 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
Von Rosenberg v. Wickes, 109 S.W. 968, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 455, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 608 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinions

This is an appeal by appellants from a judgment of the District Court of Travis County, wherein was probated the will of D'Lacy B. Wickes, deceased, and wherein letters testamentary were granted appellee Hiram G. Wickes. Hiram G. Wickes filed his application in the Probate Court of Travis County for the probation of the will of D'Lacy G. Wickes, with the request that letters testamentary be issued to him. During the pendency of that proceeding the appellants, Von Rosenberg and Tucker, contested the application of Hiram G. Wickes for letters testamentary, and requested that letters be issued to Fred C. Von Rosenberg, which request was denied, hence this appeal. There is no objection raised to the judgment of the court probating the will, but the contest arises over who is entitled to letters testamentary. It is claimed by the appellants, that, although Hiram G. Wickes was named by the testator in his will as executor, the time had expired in which he was required to qualify under the terms of the will, and that the appellant, Fred C. Von Rosenberg, being also named as executor, he was the next in order that was entitled to be appointed, and that the court erred in refusing and declining to cause to be issued to him letters testamentary. The terms of the will out of which this contest grows, are as follows:

"First, I nominate, constitute and appoint either Hiram G. Wickes, Edward F. Huppertz, Newton S. Walton, George S. Walton or Fred *Page 456 C. Von Rosenberg executor of this instrument in the manner as hereinafter stated, that is to say, the said Hiram G. Wickes, if alive at the time of my death, shall be the executor of this instrument; and in case he, the said Hiram G. Wickes, is not living at the time of my death, or shall die while acting as such executor, then the said Huppertz shall be such executor; and if the said Hiram G. Wickes and Edward F. Huppertz are dead at the time of my death, or said Huppertz shall die while acting as such executor, then the said Newton S. Walton shall be such executor; and if the said Hiram G. Wickes, Huppertz and Newton S. Walton are dead at the time of my death, or said Newton S. Walton shall die while acting as such executor, then the said George S. Walton shall be such executor; and should the said Hiram G. Wickes, Huppertz, Newton S. Walton and George S. Walton be not alive at the time of my death, or the said George S. Walton shall die while acting as such executor, then the said Fred C. Von Rosenberg shall be such executor; and in case of the failure to qualify and act of any one or more of those named who may become my executor, as aforesaid, within three months after my death, or within three months after the death or disqualification of their predecessors aforesaid, such failure to qualify and act shall operate the same as if the one or more of those named so failing, by death or otherwise, to qualify and act as such executor within such time were dead."

Said will had the following codicil: "In the event of the death of the said Hiram G. Wickes, I, the said D'Lacy B. Wickes, do hereby nominate and appoint the said Charles B. D. Wickes, as is the said Hiram G. Wickes, appointed executor thereof, the second person to become the executor of the foregoing will."

It appears from the evidence that D'Lacy B. Wickes, on April 24, 1892, executed the will in question, and on October 20, 1899, he made the codicil, as above set out. At the time he was a resident of Travis County, Texas. He died in Blanco County whilst temporarily there on a visit on July 4, 1906. At that time his brother, the appellee Hiram G. Wickes was in the State of Tennessee and had in his possession the will in question. The County Court of Travis County convened on the 2d day of July, 1906. On July 6, 1906, the appellee Hiram G. Wickes, from McMinnville, Tennessee, wrote to Charles Huppertz at Austin, Texas, a letter, enclosing the will in question, requesting him to proceed to have the will probated, and further, that if his presence should be required in Austin, to inform him of that fact. Again on July 10, 1906, he wrote to Huppertz from Tennessee, to the effect to avoid all possible delay in the probation of the will. This was followed by another letter from McMinnville of date July 14, 1906, in which he expressed the hope that the will would be probated at the August term, and further requested him to avoid delay in its probation. Huppertz received these letters and also the one enclosing the will in July, and about the 28th of July, 1906, he prepared and caused to be filed an application requesting the probation of the will. Huppertz during all of this time was deputy county clerk of Travis County, and was at the same time a licensed attorney, but he says that he was not engaged in the practice of law, and further testifies to the effect that what he did was as deputy clerk. *Page 457

The will when received, and when the July application was made, was not filed, but it was deposited by Huppertz in the vault in the clerk's office. The will was received too late to be probated at the July term of the County Court, the next term of which convened in October. About the middle of September, 1906, the appellee Hiram G. Wickes, returned from the State of Tennessee, and discussed with Huppertz the subject of probating the will. It seems from the terms of the will that the property covered by it is in the State of Tennessee; and the evidence shows that Wickes obtained Huppertz's advice on the subject as to the proper place for the probation of the will, and it appears that he was advised by Huppertz that the will should be probated in the State of Tennessee, as the property was situated in that State. Acting upon this advice at that time he withdrew the will, and sent it to parties in Tennessee, with request that it be probated. There was a correspondence extending over some little time between him and the Tennessee parties who had possession of the will for the purpose of probating it there. Finally, in the spring of 1907, he received a letter from the attorney there to whom the will was entrusted, that it could not be probated in that State until first probated in this State. Thereupon the will was returned to him and he delivered the same to his attorney, who on June 6, 1907, prepared and caused to be filed his application for the probation of the will. That application when received by Mr. Huppertz as deputy clerk, was filed of date to correspond with the original application of July 28, 1906. In explanation of this Huppertz says that this was done because he supposed it supplied the old application, which had been lost, mislayed or destroyed, or in other words, he was not able to find it.

We have not set out all of the evidence bearing upon this question, but we have stated enough, in our opinion, to justify the conclusion that there was no intentional delay on the part of appellee Wickes in taking timely steps to have the will probated, and that the withdrawal of the will from the possession of the deputy clerk in September, 1906, was not with the intention and purpose to withdraw the application that had been prepared and filed and to abandon the same, but that the withdrawal of the will was merely for the purpose of having it first probated in the State of Tennessee, under the mistaken idea and belief that that was the State in which it should be first probated; that as soon as the mistake was discovered, appellee had the will returned and propounded it for probation in this State. In this connection it is well to say that if the appellee Hiram G. Wickes is not entitled to letters testamentary, then the appellant Fred C. Von Rosenberg stands next in line entitled to appointment.

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W. 968, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 455, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-rosenberg-v-wickes-texapp-1908.