Ward v. Gohlke

279 S.W.2d 422, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 1403, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 1826
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 27, 1955
Docket12829
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 279 S.W.2d 422 (Ward v. Gohlke) 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
Ward v. Gohlke, 279 S.W.2d 422, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 1403, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 1826 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

NORVELL, Justice.

The subject matter of this lawsuit consists of four tracts of land situated in DeWitt County, Texas, and covered by an oil, gas and mineral lease held by the Shell Petroleum Company. This lease is identified by the company as No. 17096. Three of these tracts were the community property of Fred W. Gohlke and his wife, Helene Gohlke, both deceased. The fourth tract, upon which four of the five producing wells under the lease are located, was the separate property of Fred W. Gohlke. The dispute is essentially between the nieces and nephews of Fred W. Gohlke, Edwin P. Ward et al., who claim as devisees under his will, and the executors and devisees named in the last will and testament of Helene Gohlke.

The principal questions presented relate to the doctrine of. election as applied to the residuary clause of Fred W. Gohlke’s will; the construction of some five written instruments making up the Shell lease, insofar as they govern and control the respective *424 royalty interests of the parties (i. e., whether these royalty interests are pooled of not) , and the contention that such instruments should be reformed in certain particulars.Some of the Fred - W. Gohlke devisees •stand in a somewhat different position from the majority, and they present varying contentions that will also be discussed.

The trial' court’ peremptorily instructed the jury to find for the Helene Gohlke executors and devisees, who claimed that the royalty interest under the four tracts was pooled ’and that the .Helene Gohlke ■devisees owned .38.29 per cent of .the royalty, while the .Fred W; Gohlke.devisees owned 61.71 per cent thereof. (Arnold Gohlke,, .while one of the Fred W. Gohlke devisees, was also one of the executors of the Helene Gohlke estate. In this litigation he and his brother Fritz Gohlke, as individuals, take the same position as the Helene Gohlke devisees.) The stated per-' cetttages were based upon the theory that of the 734.5 acres covered by the lease, three tracts, aggregating 562.5 acres, were the community property of Fred W. and Helene Gohlke, and that she died possessed of. a one-half interest therein, which passed, to her devisees' by will, and that the royalty interest in these1 three tracts was pooled with a l72-acre tract which' w;a§ the sepa-' rate property of Fred W. Gohlke and now held by his devisees, who likewise held a one-haif interest in the three tracts aggregating 562.5 ácres.

’Upon-the issue of election, the Fred WV Gohlke devisees, ■ Edwin P. Ward et - al.,> contend, that the -residuary clause- of - the will, of Fred W. Gohlke disclosed a clear and certain intention on-his part to dispose of not only his.-but- also his wife’s interest-in their community property. The pertinent provisions of the will read as follows: - -

“Second. I give to my beloved wife, Helene Gohlke,-all-of my notes, money, cattle and horses," absolutely, save and except fifteen milk cows and sufficient workhorses and mules,- to work the home place, as hereinafter provided; said notes; money, cattle, mules and horses to be her individual property to be disposed of as she may. see fit.
“Third. I give to my beloved wife, Helene Gohlke, a life interest in all of niy rea!‘estáte and personal property, wheresoever located, to be used and enjoyed by her during her natural life.
“Fourth. After the death of my said wife, I give to my nephew, Arnold O. Gohlke, son of W. F. Gohlke, the one hundred thirteen acres of land, more or less, known .as my home place,'in fee simple, together witlj fifteen milk cows, all.farming tools and ejc., on said place, and all household and:kitchen furniture in the house, and ^lsp sufficient number of horses and mules to properly work .and cultivate .said one hundred, thirteen, acres of land} more of less.
“Fifth. ' After the death óf my beloved wife, I give all the residue of my estate to my nieces and nephews, children of my brothers-and sisters, to be equally divided among said nieces and nephews. In-the event--of the death of any of said nieces or nephews prior to the death of. my said wife, I give the interest said nieces and.nephews would receive to their respective children, and in- the event they shall have no children, then, said property is .to"' be divided equally between my nieces and nephews then living.”

In our opinion, the rule of Avery v. Johnson, 108 Tex. 294, 192 S.W. 542, is applicable and. controlling here. It can not be said that the fifth clause of the will above set out is “open to no other construction”..than that .Fred .W- Gohlke intended to dispose of his wife’s community interest as, well.as his own.in and to property not specifically theretofore disposed of. The words, “I give all the residue of my estate” may be reasonably construed as applying only to that portion of the community estate he actually owned, despite the fact thát in preceding clauses of the will, where a definite tract of land-or particular article of personal property is 'described, it may appear certain that insofar as that clause *425 is concerned a disposition of his wife’s interest, as well as his own, was contemplated. In Wright v. Wright, Tex., 274 S.W.2d 670, the Supreme Court recently-considered the contention that as the words “my property” or similar possessive expressions were used in one clause of a will as comprehending the community interest of both spouses, such expressions must necessarily be given, a similar meaning throughout the will. This view was rejected and it was held that although the sense in which the possessive expressions were used in various clauses of the will was pertinent, nevertheless, if the wording of the particular clause involved was open to the construction of referring only to property which the testator actually owned, that, construction would be adopted. : In the later case of Hodge v. Ellis, Tex., 277 S.W.2d 900, the rule of the Wright case was reaffirmed. In view of the Supreme Court’s recent pronouncements and recon-siderations of the applicable authorities, we need not discuss the matter further. In our opinion, the present case can not be distinguished from Wright v. Wright, supra.

Shell Lease No. 17096 was one of a number of leases executed by members of the Gohlke family, covering various lands in DeWitt County, Texas. It is sometimes referred to in conveying and ratifying instruments as Lease No. 2; this number being used to designate the particular lease as among others executed by the Gohlkes. Lease No. 17096, as above, indicated, was evidence by five- separate instruments and was taken by Shell in place of a prior lease executed in 1940. The.written instrument signed by a majority of the lessors, which we shall for convenience refer to as ’ the primary instrument, bears date of August 4, 1945, and was signed by the following parties lessor: Helene Gohlke, Edwin P. Ward, Myron F. Ward, Henry G. Ward, W. F, Lobenstein, Edward Lobenstein, Adeline Stork, Mrs. Frieda Boehl, A. O. Gohlke, Fritz Gohlke and Venor H. Gohlke (names of spouses signing as such have been omitted). The parties lessor were described as “the. undersignéd heirs and devisees under the will of Fred W.

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Bluebook (online)
279 S.W.2d 422, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 1403, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 1826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-gohlke-texapp-1955.