Williams v. Smith

206 S.W.2d 208, 146 Tex. 269
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1947
DocketNo. A-1238
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 206 S.W.2d 208 (Williams v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Smith, 206 S.W.2d 208, 146 Tex. 269 (Tex. 1947).

Opinion

Me. Justice Folley

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit to construe the will of Rosa C. Allen, deceased, and to require the trustees named in the will to make a partial distribution of the principal of the estate to the beneficiaries of one of the trusts created therein. It was originally filed by the petitioner, Rosa Allen Williams, and her two sisters, Mrs. Loula Allen Smith and Clara Dell Allen Drouet, the surviving daughters of Mrs. Allen. Before the trial the two sisters, having declined to proceed further as plaintiffs, were made defendants. Other defendants were the trustees under the will and the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of the testatrix. One of the sisters, Mrs. Drouet, completely reversed her original position and adopted the view of the trustees which was that no distribution should be made. The other, Mrs. Smith, adopted an intermediate ground. The trial court denied the construction of the will sought by Mrs. Williams, sustained that urged by the trustees, and refused any order of distribution. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court. 200 S. W. (2d) 201.

It is the contention of Mrs. Williams that under the will of her mother, and particularly under Section 6 of Article Six thereof, she and her two sisters are entitled to- distribution of payments and proceeds received by her and the trustees upon the principal of certain vendor’s lien notes, accounts and obligations of her mother’s estate which had fixed maturities.

Mrs. Allen, the testatrix, died April 24, 1931. Surviving her werfe*s her three daughters, above named, and one son, Samuel Mil? ton Allen, who died prior to the trial of this suit, leaving no children surviving him. The will, dated and pub-[272]*27222, 1930, were admitted to probate in Harris County on May 12, 1931. The codicil is not material since it in no way modified the provisions of the will here in controversy. Mrs. Williams was named as independent executrix in the will, and she qualified and served as such until the administration was completed on December 31, 1938. On that date she delivered to John H. Crooker and the Second National Bank of Houston, as trustees, all the assets then remaining in her hands as executrix.

The will of Mrs. Allen is lengthy. A complete copy of it is appended to the opinion of the court of civil appeals. (200 S. W. (2d) 208-224). We shall summarize and quote only so much of it as we deem necessary to make this opinion complete within itself.

Article One directs the payment of all her debts without delay by her executrix, and provides that any estate, inheritance or death taxes or charges should be paid out of the residu- ■ ary portion of her estate.

Article Two contains a special bequest of $5,000.00 in trust for the maintenance of Mrs. Allen’s cemetery lot in Houston.

Article Three deals with her orally expressed wishes as to the distribution to her children of her jewelry, heirlooms and other personal effects. She states that she had from time to time made statements to them of her desires in that respect and felt sure her children would respect her wishes. She merely bequeathed those personal items to her children to be divided and distributed among them by their mutual agreement.

Article Four is a special bequest to her three daughters whereby she devised to them in fee simple certain real estate and mineral interests.

Article Five creates what is known as the “Loula Allen Smith Trust” wherein she devised and bequeathed her home in Houston and $50,000.00 to her trustees named therein to be held in trust for the benefit and use of her daughter, Mrs. Smith,, and the two daughters of Mrs. Smith.

The above five articles of the will constitute all the bequests of the testatrix before she deals with the residuary ,-j5ortion of her estate. Those bequests have been executed isC accordance with the expressed wishes of the testatrix, and t/here is no controversy with reference to them. They become ^important only [273]*273in so far as they shed light upon the intentions of the testatrix as expressed in Article Six of her will.

Article Six is in eight sections. Section 1 provides for the creation of a trust to be known as the “Rosa Allen Trust,” and names the First National Bank of Houston and John H. Crooker as trustees. The First National Bank of Houston, and an • alternate trustee named in Article Six, declined to accept the trust, and the Second National Bank of Houston was duly appointed substitute trustee by the District Court of Harris County, as authorized by the will.

The first paragraph of Section 2 of Article Six devises and bequeaths to the trustees “all of the rest and residue of my property of every sort and character, real, personal and mixed, and wheresoever situated.”

Section 3 gives the trustees broad powers with respect to handling and dealing with the trust property, which included the authority to sell or invest the same, and to change the form of the investment from time to time and reinvest the proceeds in other property.

Section 4 provides that the net income from the trust estate shall be distributed equally between her three daughters during their lives and the lifetime of the trust, with additional provisions, in the event of their deaths, for distribution of the net income to the children of her two daughters, Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Drouet.

Section 5 directs the trustees as to making reports and provides compensation for the bank trustee and for the appointment of substitute truseees.

Section 6 of Article Six is the provision directly involved in this suit. It provides that “all payments upon the principal” of all notes, accounts and obligations having fixed maturities owned by the testatrix at the time of her death, and which \ were to become a part of her residuary estate, should be distributed to her three daughters during their respective lifetimes. It further provides that these beneficiaries should “be paid and have distributed to them from time to time as herein* above ser out, all monies and proceeds arising from payments upon the principal of said vendor’s lien notes, other notes, accounts, debts and obligations having fixed maturities * * (Emphasis ours). It also provides that where the form of the [274]*274investments is changed from one having fixed maturities to some form having no fixed maturity, the provisions of that section should also apply, and that “payment and distribution shall be made to the beneficiaries hereof of amounts corresponding with the payments that would have matured upon the principal * * * had there been no reinvestment or change of form.” (Underscoring ours). The interpretation of these provisions in connection with the will as a whole is the basis for all the controversies of this suit. With emphasis on these features of the will we quote Section 6 in full, as follows:

“Among other property included in this residuary article of my will, I now own and will in all probability at the time of my death own, a considerable number of vendor’s lien notes arising from the sale to various persons, firms and corporations of different lands formerly owned by me, as well as other notes, accounts, debts and obligations due me, all of which have fixed maturities.

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Bluebook (online)
206 S.W.2d 208, 146 Tex. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-smith-tex-1947.