Winkler v. Craven

265 S.W.2d 191, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 1927
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1954
Docket3140
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 265 S.W.2d 191 (Winkler v. Craven) 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
Winkler v. Craven, 265 S.W.2d 191, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 1927 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

HALE, Justice.

Appellees brought this suit against appellants for the partition of certain property and an accounting with respect thereto. The action involves the construction and application of the probated will of J. B. -Anderson, deceased. Appellants are the two children of the testator by his second marriage and appellees are the five children (or their heirs) of the testator by his first marriage. For a statement of the facts developed in the contested application to probate the will here involved, we refer, to the prior opinion of this court in the case *193 of Winkler v. Ciraven, Tex.Civ.App., 250 S.W.2d 300, er. ref.

J. B. Anderson was married to his first wife, Octavia, on September 30, 1880 and lived with her until she died, intestate, on October 27, 1895. He was married to his second wife, Mattie, on May 13, 1897 and lived with her until April 19, 1926, when he died. On January 10, 1895 he and his first wife acquired’ : 170 acres of land near Móody, Texas, by deed of that date, in consideration of $1,750 cash and the execution of six vendor’s lien notes, one note being for $1,300, due December 1, 1895 and the other five notes being for $400 each, being due' on or before December 1, 1896,. ’97, ’98, ’99 and 1900, respectively. On May 21, 1898, Anderson, as community survivor of himself and his first wife; being joined by his second wife, Mattie, sold and conveyed 57.93 acres out of the 170 acre tract for the sum of $1,882.72 in order to pay off the unpaid balance of the six vendor’s lien notes above referred to'and other community debts of himself and his first wife, thus leaving a residue of 112.7 acres of the original 170 acre tract. During the existence of his second marriage, Anderson and his second wife, Mattie, acquired as their community property an additional tract of 104.5 acres of land adjoining the 112.7 acres, a house and lot in the iCity of .Waco and certain household furniture.

By the terms of the probated will of J. B. Anderson he devised and bequeathed to his second wife, Mattie, in trust for the use and benefit of his minor children during their minority and his unmarried daughters until their marriage, and for the use and benefit of his second wife until her remarriage or death, all of his property, with remainder to his seven children, share and share alike, subject, however, to the following provisions :

“Upon the death or marriage of my wife, Mattie Anderson, I will that the title to all of my property shall pass to my children, but I desire it to be distinctly understood that it is my will that my separate estate, my interest in the community estate, as well as my vidfe,"- Mattie’ AridersbriV' interest "in said 'community estate, shall be divided ‘ equally among all of my children; seven' in number, share and share alike, and that no distinction or difference shall be made between' the children of my first wife and the children'of 'my second wife. And while I shall not attempt to dispose of 'my wife’s interest'in said cdmmtmity "estate, however, 'it is my will arid' I so direct, that ■ my estate shall be divided in such manner' that' all my children may share alike in the combined estates of myself arid my wife, Mattie Anderson.' That is to say', if the said Mattie Anderson should by deéd' or gift of her own property, or by will or otherwise, bestow upon our childreri, Jifnmie Anderson and J. B. Anderson, 'Jr., her entire estate, then my estate shall be divided among the children of my first wife, Octavia Anderson until each of their shares are equal to each of the shares received by Jimmie Anderson arid J. B. Ariderso’n, Jr., frbrii théir mother’s estate, and the balance, if any, shall be divided’’ equally, share and share', alike,'among all of my children. But it is expressly understood that said property shall not be divided or partitioned until the youngest of my children shall have attained his majority. 'But, upon the arrival of the youngest of my children then living, to the age of twenty-one years, my estate shall be divided among all my children, their portions to be equalized as hereinbefore expressly provided.”

Upon the death of J. B. Anderson in 1926, Mrs. Mattie Anderson took possession of all the property bequeathed to her under the will of her deceased husband, including the two tracts of land and the house in the City of Waco. She rented the two tracts of land to her deceased husband’s eldest son by his first marriage and continued to occupy the house in Waco as her homestead until she died intestate on October 5, 1950. Shortly after that time her married daughter, Mrs. Jimmie Lee Winkler, and husband took exclusive pos *194 session of the house in- Waco and continued to use and occupy the same as their place of residence until this case was tried on April 13, 1953. Under date of .July 14, 1951 the appellees herein, acting by their attorney, made written demand of Mrs. Winkler and her husband for payment to them of their proportionate share of the rental value of the property they were occupying until the pending suit should be disposed of and the property divided between its joint owners.

The case was tried before a jury. In response to certain special issues the jury found that the reasonable market value of the 112.7 acre tract of land was $187.50 per acre, the value of the 104.5 acre, tract was $180 per acre, the value of the house and lot in Waco was $12,500, the amount of rents received by Mrs. Mattie Anderson from the 112.7 acres from April 19, 1926 to October 5, 1950 was $27,500 and that the reasonable rental value of the house and lot in Waco from July 14, 1951 to the time of trial on April 13, 1953 was $110 per month. The trial court concluded from the findings of the jury and the material facts established by the undisputed evidence that the value of the shares of the estate of J. B. Anderson received by each of the appellees by virtue of his will did not equal the value of the shares received by each appellant from their mother’s estate; that appellees are the sole joint owners of the 112.7. acre tract of land and as such are entitled to judgment against appellants for the title and ¡ possession thereof and to receive the residue of the rents on deposit to the credit of Mrs. Mattie Anderson in the Bank at Moody at the time of . her death in the sum of $11,387.84; that appellees are entitled to receive from Mrs. Winkler and husband their just and equitable share of the rental value of the house in Waco from July 14, 1951 to the time of trial in the total sum of. $1,155, that appellees are entitled to re.-ceive their pro rata part of the rents collected by the Receiver from .the two tracts of land after October 5, 1950, the same amounting to $4,916.92 for appellees and $1,466.63 for appellants; that the ,104.5 acre tract, being susceptible.of an equitable partition in kind, should be divided equally by Commissioners between appellants jointly and appellees jointly; that the house and lot-in Waco and the household furniture, not being susceptible of an equitable partition in kind, should be sold by the court appointed Receiver and the proceeds derived therefrom divided equally between appellants on the one hand and appellees on the other, provided, however, that the sum of $1,617.82 should be deducted from the one-half awarded to appellants and that such sum should be paid over to appellees to compensate them for a deficiency in that amount of one-half of-the net rents received by Mrs. Mattie Anderson from the 112.7 acre tract of land.

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Bluebook (online)
265 S.W.2d 191, 1954 Tex. App. LEXIS 1927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winkler-v-craven-texapp-1954.