Wolnitzek v. Lewis

183 S.W. 819, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1916
DocketNo. 7052. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 183 S.W. 819 (Wolnitzek v. Lewis) 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
Wolnitzek v. Lewis, 183 S.W. 819, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 180 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, 0. J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the district court of Austin county admitting to probate the joint will of Paul and Franciska Wolnitzek, deceased, executed on April 6, 1903. The will was offered for probate by appellee, J. B. Lewis, the executor therein named, in the county court of Austin .county on January 4, 1912. On February 5, 1912, the appellants, Oscar Wolnitzek and Alma Wolnitzek, offered for probate a will of said Paul Wolnitzek executed on July 7, 1910, and contested the probate of the will offered by appellee, on the ground that it was obtained by undue influence and had been revoked by the testator. In answer to the application of appellants to probate the will of July 7, 1910, appellee pleaded that the deceased, Paul Wolnitzek, was of unsound mind at the time and fox-two years or more before the date of the execution of the will offered for probate by contestants, and was on January 21, 1910, adjudged a person of unsound mind by the county court of Austin county upon the verdict of a jury in said court on a trial upon a complaint duly filed charging him with lunacy, and appellee was appointed guardian of his person and estate. Appellee further resisted the probate of the will offered by contestants on the ground that the will of April 6, 1903, being a joint will executed by agreement between said Paul and Franciska Wol-nitzek, and the said Paul having retained possession of the joint property after the death of Franciska, could not revoke or change the terms of said joint will. He denied the allegations of appellants that the will offered was obtained by undue influence. The pleadings in the county court are somewhat voluminous, but the foregoing statement is believed to be the substance of the material issues presented. The trial in said court resulted in a judgment probating the will offered by appellee. Upon appeal to the district court and a trial by jury, a like judgment was rendered. There was no material change in the pleadings after the cause reached the district court. The special issues submitted to the jury and their findings thereon are as follows:

“Question No. 1. Do you find from the evidence that Paul and Franciska Wolnitzek executed the will hearing date April 6, 1003, and offered for probate by petitioner J. B. Lewis? You will answer this question, ‘Yes,’ or, ‘No.’
“We. the jury, answer question No. 1, ‘Yes.’
“Question No. 2. If you have answered the foregoing question, ‘Yes,’ then did Paul and Franciska Wolnitzek, in executing the will aforesaid, do so under an agreement to devise their property as set out in said will? If you find that they did make such agreement, then you will answer this question, ‘Yes.’ If you find they did not make such agreement, you will answer, ‘No.’
“We, the jury, answer question No. 2, ‘Yes.’
“(a) If you have answered the foregoing question No. 2, ‘Yes,’ then you will answer this question: At the time of the execution of said joint will by Paul and Franciska Wolnitzek, were they ‘unduly influenced,’ as that term is above defined, by J. B. Lewis and O. G-. Kreuger, or either of them, to make said agi-eement to devise their property as set out in said will? You will answer this question, ‘Yes,’ or, ‘No.’
“We, the jury, answer question No. 2a, ‘No.’
“Question No. 3. Did Paul Wolnitzek execute the will bearing date July 7, 3910? You will answer this question, ‘Yes,’ or, ‘No.’
“We, the jury, answer question No. 3, ‘Yes.’
“Question No. 4. If you have answered the foregoing question, ‘Yes,’ then you will answer the following-: At the time of the execution of said will, did said Paul Wolnitzek have sufficient mental capacity to know and to understand the nature of the transaction and to execute said will dated July 7, 1910? You will answer this question, ‘Yes,’ or, ‘No.’
“We, the jury, answer question No. 4, ‘No.’ ”

[1] Appellants’ first assignment of error complains of the ruling of the court refusing their motion for a change of venue, on the ground, that there was such a combination of influential persons in Austin county against them that they could not expect a fair and impartial trial in said county.

The motion was verified as required by the statute. Appellee filed an affidavit denying the facts stated in the motion and attacking the means of knowledge of the persons who verified the motion by their supporting affidavits. Upon the issue thus made, the burden was upon appellants to prove the facts upon which the motion was based. Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes, art. 1913; Railway Co. v. Bernard, 57 S. W. 686; Trimble v. Burroughs, 95 S. W. 614.

[2] We hardly think that the evidence upon this issue would have authorized the trial court to grant the motion; it certainly was not of such probative force as to compel a change of venue, and the judgment of the court refusing the motion cannot be disturbed. Freeman v. Cleary, 136 S. W. 521.

The second assignment of error complains of the refusal of the court to grant appellants’ motion to permit them to open and close the ease in introducing the evidence and in the argument to the jury. This motion, which was made under rule 31 for district and county courts, alleges that:

Appellants “admit that plaintiff J. B. Lewis has a good cause of action as set forth in his petition, except so far as it may be defeated in whole or in part by the facts of the answer ox-pleadings of these contestants constituting a good defense which may be established on the trial.”

Buie 31 (142 S. W. xx) is as follows:

“The plaintiff shall have the right to open and conclude, both in adducing his evidence and in the argument, unless the burden of proof of the whole case under the pleadings rests upon the defendant, or unless the defendant, or all of the defendants, if there should be more than one, shall, after the issues of fact are settled and before the trial commences, admit that the *822 plaintiff has a good cause of action as set forth in the petition, except so far as it may be defeated, in whole or in part, by the facts of the answer constituting a good defense, which may be established on the trial; which admission shall be entered of record, when the defendant, or the defendants, if more than one, shall have the right to open and conclude in adducing the evidence and in the argument of the cause.”

The admission in appellants’ motion is in the exact language of the rule, which, as said by our Supreme Court in the case of Smith v. Banks, 74 Tex. 545, 12 S. W. 222, “must he construed to mean that the defendant admits every fact alleged in the petition which it is necessary for the plaintiff to establish in the first instance to enable him to recover.” We think it manifest that appellants did not intend to make any such admission. One of the facts alleged by appellee, and which he was required to prove in order to obtain the probate of the will offered by him, was that said will was the last or unrevoked will of the testator.

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Bluebook (online)
183 S.W. 819, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolnitzek-v-lewis-texapp-1916.