Woods v. Townsend

192 S.W.2d 884, 144 Tex. 594, 1946 Tex. LEXIS 118
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1946
DocketNo. A-753.
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 192 S.W.2d 884 (Woods v. Townsend) 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
Woods v. Townsend, 192 S.W.2d 884, 144 Tex. 594, 1946 Tex. LEXIS 118 (Tex. 1946).

Opinion

*597 Mr. Justice Brewster

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Claude Townsend and Amos Townsend, respondents, were proponents of the will of William Green Townsend, deceased, probate of which was denied in both trial courts on a contest filed by Mary Townsend Woods et al, petitioners, alleging that the deceased lacked testamentary capacity and was under the undue influence of respondents when he executed the alleged will on August 27, 1942. The district court jury found that William Green Townsend did not have testamentary capacity and that he was acting under the undue influence of Amos Townsend when the instrument was executed.

In opinions ordered not to be published, the court of civil appeals first held that the evidence was insufficient as to both issues and remanded the cause for a new trial. But on rehearing it rendered judgment that the will be admitted to probate, holding that there was no evidence of lack of testamentary capacity but making no holding in that respect as to undue influence. We assume, therefore, that its judgment of rendition was based on the following statement in its opinion: “The case was remanded for a new trial in the belief that the facts had not been fully developed on the trial. In the course of the oral argument on the motions for rehearing, however, counsel for appellees stated that the facts on such issues of undue influence and lack of testamentary capacity had been fully developed and that the testimony thereon would not be materially different on another trial.”

That raises two questions for our decision, namely, whether there was an% evidence of the testator’s lack of testamentary capacity, and, if so, whether the holding that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s finding of lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence warranted the court of civil appeals in rendering judgment merely because contestants’ counsel stated in argument that the testimony on those issues had been fully developed and would not be materially different on another trial.

The next paragraph is taken verbatim from the opinion of that court in reversing and remanding the cause and is a fair resume of the testimony offered by petitioners:

Fourteen witnesses testified for the contestants of the will, twelve of whom were not interested in the outcome of the law suit, and related a number of specific instances on which they predicated their opinions as lay witnesses that the deceased was *598 of unsound mind at the time he executed the will. Some of them related instances in regard to influence exercised by Amos Townsend on the deceased. One witness, Paul N. Ashby, had been a merchant at Brookeland, Texas, and Uncle Billy had traded with him. Sometime in 1942 the witness saw the deceased and he testified the deceased was then feeble and did not know the witness. He stated that “it looked like he wasn’t normal. His age was 90 some odd years, I can’t have my opinion a man of that age would be normal. There was a. difference in the way he looked and in his actions when I used to see him in Brooke-land.” The witness D. E. Willis testified that he had known the deceased many years, that four or five years before the trial he did some notary work for the deceased and Amos Townsend ; that he drew up a power of attorney and when “Uncle Billy was asked to sign the paper he made his mark and afterwards asked 'Now what is that for?’ ” That sometime later he met Uncle Bill and Uncle Bill did not know him, that he was slouchy and was not as neat as he had formerly been. Mr. M. L. Woods testified that he had known the deceased many years, that he noticed a change in him in recent years, that he did not act like he used to, that Uncle Billy didn’t recognize him at a grave-yard working. Mr. M. T. Harvard testified that he had known Uncle Bill for about 15 years, that “there was a lots of difference between him in later years and that he acted like a man that didn’t have his right mind.” That on one occasion he pretended to be talking to his mules while plowing, his clothes were not clean and that on another occasion Uncle Bill didn’t recognize him. E. H. Marshall testified that he had known Uncle Bill for many years, saw him the last time in August, 1941, when he served some papers on him, that there was a lot of difference in him; that he was very forgetful and didn’t recognize him. Henry Jones testified that he had known Uncle Billy for many years; that he saw him in August, 1942, and noticed a change in him; that Mrs. Jones spoke to him and that he didn’t recognize her; that on a later occasion when another man was with him he saw Uncle Bill didn’t recognize the other man; that on another occasion while Uncle Bill was down at the witness’ house he sat down and helped the women shell peas and let the peas fall on the floor; that he said to one of the women present: “You got the God damnest biggest wild eyes I ever seen in my life.” Pratt DuBose testified that he had known Uncle Bill for many years, lived near him, that Uncle Bill used to be a big talker but in 1942 he didn’t have much to say and didn’t act and look the same. Another witness, Jack Woods, in his testimony related an incident when he was driving Uncle Bill Townsend to Ville Platte, Louisiana, to a-doctor. He stated that the old man got out of the car at a small filling station and answered a call of *599 nature near the car, while two ladies were in the car. Another witness, Mr. S. M. Mosley, stated that he had known Uncle Billy since 1908, and saw him at the cemetery working in August, 1942, and Uncle Billy didn’t recognize him; that he wasn’t as neatly dressed as he formerly had been and failed to recognize other acquaintances at that time. Lewis Powell testified that he drove the car which took Uncle Bill Townsend and Amos Townsend to Jasper on the day the will was signed; he took them to Dr. Hardy’s office and they went later to Mr. Faver’s office; that in driving between home and Jasper Uncle Bill stated, “There used to be lots of houses standing here.” Witness stated there had not been any houses in that locality. The witness Virgie Ruth Lakey testified that Uncle Billy would look wild out of his eyes, sometimes would go with his clothes unbuttoned, that the day when Uncle Billy Townsend had gone with Amos Townsend to Jasper he came back to her house and at that time he called her husband Lige, which was not the name of her husband but that of her husband’s uncle. She further testified that “several weeks after the day the will was signed Amos Townsend, one of the beneficiaries, said to her that ‘We got the papers fixed,’ I said, ‘What papers?’ and he said, ‘The will to me and Claude but the old man didn’t know what he was doing’.” J. W. Robbins testified that he was 78 years old and had known Uncle Bill Townsend all his life and that they were good friends; that there was quite a change in him in his last days, he had a wild look out of his eyes and didn’t have much to say, that his personal appearance was not good, that he saw him at the cemetary working and that he was very dirty; that he thought Amos influenced him and managed him better than parents manage their children today.

To agree that this testimony was no evidence of lack of testamentary capacity we would have to believe that it furnished no reasonable ground for'the jury’s conclusion that the deceased lacked that capacity when he executed the will.

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.W.2d 884, 144 Tex. 594, 1946 Tex. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-townsend-tex-1946.