This is а suit for declaratory judgment to construe the joint and mutual will of Joe and Myrtle Livsey, husband and wife. The will devised and bequeathed all property to the survivor аbsolutely and in fee simple, but provided that should Mr. and Mrs. Livsey die “simultaneously, or approximately so” all of the property would vest in “the children of eithеr of us, said children being Harold Fulton King, James Lee King, Oquinda Faye Narramore and the grandchildren of either of us living at the time of our deaths, each of said сhildren and grandchildren to share and share alike in said estate . . . ” If the deaths were not simultaneous or approximately so and one party therеfore survived the other and subsequently died, the property was left undisposed of and would vest as an intestate remainder of the survivor’s estate.
Myrtle Livsey diеd on January 28, 1973. Joe Livsey died of an unrelated cause seven days later on February 4, 1973. Both Mr. and Mrs. Livsey had been previously married. The children and grandchildren named in the will were those of Mrs. Liv-sey. Joe Livsey had no child.
The will was admitted to probate on February 7, 1973 in the Bowie County Court. On February 15, 1973, the independent exеcutor named in the will filed this action seeking a construction of the “simultaneous death” provision of the will to determine if the deaths came within that provision. The petition for declaratory judgment listed the children and grandchildren who were named in the will as devi-sees and legatees under the “simultaneous death” provision, but they were not named as plaintiffs or defendants, and citations to them were neither issued nor served. The heirs at law of Joe Livsey were nоt listed or named. Some, but not all of these heirs intervened in the action. In a nonjury trial the court, in construing the will, found that the deaths of Myrtle and Joe Livsey, oсcurring seven days apart, did occur “simultaneously or approximately so” within the meaning of the will, thus vesting the estate in the children and grandchildren named therein. The heirs at law of Joe Livsey have appealed, urging ten points of error.
The first four points assert that there is an absence of indispensable parties. We have concluded that these points are well taken.
Under one construction of the will — that the deaths occurred simultaneоusly or approximately so, the children and grandchildren named in the will take the entire estate. Under the other construction of the will — that the deaths were not simultaneous or approximately so, Joe Livsey, having survived his wife would have received the entire estate, and as the will made no disposition of the property in such event it would vest in his heirs at law as in intestacy. Consequently, both of these groups, the named devisees and legatees in the will and the heirs at law of Joe Livsey, stand to gain or lose the property depending upon the construction given the will.
It has long been the rule that all partiеs whose interests in the property will be affected by a construction of the will are indispensable parties to an action to construe the will. 96 C.J.S. Wills § 1088 р. 765; 61 T.J.2d p. 339 and 340; Hay v. Hay,
Appellees contend that as the Declaratory Judgment Act provides that “no declaration shall prejudice the rights of persons not parties to the proceedings”, the omitted pаrties are at most only “insistible parties” rather than “indispensable parties,” and that the court had the discretion to proceed without them. We cannot agree. The Act provides that all parties who have an interest which would be affected by the declaration
"shall be made parties . ■ . ”
The additional language tо the effect that no declaration shall prejudice the rights of persons not parties to the action does not militate against this express command, but only serves to emphasize it. Stanley v. Mueller,
It is true that Rule 39, and especially the amendment of Jhe rule effective January 1, 1971, relaxed the requirements of necessary jоinder and gave the trial court the discretion to determine if parties whose interests may be affected by the de
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cree are indispensable or only insistible, based upon various criteria enumerated in the rule. However, the rule making power is a limited power, exercisable only in a manner nоt inconsistent with the law of the State. Vernon’s Ann.Tex. Const. Art. V, Sec. 25. As recently emphasized by our Supreme Court, when a rule of the court conflicts with a legislativе enactment, the rule must yield. Few v. Charter Oak Fire Insurance Co.,
We therefore conclude that the legatees and devisees named in the will and ' the heirs at law of Joe Livsey are all indispensable parties to this action and that the trial court was without jurisdiction to proceed in the absence of any of them. Lack of indispensable parties is fundamental error which must be noted by the appellate court. Petroleum Anchor Equipment, Inc. v. Tyra,
For the lack of indispensable parties, the judgment is reversed and remanded to the trial court with instructions that if such parties are not joined within a reasonable time, the action is to be dismissed.
Appellants’ other points are not reached.
