Appellant sought to probate the will of Mrs. Manuela Morales Guerguin in the county court, and a contest was filed by Mrs. Annie Guerguin, as next friend of her husband, Leopold Guerguin, a person of unsound mind, on the ground of the mental condition of testatrix at the time the will was executed, October 6, 1910, by reason of the fact that the will was not executed as required by law, of undue influence over testatrix by appellant, and of fraud perpetrated by her. On October 16, 1911, Carlos Guer-guin, a minor, and Edna Guerguin Hill, joined by her husband, O. A. Hill, children of Leopold Guerguin, intervened in the contest, adopting the pleadings of Annie Guer-guin. The will was admitted to probate by ±he county court, and the cause -was appealed to the district court. Prior to that time Annie Guerguin, as next friend of Leopold Guerguin, had filed two suits against appellant, one to set aside a deed executed by Charles Guerguin and Manuela Morales Guerguin, parents of Leopold Guerguin and appellant, in which they had conveyed to appellant all the property they owned, as well as certain lots belonging to Leopold Guerguin; the other suit being to recover certain jewelry and other personal property. When the will contest reached the district court, the three suits were consolidated by agreement. Edna Hill, joined by her husband, for herself and her minor brother, Carlos Guerguin, filed an amended pleading, in which it was alleged that Leopold Guer-guin had died pending the suit, and that Edna Hill and Carlos Guerguin were his surviving children and only heirs at law; that Charles Guerguin, the father of Leopold, died on May 11, 1911, and Manuela Morales Guerguin, his wife, and mother of Leopold Guerguin, died on April 30, 1911, and that they at the time of their death owned the property in controversy, situated in San Antonio, and 237,135 acres of land in Mexico. It was alleged that on or about October 6, 1910, Adeline Guerguin Holt, her husband, D. T. Holt, J. G. Griner, and W. L. Frame entered into a conspiracy to deprive Leopold Guerguin, their insane father, of his share of his parents’ estate, and in pursu- *583 anee of the conspiracy caused Manuela Morales Guerguin to execute the document purporting to be her last will and testament, whereby all the property of the estate was bequeathed to Adeline Guerguin Holt; that at said time the purported testatrix was of unsound mind, without capacity to understand the effect of the instrument she was executing, and the property she was devising, or her relation to her son; that the property sought to be devised was of the probable value of $500,000; that Manuela Morales Guer-guin at the time was about 75 years of age, and was mentally and physically weak and infirm, and was a bedridden invalid and paralytic, and executed the will under the influence and by the fraud and trickery of the conspirators named; that Charles Guer-guin was weak physically and mentally, and helpless and infirm; and that he and his wife, Manuela, were under the control, custody, and influence of appellant and wholly unable to exercise their own will. It was further alleged that on the day succeeding the execution of the will by Manuela Morales Guerguin she and her 'husband, Charles Guerguin, were induced, through the fraud, trickery, and undue influence of the conspirators, to execute a deed to the whole of their property, real and personal, to appellant; that Charles Guerguin, at the time, was nearly 90 years old, was blind and nearly completely deaf; that he and his wife were rapidly approaching dissolution, were suffering from Bright’s disease and hardening of the arteries, and in a condition of senility that rendered them incapable of understanding the nature of the transactions into which they were led by the conspirators. It was also alleged that the deed was concealed until after the death of Charles and Manuela Guerguin. Each and every allegation of the petition was specially traversed by appellant. The cause was tried by jury on special issues submitted by the court, and on the answers thereto judgment was rendered annulling the will of Manuela Morales Guerguin, canceling the deed made by Charles Guerguin and Manuela Morales Guerguin to appellant, dated October 7, 1910, canceling a deed made by Manuela Morales Guerguin and Carlos Guerguin to appellant; that ap-pellees recover from appellant lots 4, 5, and 6, block 8, new city block 972,. in San Antonio, Tex., being the homestead of Mrs. Annie Guerguin and appellees; that appel-lees recover one-half the property of the estate in Texas and Mexico; that they recover $835, being the value of certain personal property; and that they recover from appellant $10,476.54, with interest. Commissioners were appointed to appraise the real property, which was undivided, and apportion appellant a one-half interest in the same, and that the other moiety be apportioned, one half of it to Edna Hill, and the other half to Carlos Guerguin.
In the ease of Ashton v. Thompson,
As said by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in Woodbury v. Woodbury,
It is insisted that a moving cause for the execution of the instruments which stripped the insane son of any inheritance in property that he had devoted his life to enhancing in value, and robbed the minor grandchildren (the only ones, by the way) of any part in the estate, was caused by the hatred of the aged couple to their daughter-in-law, but how easy it would have been to have devised the property so that she could not have reached it, and, even if the insane father had been deprived of it, to have given something to the minor grandchildren. The legal adviser and doubtless the appellant knew that, but it was not suggested. According to the testimony of the mother of appellees, the old people did not entertain any animosity to her, but invited her to call on them, which she was not permitted to do by appellant. The wife was even deprived of the privilege of seeing her husband by appellant, after he was taken to his parents’ home. After the husband left for the asylum, Mrs. Guerguin was denied admittance to the presence of her parents-in-law; the reason given by appellant being that they were sick and would cry. The minor appellee, • Carlos Guerguin, was his grandfather’s namesake, and had been so named by his grandmother. He was the only grandson, and yet by the instruments under which appellant claims the property he was totally disinherited and his paternity and that of his sister questioned by the beneficiary in the instruments, the appellant herein.
The twentieth and twenty-first assignments of error are not followed by - statements casting any light on them, and they are overruled.
The case of Salinas v. Garcia,
The judgment is affirmed.
