49 S.W.2d 998 | Tex. App. | 1932
Defendant in error Aug. Uehlinger filed an application in the county court of Nueces county, Tex., on February 26, 1930, to probate an alleged will (also filing the will) of Clara V. Rosales, deceased, and seeking to have himself appointed independent executor without bond or security, and with no further action in court than to return an inventory and appraisement of the estate of the deceased.
Prior to a hearing upon the application, plaintiff in error, Eduardo Idar, for himself and as representing the blood heirs of decedent, on March 20, 1930, filed a protest against admission of the alleged will to probate, setting up, among other things, invalidity and unconstitutionality of the laws under which such notice or citation was issued and served, as well as the insufficiency in law of the said notice or citation and the service and return of the officer, and alleging also unsoundness and lack of mental capacity on part of the alleged testatrix to make a valid will, and fraud and undue influence on the part of the proponents and others in its alleged execution, and that the same was an unnatural will leaving a large estate to strangers to her blood, and disinheriting her own blood relatives, the plaintiffs, on part of testatrix.
The court overruled all exceptions to the pleading and after considering the same heard the case on its merits, rendered judgment for defendant in error, and appointed Aug. Uehlinger executor without bond or other security.
Plaintiff in error has briefed the case very elaborately, but as no statement of facts was made and filed it is impossible for us to pass upon many of the questions raised and presented.
Plaintiff in error's first proposition claims that special issue No. 1 was a comment on the weight of the evidence. It is impossible for us to pass upon the same without the evidence bearing on the subject; we cannot assume the same was an issue of fact before the jury in the absence of a statement of facts, and in all the cited cases there was a statement of facts. In the case of Wetz v. Schneider,
Plaintiff in error complains at the use of the word "cannot" in the charge, and the use of the words "arguments, persuasions, affection and attachment," which they claim as too strong.
In the case of Patterson v. Lamb,
In Wetz et al. v. Schneider et al.,
In the case of Holmes v. Houston et al. (Tex.Civ.App.)
In the case of Fox v. Bierman et al.,
"Not only was the burden on appellees to establish undue influence, but it devolved upon them to show that it was operating upon the mind of the testator at the time that he executed the will * * * and that the execution of the will was the outcome of an influence amounting to moral coercion, which destroyed his volition, and caused him to make a disposition of his property which he did not wish to make. * * *
"It [undue influence] is an influence which destroys the free agency of this testator, and places him in a position where he is dominated by another, which acted directly on his mind at the very time when he executed the will."
In the case of George B. Brown v. John Mitchell et al.,
In regard to the charge of misconduct of the jury, there is no statement of facts showing any such evidence, and we cannot discern it in the absence of a statement of facts.
The courts have repeatedly held that the burden of proof to establish unsound mind and undue influence is upon the protestants.
In regard to the method of posting notices of probate, see article 3334 (as amended by Acts 1929, c.
Because there is no statement of facts filed in this case it is impossible to give a full discussion, such as we should like to make, of all the questions raised, and this applies to the charges too. We deem it important that the judgment be affirmed. *1107