71 S.W.2d 580 | Tex. App. | 1934
This suit was instituted in the district court of Smith county, by appellants, Mrs. T. J. Messer and her husband, T. J. Messer, against appellee, Robert G. Carnes, to recover from him an undivided one-half interest in 128 acres of land situated in said county and to require him to execute a deed to appellant Mrs. Messer conveying such interest therein to her. Appellants alleged that said land was the separate property of Mrs. Frances Carnes Harris, deceased; that Mrs. Messer and appellee were her only children and heirs at law and inherited said land as such. Appellants further alleged that Mrs. Harris was born in the year 1850, and was at the time of the transactions hereinafter recited suffering from senile dementia and subject to the will and control of appellee; that he knew such condition and formed the fraudulent purpose to acquire her estate; that in pursuance of such purpose, he, on September 3, 1921, prepared and caused her to execute a purported *581 will in which she devised said land to him on condition that he move thereon and support and care for her during the remainder of her life; that appellee, on May 8, 1922, with such knowledge and fraudulent purpose, and with the particular intent to deprive Mrs. Messer of any inheritance from her said mother, caused Mrs. Harris to convey said land to him for a recited consideration of one dollar, support during her life, and burial at her death; that afterwards, on November 15, 1928, appellee caused and procured Mrs. Harris to execute and deliver to him a quitclaim deed to said land for a recited consideration of one dollar and for the purpose of releasing the land from any apparent lien arising out of the language used in the former deed. Appellants alleged that at the time of the execution of each of said deeds, Mrs. Harris was mentally incompetent and subject to the will and control of appellee. They further alleged that appellee concealed the existence of said will and that he did not probate it until after this suit was filed, and that they learned of its existence and probate for the first time when set up in appellee's pleadings herein. Appellants further alleged that Mrs. Harris, in devising said land to appellee upon the conditions alleged, further provided that if he failed to comply with such conditions such devise should be null and void and said land pass to her lawful heirs; that appellee failed to comply with such conditions, and that said devise had become null and void; and in that connection, prayed for a construction of said will.
Appellee denied appellants' allegations and claimed the land as grantee in said deeds and as devisee in said will. He also alleged compliance with all the conditions imposed upon him by the terms of said instruments and prayed for judgment establishing title to said land in him.
A jury was impaneled and the trial of the case begun. The court, on objection of appellee, excluded certain testimony which appellants deemed indispensable to establish their case. No further testimony being offered by them, the court instructed a verdict for appellee and rendered judgment that appellants take nothing and that appellee recover from them the land in controversy.
Appellant Mrs. Messer, being upon the stand and testifying, was asked by her counsel to describe her mother's mental status on September 3, 1921 (the date of said will), and continuously thereafter up to the date of her death. Appellee objected to the introduction of such testimony on the ground that appellants' suit was in effect a collateral attack upon the judgment of the county court probating said will, and that testimony with reference to the lack of mental capacity on the part of the testatrix was not admissible for such *582
purpose. The court sustained the objection. The witness, had she been permitted to do so, would have testified to facts tending to show lack of testamentary capacity on the part of Mrs. Harris at the time she made said will and continuously thereafter until her death. Jurisdiction over original proceedings to probate wills is conferred by the Constitution and laws of this state upon the county court, and upon that court alone. Const. art. 5, § 16; R.S. art. 3290. Ample provisions are made for review of such proceedings in the district court by appeal or certiorari. R.S. arts. 3291, 3698, and 932. Before any will can be admitted to probate, affirmative proof must be made that the testator was of sound mind at the time he executed the same. R.S. art. 3348. When a will has been regularly admitted to probate, special statutory provision is made for contesting the same by an action in the proper court. R.S. art. 5534. The county court in which such will was probated is the only proper court for such contest. Franks v. Chapman,
Appellants also assign as ground for reversal the refusal of the court to permit them to introduce testimony tending to show that appellee did not in fact comply with the requirement of the will that he support and maintain Mrs. Harris until her death. The paragraph of the will containing such requirement has been hereinbefore set out in hæc verba. Said paragraph further specifically provided that if appellee failed to comply with such requirement, the devise to him should be null and void and the land should pass share and share alike to the lawful heirs of the testatrix. Compliance by appellee with such requirement was a condition precedent to the vesting of the entire title to said land in him under and by virtue of said paragraph of the will. Minor v. Hall (Tex.Civ.App.)
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the cause remanded.