76 Tex. 479 | Tex. | 1890
Lead Opinion
This is an action of trespass to try title brought by the appellants, on the 13th day of January, 1886, against the appellees, to recover an undivided one-half interest in 1107 acres of land ■granted to Darwin M. Stapp.
The appellants deraign title to the land from and under the will of Thomas P. Rutledge, executed on January 7, 1848, and probated on April 29, 1850.
It was provided by the clause of the will under which appellants claim title that all property, real or personal, owned by the testator should vest first in Eliza Rutledge, his wife, for the period of twenty-one years from his death, at the expiration of which time it should go to any ■child or children of the testator he might have by his said wife. In the ■event of the death of his offspring by his said wife, the property was to vest in her for life. In the event of the death of his wife Eliza without offspring by him surviving her, his property should be owned equally by the children of Alsey S. Miller who survived the testator, and which he might have by his present wife. (Such are the appellees in this, case.)
It was admitted that the land involved was the community property of Thomas F. and his wife Eliza Rutledge on the 7th day of june, 1848,
Foster testified that the defendants had been in possession of the land since 1850 as a homestead, when he married Eliza Rutledge, the widow •of Thomas P. Rutledge, and had paid the taxes on the same, except perhaps the first year, when they were paid by Miller, the executor; that A. ■S. Miller lived about five miles from the land, and raised his family there; the plaintiffs were born there and lived there until they attained their majority; plaintiff Mrs. Nicholls, up to the time of her marriage to Ramsey, lived at defendant's place about as much as at her father's; defend.ant Foster lived at Miller's place when he married said Eliza; the families were intimate, Alsey S. Miller’s wife and Eliza Rutledge being sisters; “the matter of the judgment vacating the will was often discussed between us,” and plaintiffs knew all about it, he supposed; a copy of the judgment was at his house.
On the 19th of April, 1852, Eliza Foster, formerly the wife of Thomas P. Rutledge, joined by her husband W. L. Foster, filed a petition in the District Court of Gonzales County, where the parties resided, against the ■executor under the will, to set aside and declare the same null and void.
The petition alleged that she was the relict of said Thomas P. Rutledge; the execution of the will on June 7, 1848, at which time he had a small amount of property and no children; that afterwards he had a child born to him, who is now living, named William M. Rutledge; that said deceased, late in 1849, and long after the birth of his child, left on a visit to Tennessee, and died on his return passage on January 10, 1850; and Alsey Miller, with whom his business was left, and the will found amongst his papers, felt it his duty to have the probate thereof made, and the same was done in Gonzales County on the 29th of April, 1850, and he was appointed executor thereon. Tour petitioners allege that all the property of the deceased was community property; that said will was made without reference to the contingency which took place, or at least before the
Ah answer was filed by the executor and by 8. B. Conley, guardian ad litem for the minor W. M. Rutledge. The answer of the executor, Alsey 8. Miller, admitted the truth of the material facts set forth in the petition. The minor and heir, W. M. Rutledge, through his guardian ad litem, answered, in effect neither admitting nor denying the allegations, and submitted the matters to the court.
The following judgment was rendered by the court:
“Foster and Wife v. Miller, Executor—253.—Saturday, October 22, 1852, came all the parties by their attorneys, and 8. B. Conley, Esq., guardian ad litem for the minor William M. Rutledge, and the matters and things being all before the court by the pleadings and record evidence therein, the same was submitted to the court, and being heard, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the will of the deceased, Thomas P. Rutledge, made on June 7,1848, and admitted to probate on April 29, 1850, be and the same is hereby declared to be null, void, and of no effect, and that the same be in all things set aside and held for naught. It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the said Eliza Ann Foster, as, relict of said Rutledge, deceased, and the said William M. Rutledge, minor, be entitled to take, receive, and. hold all the property of said deceased jointly between them as heirs at law, be the same real, personal, or mixed, and subject to the action of the County Court of Gonzales County as to,
We do not deem it necessary to consider each of the assignments presented or to comment upon the many authorities cited in the elaborate briefs in support of the propositions respectively contended for by appellants and appellees, but shall confine our examination of the questions raised to those we believe to be decisive. There are three controlling propositions involved in this case, and the law of each we believe, upon principle and authority, to be settled adversely to appellants. If the law is so'settled in either one of them, it precludes a recovery by appellants.
It is earnestly contended that the appellants were not parties to the suit in which the judgment vacating the will was rendered; that it is not therefore binding on them, and is subject to be impeached in this action; that they were necessary parties to the suit, and that it was not such a proceeding in rem as would be for that reason conclusive as to them.
Before determining whether this judgment is conclusive as to appellants upon the principle that a proceeding to probate or vacate a will is one in rem and binding upon the world, it may be well to ascertain whether the objection to the judgment upon the ground that plaintiffs were not parties to it has any foundation in fact; and whether they were parties to it depends upon the character of and legal consequences attached to the estate created by the will in favor of plaintiffs, and the relation established by law between such estate and other estates created by the same instrument in favor of other devisees who were parties to the judgment sought to be impeached.
The will of Thomas P. Rutledge bequeathed to his wife Eliza Rutledge all of his estate, real and personal, for and during the period of twenty-one years from and after his death. After the expiration of said twenty-one years it was provided that his estate should be “owned and enjoyed by my offspring or child or children by my said wife. In the event of the death of my said wife without offspring by me at her death which may survive her, I direct that all of my estate, real and personal, shall be •owned equally by the children of Alsey S. Miller which may survive me which he may have by his present wife. In the event of the death of the offspring which I may have by my said wife, I direct that my said wife shall have all of my estate, real and personal, for and during her life,” etc. Such are the estates created by the will, and applying to'the estate -created in favor of plaintiffs (Upon the contingencies stated) the description given by the learned writers on this intricate branch of the law of a
Tested, then, by the definition of a remainder—that is, an estate limited to an uncertain person, or to a certain person and a certain event, but not vesting in possession until the determination of the preceding estates (Wigram on Wills, p. 139)—the remainder in fee to plaintiffs was-contingent upon W. M. Rutledge’s death, but did not take effect in possession because of the estate for years and the estate for life in Eliza Rutledge, unless after it vested in plaintiffs her estate failed or was renounced, in which event it would vest in possession as fully as if her estate had terminated under the will.
Such being the estate of appellants, the next inquiry is, how far and. to what extent they would be represented by those to whom other estates', were devised in a suit to which such other devisees were parties.
After discussing the rule, "that persons having an interest in the subject matter should under all circumstances be before the court as parties,” Judge Story says: " On the contrary, there are cases in which certain parties before the court are entitled to be deemed the full representatives, of all other persons, or at least so far as to bind interests under the decree, although they are not or can not be made parties.” Story’s Eq. Plead., sec. 142. Citing examples in support of the rule, he says: "Upon, similar grounds of a virtual representation of all proper interests where-there is real estate in controversy which is subject to an entail, it is generally sufficient—all the parties having antecedent estates being before-the court—to make the first tenant in tail in esse in whom an estate of' inheritance is vested a party with those claiming the prior interests, without making any persons parties who may claim in remainder or reversion after such vested estate of inheritance. The tenant in tail, in such case, is equally the representative of all subsequent estates and interests.” Id., sec. 144. "And a decree for or against such tenant in tail will generally bind those in remainder or reversion, although by the failure of all the previous estates the estates in remainder or reversion may afterwards vest, in possession. * * * If there be no tenant in tail in being, the first, person in being entitled to the inheritance should be made a party, and if there be no such person in being, then the tenant for life; and in such a case the decree made will bind the other persons not in being. So-where a bill is brought by a tenant in tail, or by any other person having the first estate of inheritance, other persons having a subsequent vested or contingent interest will generally be bound by the decree, and will
An exception to this rule of virtual representation is said to exist “where a person is in being, claiming under a limitation by way of executory devise, not subject to any preceding vested estate of inheritance.”
The rule on this subject is also stated by Mr. Freeman as follows: “If several remainders are limited by the same deed, this creates a privity between the person in remainder and all those who may come after him, and a judgment for or against the former may be given in evidence for or against the latter.
“ So where lands were conveyed to be held, first for S. P. 0. for life; second, remainder to the heirs of his body; third, remainder to R. 0. for life; fourth, remainder to heirs of R. C/s body; fifth, remainder in fee to children of S. 0.; in an action against the trustees the deed was set. aside. S. P. 0. and R. 0. dying afterward, the children of S. 0. sued to obtain their remainder in fee. It was held that the decree setting aside the deed was binding on them; that the contingent remainder depended on the legal fee and estate in S. P. 0. intermediate, and was liable to be destroyed by anything which defeated these estates. It is sufficient to bring before the court the first tenant in tail in being, and if there be no such tenant, then the first person entitled to the inheritance, and if no. such person, then the tenant for life.” Freem. on Judg., sec. 172, and cases cited.
Applying these principles to this case, we do not find appellants claiming “under a limitation by way of executory devise not subject to any-preceding vested estate of inheritance,” and therefore an exception to the rule of virtual representation, because it was subject to the preceding estate of inheritance of W. M. Rutledge. But we do find several remainders limited by the same instrument, and that of appellants dependent on the estate of W. M. Rutledge, the vested estate of twenty-one years in Eliza Rutledge, and the contingency of a life estate in her.
We find also that when the judgment vacating the will was rendered in 1852, and that the person entitled to the first estate of inheritance, as also the tenant for life and for years, were parties to the suit, their estates were destroyed by this judgment; and if the principle be correct that the estate in remainder is subject to destruction by anything which defeats the preceding inheritable estate, it necessarily follows that such was the effect upon the estate of appellants.
If the doctrine of virtual representation as announced in the authorities cited applies where the tenant for life is made a party when there is no person in existence having an estate of inheritance, by stronger reason would it apply and include as a party the appellants when the person having the inheritable estate was in existence and a party, as well also as the tenant for life. It is to be observed in this connection that the execu
A judgment affecting the validity of a testament is an exception to the rule that only parties to the same or their successors are bound. Bige. on Estop., p. 12.
The statute (Pasch. Dig., art. 1262) under which the will was vacated did not declare who should be parties to the suit; and it has been repeatedly held in this State that in suits involving the title to land (and - the suit to vacate the will involved the title to land) it is not necessary to make the heirs parties with the executor. Gunter v. Fox, 51 Texas, 383; Zacharie v. Waldrom, 56 Texas, 117; Guilford v. Love, 49 Texas, 715.
If, however, the appellants were necessary parties, we think under the authorities cited they were represented by the persons made parties owning the estate of inheritance and the life estate, together with the executor under the will, who was also a party.
The suit to set aside the will was instituted under article 1262, PaschaPs Digest, the law then in force. This article, after providing the manner in which a will shall be probated, provides: “Any person interested in any such will may within four years after it is admitted to probate institute suit in the District Court to contest its validity. Infants, femes covert, and persons non compos mentis are allowed the same period after the removal of their respective disabilities within which to institute such suit,” etc.
There can be no doubt that in October, 1852, the District Court was clothed with the jurisdiction to determine any contest with respect to the validity of a will. This question was settled in the early case of Parker v. Parker, 10 Texas, 86, which has been repeatedly cited since with approval, in which case it was held that independently of its general and enlarged powers to entertain such a suit, it was expressly conferred by the statute. Vickery v. Hobbs, 21 Texas, 571. The transfer of this jurisdiction under the provisions of the present Constitution was explained in Franks v. Chapman, 60 Texas, 46. ****** *
We are of opinion that there is no error in the judgment, and that it •should be affirmed.
June 28, 1889.—Report of Commission of Appeals examined, and, without passing on other questions discussed in the report, we approve so much of the opinion as holds that the necessary parties were before ■the court when the decree annulling the probate of the will of Thomas
Affirmed.
An application of appellants for rehearing was granted.
Frank G. Morris, on rehearing, filed an elaborate argument.
Rehearing
On Rehearing at Galveston.
A rehearing was granted in this cause, ■and after reconsidering the case we are of opinion that the judgment was properly affirmed on the former hearing on the one ground then made the basis of the judgment, and now, as then, it becomes unnecessary to pass ■on other questions discussed in the opinion of the Commission of Appeals.
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Delivered March 11, 1890.