OPINION
This is an appeal from a will contest. Appellant John G. Oechsner Jr. and his sister, Kathleen Gilliland, contested the Application for Probate of the Last Will and Testament and Codicil thereto of their father, John G. Oechsner Sr. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of Appellees, Scottish Rite Hospital and Elvira Lopez, beneficiaries under the will and codicil. In four points of error, Appellant challenges the judgment of the trial court. We affirm.
I. SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE
John G. Oechsner Sr. and his wife, Maren Oechsner, executed largely identical wills leaving their respective properties in trust to each other, upon the death of either of them, then to their children, John Oechsner Jr. (hereinafter Oechsner Jr.) and Kathleen Gilliland, upon the death of the surviving spouse. Maren Oechsner subsequently changed her will on January 29,1980, without her husband’s knowledge and completely disinherited him. John G. Oechsner Sr. was predeceased by his wife, who died on January 1, 1985. On January 3, 1985, two days after his wife’s funeral, Oechsner Sr. was advised of the existence of the provision in his late wife’s will regarding his disinheritance, and as a result, became upset about the disposition of the properties and the fact that he had not previously been told of the change. Moreover, Oechs-ner Sr. became upset by his children’s attempt to inventory household items shortly after his wife’s death. Thereafter, disagreement and conflict arose between Oechsner Sr. and his children concerning the inventorying and disbursement of the assets of Mrs. Oechsner’s estate.
On January 29, 1985, less than a month after his wife’s death, Oechsner Sr. executed his Last Will and Testament devising his entire estate to the Texas Scottish Rite Hospital For Crippled Children. No provision was made for his son or daughter.
Efforts to settle his late wife’s estate continued until October 1985 at which time they were concluded.
*133 On October 24, 1985, Oechsner Sr. executed a codicil to his will which left his home to his housekeeper, Elvira Lopez. At the time of the execution of both the will and codicil, Oechsner Sr. was ninety-three years old.
John Oechsner Sr. died on October 31, 1988. Appellant, John Oechsner Jr. and his sister, Kathleen Gilliland, instituted this action on November 11, 1988, contesting both the will and codicil of their father. As contestants, they alleged John Oechsner Sr. lacked testamentary capacity when he executed both the will and codicil because he was suffering under some form of insane delusion and was subjected to undue influence by the Scottish Rite Hospital and Elvira Lopez.
II. DISCUSSION
In his first point of error, Appellant argues the trial court erred in overruling his objection to the definition of insane delusion, as requested by Appellees and included in the court’s charge. In Point of Error No. Two, Appellant contends the trial court erred in failing to submit his requested definition of insane delusion.
. We note at the outset that Appellant timely tendered his own instruction on insane delusion and objected to the instruction as submitted to the jury. Appellant, however, failed to have his proposed instruction noted as “refused” or “modified,” nor was the proposed instruction signed by the trial court. Generally, to preserve review on appeal of a trial court’s refusal or modification of a requested instruction, question, or definition, established rules of procedure require that the trial court endorse "refused” or “modified” on the same and sign it.
1
Tex.R.Civ.P. 276. In spite of Rule 276, this Court has held that such error is properly preserved even when the proposed instruction does not contain the judge’s signature if “the record clearly demonstrates that the instruction was ‘timely presented, opposing counsel knew it was before the trial court and the trial court clearly refused to submit it.’ ”
Chemical Express Carriers, Inc. v. Pina,
The form of definitions and instructions submitted to a jury rests upon the sound discretion of the trial court.
Nixon v. Sipes,
A trial court’s refusal to submit a requested instruction will not be overturned on appeal unless the court abused its discretion.
Magro v. Ragsdale Brothers, Inc.,
The record reflects that the instructions submitted to the jury in the present case, which consisted of a definition of testamentary capacity together with that of insane delusion, provided as follows:
Testamentary capacity is composed of all four of these elements being present at the same time: (a) the ability of JOHN G. OECHSNER SR., to know and understand the business in which the [sic] he is engaged; (b) the ability of JOHN G. OECHSNER, SR., to know the effect of the act of making the will; (c) the capacity of JOHN G. OECHSNER, SR., to know the objects of his bounty and their claims upon him; and (d) the capacity of JOHN G. OECHSNER, SR., to know the general nature and extent of his property-
To make a valid will, the person making the will must have testamentary capacity, and must not, at the time of the execution of the will, be laboring under an insane delusion, which influenced the person executing such will to dispose of his property in a way which he would not have disposed of it but for the insane delusion.
You are further instructed that by ‘insane delusion’ is meant the belief of a state of supposed facts which no rational person would believe. 2
In addition to the submission of the above instruction, Appellant requested that the following language further defining “insane delusion” be given:
An insane delusion is a misconception of fact, or an abnormal mental attitude, due to some organic defect in the brain or some functional disorder of the mind. That it is so due may be inferred from its purport, if too fantastic to be the product of a normal mind; or from its fixed and persistent nature, if conceived without foundation in reason; or from its progressive immoderateness if originally induced by some rational cause; or from its origin in a previous state of irrationality.
Appellant contends that the trial court’s failure to submit the above requested language constituted an abuse of discretion, and thus error. We disagree.
In
Knight v. Edwards,
Given the above established definition of insane delusion, an instruction, identical to the instruction submitted in the instant case, was considered by the Texas Supreme Court in
Lindley,
The additional language attempting to explain or further define insane delusion which was submitted by Appellant to the trial court for its consideration is nothing more than a discussion of the concept of insane delusion, as advanced by courts of jurisdictions other than our own.
See Lindley,
We find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by refusing to submit Appellant’s requested definition of insane delusion insofar as it varies from the established definition as adopted by courts of this state for over 100 years. Moreover, the inclusion of such a proposed definition would have served to burden the jury with a surplus instruction.
Acord v. General Motors Corp.,
In Appellant’s first point of error, it is urged that the trial court erred in overruling Appellant’s objection to the charge as submitted to the jury. On appeal, Appellant complains, for the first time, that the charge as submitted to the jury was defective because the instruction failed to link the concepts of testamentary capacity and insane delusion. Specifically, Appellant, in his brief on appeal, contends that “[t]here is nothing in the instruction which refer [sic] the existence or non-existence of an insane delusion to testamentary capacity.”
We note that in the trial court below, Appellant wholly failed to object to the jury charge on this specific ground. To the contrary, the trial objection was limited to the failure of the court to include the “extra” language requested by Appellant, as fully addressed above in Point of Error No. One. Consequently, Appellant has failed to properly preserve error for review. A party is confined to the jury instruction objection made at trial; any variant complaint on appeal is waived.
Lakeway Land Co. v. Kizer,
*136 In Point of Error No. Three, Appellant contends that the trial court erred in overruling his motion for new trial. Specifically, Appellant, in his motion for new trial, asserted that the jury’s findings to questions one and two are against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. 5
A factual insufficiency point requires us to examine all of the evidence in determining whether the finding in question is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust.
In re King’s Estate,
As noted above, for the past century, Texas courts have defined an insane delusion as “the belief of a state of supposed facts that do not exist, and which no rational person would believe.”
See Knight v. Edwards,
The record shows testimony by Appellant’s psychologist, Dr. Luis Natalicio, that Oechsner Sr. suffered from primary degenerative dementia and possessed paranoid delusions of mistrust. Moreover, there was testimony that the Testator was “out of his mind” or had “no control over his thoughts,” and that he wrongly accused persons of stealing from him. The record further establishes that Dr. Natalicio’s conclusions were based largely on interviews with and materials provided by persons interested in an outcome favoring lack of capacity, and he never had the opportunity to observe or speak with John Oechsner Sr. firsthand.
On the other hand, there was extensive testimony that Oechsner Sr. did not appear “out of it” or “disoriented” during the execution of his will and codicil, that generally he possessed a good short-term and long-term memory and further, that he was cognizant of current events. Thus, despite conflicting testimony, it is for the jury to determine the weight to be given that testimony and to resolve any conflicts therein.
Carrasco,
Further, the record establishes that Testator’s attitude toward his two children changed dramatically only after the passing of his wife, and that he was upset because he felt his children had instigated his wife’s disinheritance of him. Although evidence showed that relations between Oechsner Sr. and his children had been strained prior to Mrs. Oechsner's death, the attorneys who assisted Oechsner Sr. in the settling of his wife’s estate and in executing the new will, testified that he was fully knowledgeable of the settlement of the es *137 tate and executed the will and codicil in response to his children’s behavior before and during that period. Indeed, Oechsner Sr. was unaware of the change in Mrs. Oechsner’s will until two days after her funeral and was upset by his children attempting to inventory household items shortly after her death. Additionally, there was evidence to indicate that the two children were attempting to obtain title to their father’s home on 3010 Copper despite his homestead rights. Finally, Mrs. Oechs-ner had signed over her AT & T stock, her separate property, to the children. 6
The record further establishes curious events surrounding the execution of Maren Oechsner’s will, although the record is not clear whether or not Oechsner Sr. knew of the circumstances. Craig Gilliland, Kathleen Gilliland’s son and Mrs. Oechsner’s grandson, was an attorney and prepared the will based on a letter from Mrs. Oechs-ner asking that an alternate executor be added. While the record establishes that he never spoke to his grandmother further, Craig Gilliland prepared the will and inserted a paragraph expressly disinheriting Oechsner Sr. Moreover, Mrs. Oechsner’s will was executed away from the Oechsner home, at a local dentist’s office to which Kathleen Gilliland had taken her mother, although evidence showed that she was bedridden with a condition related to multiple sclerosis and had problems speaking.
Based on the foregoing, we find that the jury could have concluded that if indeed Oechsner Sr. believed his children were attempting to take property from him and had influenced his wife to disinherit him, this belief was not irrational. Further, the jury could have come to this conclusion based simply upon the fact that John Oechsner Jr. and Kathleen and Craig Gilli-land were involved together in the changing of the will. Oechsner Sr.’s own grandson had drawn up a will radically different from the wills the couple had made together many years before, and further, did so without Oechsner Sr.’s knowledge.
We have carefully examined all of the evidence in the instant case in determining whether the evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s answers to issues one and two. We find the jury’s answers not to be against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust and accordingly, find that the trial court did not err in denying Appellant’s motion for new trial. Appellant’s Point of Error No. Three is overruled.
In Appellant’s fourth and final point of error, he argues the trial court committed fundamental error by improperly empaneling a jury of twelve persons when six was required.
The Texas Supreme Court has held that the existence of fundamental error is rare.
American General Fire and Casualty Company v. Weinberg,
Courts in our jurisdiction have refused to find the existence of fundamental error in a
*138
trial court empaneling an improper number of jurors holding that a litigant can waive a right to a certain number of jurors just as he can waive his right to jury trial.
Daily v. Wheat,
We have reviewed the record and find that while Appellant asserts that during preliminary proceedings, the trial court announced it would proceed with twelve jurors because it always seated twelve, there is no record of any such preliminary proceeding. Of greater significance, Appellant has failed to provide this Court with a full and complete record which would reflect any timely and specific objection to a trial by jury of twelve individuals as well as any ruling of the trial court. Consequently, Appellant has once again failed to preserve error for review. Tex.R.App.P. 52(a). Moreover, the sparse record before us which touches on Appellant's complaint, reveals testimony received at a hearing on a motion for new trial that tends to establish that the parties were given an option by the court and “agreed” to a jury of twelve. Appellant’s fourth point of error is overruled.
Having overruled each of Appellant’s points of error, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Tex.R.Civ.P. 276 provides as follows:
When an instruction, question, or definition is requested and the provisions of the law have been complied with and the trial judge refuses the same, the judge shall endorse thereon "Refused,” and sign the same officially. If the trial judge modifies the same the judge shall endorse thereon "Modified as follows: (stating in what particular the judge has modified the same) and given, and exception allowed” and sign the same officially. Such refused or modified instruction, question, or definition, when so endorsed shall constitute a bill of exceptions, and it shall be conclusively presumed that the party asking the same presented it at the proper time, excepted to its refusal or modification, and that all the requirements of law have been observed, and such procedure shall entitle the party requesting the same to have the action of the trial judge thereon reviewed without preparing a formal bill of exceptions.
. A careful review of the record before us indicates that the trial court relied on previous case law in an attempt to form the jury charge inasmuch as there are no applicable provisions pertaining to wills or will contests found in the Texas Pattern Jury Charges. This was proper in view of the Rule 277 mandate providing that the court shall instruct the jury to enable it to reach a verdict, and because trial courts would otherwise have to remain silent in situations where there is no appropriate pattern charge. Tex. R.CÍV.P. 277 [Emphasis added].
Duree,
. The instruction considered by the Supreme Court in
Lindley
is set out in full in footnote form.
Lindley v. Lindley,
. Recently, the Texas Supreme Court expressed concern regarding the complexity of the current method for preserving a complaint about the jury charge, stating, "[i]n our State’s procedural jurisprudence, there are no rules more recondite than those pertaining to the preparation of the jury charge."
State Department of Highways & Public Transportation
v.
Payne,
No. C-9343,
. Jury questions one and two required the jury to determine whether Oechsner Sr. possessed testamentary capacity at the time of the execution of his will and subsequent codicil. The jury answered “yes" to both questions. On review, Appellant contends the jury could not have found that his father possessed testamentary capacity, because he was operating under an insane delusion at the time of the execution of his will and codicil.
. Apparently Oechsner Sr.’s distrust of his children did not become acute until after the passing of his wife. Prior to her death, Oechsner, Sr. had signed over his interest in a potash lease and joined his wife in the transfer of a family farm to his two children. Additionally, Oechs-ner Jr. also borrowed $38,000 from his parents prior to his mother’s death in order to purchase property outright that he and his father had purchased together in Dallas.
