Court Opinion

ID: 4893579
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:53:49.636541+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:09:57.172564
License: Public Domain

Watts, J. Com. App.
The appellants claim title to one-half of the property in controversy as the heirs of their deceased father, W. S. Orr, alleging his death in 1845, and that the property belonged to the community of their said father and their mother, Martha J. Orr.
Appellee claims title to the whole of the property sued for. The record shows, and both parties claim, a regular title from the sovereignty of the soil down to the estate of Orr, and it is admitted by appellants that there is a regular chain of transfers from William Custard to the appellee. It is claimed by appellee that Custard acquired the title to the lots by and through the last will and testament of said W. S. Orr, and certain conveyances from Mrs. Martha J. Orr to Wm. Custard, the first of which is dated September 1, 1846, and the other November 28, 1846.
To meet this claim of title upon the part of appellee, the appellants claim that said last will and testament was *155and is void as being in violation of the statute of forced heirship, which statute was in force at the time of the testator’s death. And this is one of the controlling and decisive issues in the case. The will is as follows:
“ Republic oe Texas, County of Brazoria:
“ To all whom these presents shall come: Be it known that I, William S. Orr, of the republic and county aforesaid, being of sound mind and memory, but laboring under a disease which may shortly terminate my existence, do make and declare this my last will and testament:
“First; To my wife, Martha Jane Orr, I give and ber queath the following property, viz.: The place in which I now reside, containing two hundred and fifty-six acres, more or less; one negro boy named Tom, aged about seventeen; one horse, one mule, twelve head of cattle, my stock of hogs, household furniture and farming utensils, and also a headright certificate for six hundred and forty acres, granted me as a citizen of the government of Texas, together with all other property, both personal and real, of which I am at present possessed, for and during her natural life-time, to be applied as she may deem best to the support and maintenance of herself and our. children; and in the event of her death, such of the property as may be left to be divided equally among those of our children as shall survive her. The particular object of this bequest is to constitute my wife the possessor during her life-time, and the unrestrained controller of my property, and the guardian and protector of our children, without being subject to the formalities and requirements of the law.
“ Second. With a view to the object above expressed, I name and appoint my wife, Martha Jane Orr, the executrix of this my will; and it is my particular desire and request that she shall not be required to furnish to the court an inventory or appraisement; that no security as executrix be demanded, and that she shall be no further *156subject to the probate court than shall be necessary to probate this will.
“ Signed and sealed with my scrawl by way of seal, this twenty-seventh day of February, one thousand eight hundred and forty-five, in the presence of the witnesses hereunto subscribed.
[Signed] “ Wm. S. Orr. [seal.]
“Witness:
“JohnM. Kirioian,
“It W. McKinney.”
Win. S. Orr died in Brazoria county on the 3d day of March, 1845, and his will was duly probated in that county on the 26th day of January, 1846.
The will vested in Mrs. Orr a life estate to all of the property. And without, in this connection, pausing to consider whether or not, by its terms, she is vested with absolute power of disposition of the property, it is sufficient to say, if the will is to be deemed valid, her conveyances to Custard vested in him the life estate of Mrs. Orr. And as the evidence shows that she was living at the time of the institution and trial of this case, the appellants could not maintain this action.
Admitting that the testator did, by his will, dispose.of .his property in such way so as to infringe upon the statute of forced heirship, that did not render the will void, but only voidable at the instance of those affected thereby; and that right, by such parties, must be asserted in the tribunal, manner and time, and against the parties, prescribed by law.
The court, in the case of Steele v. Renn, 50 Tex., 481, held that “an application for the probate of a will is a proceeding in rein, and the judgment of the court upon it is binding upon all. the world, until revoked or set aside.” See also Freeman on Judgments, sec. 608, and authorities cited, to same effect. This, principle is sound, for it proceeds upon the idea that, as a court of competent *157jurisdiction, upon proper application, adjudicating upon this thing, has determined that it is the valid will of the purported testator, that this determination constitutes and is a judgment of a court, and is not the subject of collateral attack. The law makes ample provisions for parties at interest to secure and protect their interests and rights in this respect, by giving them full time, after the removal of all disabilities, to institute a direct proceeding, and thereby have the judgment probating the will revoked, vacated or set aside, and the will declared invalid, provided sufficient grounds exist therefor.
For as was well said in Paschal v. Acklin, 27 Tex., 196, “ a will is not void because the testator may have attempted to bequeath more than the disposable portion of his estate; it is only voidable to the extent of the excess.' The agreement to waive the filing and recording of the ' will must be construed, as has been said, as an admission that it stands before the court as properly probated. This being the case, to raise the question of its validity hi the present suit, would be to attack it in a collateral proceeding. The will, when admitted to probate, is presumptively valid and good. It remains so mitil its invalidity is established in a direct proceeding between the proper parties, in the proper tribunal.”
In that case it was insisted that the will then in ques- ' tion, and before the court, was void, as the same was iii' violation of the statute of forced heirship; and the court held that as long as the judgment admitting the will to probate was permitted to stand, the will was to be deemed good and valid, and in this respect not subject to be inquired into in a collateral proceeding.
That decision is decisive of the question under consideration. For all the purposes of this proceeding, the will of said Wm. S. Orr must be taken and considered as good and valid. And thus considered, Mrs. Orr’s deeds to Wm. Custard certainly conveyed to him her life estate *158in and to the property in controversy. During her life, the will remaining duly probated, the appellants cannot maintain an action to recover the property from him or his vendees.
There is also another and an independent view of the matter to be considered; and that is, whether, by the terms of the will, Mrs. Orr is not vested with the power of sole and absolute disposition of the property.
It is well settled that the primary rule in the construction of wills is to ascertain and follow the intention of the testator. Howze v. Howze, 19 Tex., 554; Paschal v. Acldin, 27 Tex., 193.
All other rules of construction are of secondary importance, and are but auxiliaries in the practical application of this cardinal rule. The language that the will speaks is, that he gives her the property “ for and during her natural life-time, to be applied as she may deem best to the support and maintenance of herself and our children.” It would seem that he could have intended nothing else than conferring upon her the power of using the property, in whatever manner should occur to her best, in securing out of the same a support for herself and children. If it seemed best to her, she could rent it, exchange it, or make an absolute sale of the same. And this construction gathers strength from what follows. He says, “in the event of her death, such of the property as may be left to be divided equally among those of our children as shall survive herd’ Again he says, the object he has in making the will is to give his wife the unrestrained control of his property, and to effectuate that object he appoints her executrix, and makes her independent of the probate court, even to dispensing with the requirements of returning an inventory and appraisement, and relieves her from giving any security as such executrix.
In looking to the surrounding circumstances to aid in *159gathering his intention, we are further confirmed in the opinion that he intended to confer upon his wife, with reference to the property, the absolute and unrestrained power of disposition. The evidence shows that the country was in a disturbed and critical condition. There was almost a total want of civil government in a large portion of the republic; the occasional invasion of the country by the Mexicans, and the frequent incursions by hostile Indians; the removal of the government records, etc., from Austin; the incomplete condition of his title to the Austin City property; and that it was liable to be forfeited by the government at any time because of failure to pay the installments; and the fact that property was of but little value, and money exceedingly scarce.
These are the circumstances attending and surrounding the execution of the will, and aid in shedding light upon the question as to the intention of the testator.. We conclude that the will authorized the sale, and that the conveyances from Mrs. Orr vested the title to the property in Wm. Custard; and, as a consequence, the appellants had no title upon which to sustain their action.
There still remains another view of the case to be considered. The pleadings of both parties and the evidence indisputably show that the property in controversy was the community property of Wm. S. Orr and his wife Martha. It is also shown that his bond to Custard was outstanding and not complied with at the time of his death; and that he was, in addition, due the goyernment certain installments on the property, the title to which he had bound himself to have vested in Custard. And that he was also indebted to the government one installment on one of the lots in controversy; besides, his right and title to the property was clouded by the complications growing out of the apparent interest of McClure, to remove which required the expenditure of money.
Under such circumstances, the property being in the *160possession and under the control of Mrs. Orr, she, as survivor in community, in the absence of a will, in her right as such survivor could make a valid sale of the community property to discharge these obligations and debts against the community. That there were debts and obligations against the community at the time Mrs. Orr conveyed the property in controversy to Custard is shown beyond any sort of question. - And it is as certainly shown, that, by the sale to Custard, these obligations and debts against the community were settled and discharged. W e have no hesitation in saying that if Orr had left no will, still, under these facts and circumstances, Mrs. Orr’s conveyances to Custard vested in him the title to the property; and in this view of the case appellants could not recover.
' The position of appellants, that the title bond, at and after the date when the patent was to issue to Custard, became absolutely a monied demand and nothing else, and that the same was barred by limitation before the conveyances were made to Custard, etc., in our opinion is not well taken. Custard could, it is true, have treated it as a monied demand, and sued on it as such, or he could, at his option, have considered it as a bond for title, and waited on Orr to perfect and have the title to the property vested in him.-
Suppose, however, the same did become a monied demand as claimed, and that ordinarily the lapse of four years would bar the claim. It must he remembered that Mrs. Orr had possession and control of the property, and that four years had not elapsed at the death of Orr. Under the authority of Jones v. Jones, 15 Tex., 143, she could have applied the same to the debt.
We are of the opinion that the record clearly shows ■ that the appellants have no title to the property in controversy, and that in no view of the case could they re- • cover; therefore any supposed errors committed by the *161court in admitting or excluding evidence, or in giving and refusing charges, would be immaterial, and need not be considered; and so it is with regard to the question of limitation, appellee has the title to the property, and there is no necessity for her to invoke the statutes of repóse in defense of her right thereto.
In our opinion, a proper disposition of this appeal is to affirm the judgment.
Affirmed.
[Opinion delivered May 2, 1881.]
Ch. J. Moore did not sit in this case.