Court Opinion

ID: 9351590
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-01-02 00:07:40.119858+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:00:56.857127
License: Public Domain

Supreme Court of Texas
                             ══════════
                              No. 21-0205
                             ══════════

                    Michelle Elise Parker Jordan,
                               Petitioner,

                                    v.

   Ola Kathleen Parker, Independent Executor of the Estate of
    J. Loyd Parker, III, Deceased, and Allison Renee Parker,
                             Respondents

      ═══════════════════════════════════════
                 On Petition for Review from the
         Court of Appeals for the Eighth District of Texas
      ═══════════════════════════════════════

                     Argued September 22, 2022

      JUSTICE BLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.

      We examine three generations of property transfers to resolve
this dispute over ownership of some ranchland.
      The facts read like a law school exam question. A father devised
his estate to his widow for life, with the remainder upon her death to his
children, including his son. The father granted his widow complete
control over the estate’s assets during her lifetime, including the power
to sell estate property and to redirect a child’s remainder interest to
others. Among the estate’s assets was a partial interest in land known
as the Cottonwood Ranch. Other owners of the ranch included the
father’s widow. The widow eventually conveyed her separate interest in
the ranch to their son and daughter.
      A few years later, while his mother was still living, the son
conveyed to his daughters “all of my right, title and interest in and to”
the ranch. The question presented in this case is whether the son gifted
a remainder interest in his father’s estate property when he conveyed
his present interest in the same property without expressly reserving
any remainder interest.
      Applying the rule in Clark v. Gauntt, 1 we conclude that the son
did not convey his remainder interest in the estate property. The son’s
remainder interest was in his father’s estate overall, not a particular
piece of property, and any property interest from the estate that the son
might eventually inherit was subject to complete divestment during his
mother’s lifetime. At the time the son conveyed his present interest to
his daughters, his mother was living, and she had complete control over
the estate’s assets. In such circumstances, the property interest in the
ranch that the son would eventually inherit through his father’s will
amounted to no more than an expectancy. As the court of appeals
correctly held, a grantor conveys an expectancy interest only through a
clear manifestation of the grantor’s intent to do so. We therefore affirm
its judgment.

      1   161 S.W.2d 270, 273 (Tex. [Comm’n Op.] 1942).

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                                       I
      Ola Kathleen Parker (Kathy) brings this trespass-to-try-title and
deed-reformation action against her daughters, Michelle Elise Parker
Jordan (Elise) and Allison Renee Parker. The parties seek to determine
whether J. Loyd Parker III (Loyd III)—Kathy’s husband and Elise and
Allison’s father—conveyed a remainder interest in his father’s estate’s
ownership of the Cottonwood Ranch when he gifted “all of my right, title
and interest in and to” the ranch to his daughters.
      The parties do not dispute the facts. They disagree, however,
about the nature of the interest Loyd III obtained through his father’s
will before his mother died and whether Loyd III conveyed this interest
to his daughters when he conveyed the present interest he owned at the
time he made the gift.
                                      A
      A bit of history explains the ranch’s ownership as it existed when
Loyd III gifted his interest to his daughters. During the mid-1950s, J.B.
Young and Loyd Jinkens owned the ranch in equal, undivided one-half
interests. 2 Young died in 1956, leaving his daughter, Ruthie Young
Parker, an undivided one-sixth interest.
      A year later, Ruthie and her husband, J. Loyd Parker Jr.
(Loyd Jr.), together purchased the undivided Jinkens interest. As a
result, Ruthie and Loyd Jr. owned an undivided one-half of the
Cottonwood Ranch as community property. Ruthie owned an additional
one-sixth of the ranch as her inherited separate property.

      2   The ranch is located in Reeves and Culberson Counties.

                                      3
       Loyd Jr. died in 1985, leaving Ruthie as his widow. Loyd Jr.’s will
conveyed his entire estate to Ruthie as a life estate, with a remainder in
equal shares to their two children, Loyd III and Pamela Parker Clifton.
Loyd Jr.’s will gave Ruthie extensive powers, including the right to “buy,
sell, mortgage, lease . . . [or] exchange” any property in the estate and
“deal with, manage, and control the assets as if she owned them in fee
simple,” without consultation with any remainder beneficiary. In
addition, the will gave Ruthie “a special power to alter the equal
devolution through this will to [Loyd Jr.’s] children or their issue.” That
special power “to alter the devolution of the remainder interest shall
prevail over any disposition a child of [Loyd Jr.] makes in his remainder
interest.”
       After Loyd Jr.’s death, Ruthie owned the following shares in the
Cottonwood Ranch:
       •     a one-sixth interest acquired from her father in 1956;
       •     a one-fourth interest from the former community estate
             acquired upon Loyd Jr.’s death; and
       •     a one-fourth life estate interest under Loyd Jr.’s will.
       In 1990, Ruthie conveyed her former community interest in the
Cottonwood Ranch to Loyd III and Pamela in equal shares. In 1993,
Ruthie signed a correction deed to clarify that the 1990 deed conveyed
her one-fourth former community property interest only, not the life
estate created by Loyd Jr.’s will.
       After Ruthie’s 1990 conveyance, Loyd III held two discrete
interests:
       •     a one-eighth fee simple interest in the ranch, and

                                       4
      •   a one-eighth remainder in Loyd Jr.’s entire estate, subject to
          Ruthie’s life estate and powers of divestment.
      In 1998, Loyd III conveyed “all of my right, title and interest in
and to” 3 the Cottonwood Ranch to his daughters, Elise and Allison, in
equal shares. The 1998 deed is the focus of the parties’ dispute.
      After Loyd III executed the 1998 deed, the family behaved as if
Elise and Allison each owned a one-sixteenth interest in the Cottonwood
Ranch and Loyd III continued to hold a remainder interest in the one-
eighth that was part of Ruthie’s life estate and under her control.
      Ruthie died in 2006. She never exercised her power to sell the
estate’s interest in the ranch, nor did she divest Loyd III of any of his
remainder interest in the estate.
      Loyd III died in 2014 and left his estate to his wife, Kathy.
                                     B
      Almost two years after Loyd III’s death, Elise claimed a one-
eighth interest in the Cottonwood Ranch instead of one-sixteenth. Elise
asserted that, in addition to his present interest in the ranch, her
father’s 1998 deed gifted to her and her sister his eventual remainder
interest following Ruthie’s life estate.
      To resolve this claim, Kathy sued Elise and Allison for trespass to
try title, deed reformation, and adverse possession. Allison agrees with
Kathy that the 1998 deed did not convey her father’s remainder interest
in the ranch, and thus she does not oppose Kathy’s suit.

      3 Quotations have been altered from the original text of the deed, in
which the quoted language appears in capital letters.

                                     5
      The trial court denied summary judgment to Kathy and granted
partial summary judgment to Elise on Kathy’s trespass-to-try-title and
deed-reformation claims. The parties agreed to sever and abate the
adverse possession claim pending this appeal, and the judgment recites
that it is a final and appealable judgment.
      The court of appeals reversed, applying the rule of Clark v. Gauntt
that a grantor does not convey an expectancy or future interest unless
the instrument “clearly manifests the intention of the prospective heir
to sell, assign or convey his expectancy or future interest.” 4 The court of
appeals acknowledged that a remainder interest is a future interest
capable of being conveyed; however, it observed, the law requires “clear
and express language demonstrating the grantor’s intent to do so.” 5
Because the 1998 deed does not refer to any future interest, the court of
appeals concluded that Loyd III did not convey one. 6 We granted Elise’s
petition for review.
                                      II
      To construe a will, we ascertain the testator’s intent from the
language found within the four corners of the document. 7 Similarly, in
construing an unambiguous deed, we ascertain the intent of the parties
from the language of the deed. 8 In either case, we “construe language

      4 632 S.W.3d 108, 116 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2021) (quoting Clark, 161
S.W.2d at 273).
      5   Id. at 120.
      6   Id.
      7   ConocoPhillips Co. v. Ramirez, 599 S.W.3d 296, 301 (Tex. 2020).
      8   Wenske v. Ealy, 521 S.W.3d 791, 792 (Tex. 2017).

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according to its ‘plain, ordinary, and generally accepted meaning’ unless
the instrument directs otherwise.” 9 The construction of an unambiguous
deed or will presents a question of law that we review de novo. 10
       On cross motions for summary judgment, each party must
establish that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 11 When the
trial court grants one motion and denies the other, the reviewing court
determines all questions presented and renders the judgment that the
trial court should have rendered. 12
                                        A
       A remainder is a “future interest arising in a third person . . . who
is intended to take after the natural termination of the preceding
estate.” 13 A remainder interest is either vested or contingent. 14 “A
remainder is vested where there is a person in being who would have an
immediate right to the possession upon the termination of the
intermediate estate.” 15 A remainder interest is contingent when there is
“uncertainty as to the persons who are to take.” 16 A remainder is

       9 Piranha Partners v. Neuhoff, 596 S.W.3d 740, 747 (Tex. 2020) (quoting
URI, Inc. v. Kleberg County, 543 S.W.3d 755, 764 (Tex. 2018)); see also Knopf
v. Gray, 545 S.W.3d 542, 545 (Tex. 2018).
       10Wenske, 521 S.W.3d at 794 (citing Luckel v. White, 819 S.W.2d 459,
461 (Tex. 1991)); Knopf, 545 S.W.3d at 545.
       11   ConocoPhillips Co. v. Koopmann, 547 S.W.3d 858, 865 (Tex. 2018).
       12   Id.
       13   Remainder, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
       14   See Caples v. Ward, 179 S.W. 856, 857–58 (Tex. 1915).
       15   Id.
       16   Id. at 858.

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defeasible, or subject to divestment, if an event subsequent to the
conveyance might terminate the interest. 17 A vested remainder is
indefeasible if “the remainderman is certain to acquire a present
interest sometime in the future and will be entitled to retain the interest
permanently.” 18 An expectancy, which is not a future interest at all, is
merely “a hope or a possibility of title” that one “expects to inherit.” 19
       The parties differ in their understanding of Loyd III’s interest in
Loyd Jr.’s estate. Elise describes the interest as a vested remainder, but
she concedes that Ruthie’s powers made it defeasible. Kathy argues that
Loyd III’s interest is better understood as a contingent remainder, given
Ruthie’s control over the estate. Kathy further points out that Loyd III’s
interest in Loyd Jr.’s entire estate is different in nature from a specific
interest in certain estate property.
       We agree that Ruthie’s powers under Loyd Jr.’s will foreclose the
possibility that Loyd III held a vested remainder in the Cottonwood
Ranch at the time he conveyed his present interest in it. At that time,
Ruthie not only possessed a life estate in the entire estate, she also had
the power to “buy, sell, mortgage, lease . . . [or] exchange” any property
in the estate and “deal with, manage, and control the assets as if she
owned them in fee simple” without consultation with any remainder
beneficiary. And, if Ruthie “substantially deplet[ed] her fee simple

       17Remainder, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019); see also Edds v.
Mitchell, 184 S.W.2d 823, 830 (Tex. [Comm’n Op.] 1945) (describing the
interest of a beneficiary to a life insurance policy as vested but defeasible
because the insured could change the beneficiary designation).
       18   Remainder, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
       19   Clark v. Gauntt, 161 S.W.2d 270, 272 (Tex. [Comm’n Op.] 1942).

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estate,” she could invade the corpus “to support her in her customary
manner of living.”
      Finally, the will gave Ruthie the power to alter Loyd III’s
remainder share in the estate:
      My spouse shall have a special power to alter the equal
      devolution through this will to my children or their issue
      by diverting part of a child’s share to other children or a
      child’s issue or spouse. . . . [That power] shall prevail over
      any disposition a child of mine makes in his remainder
      interest.
      In light of these powers, Loyd III’s remainder interest in the
estate in general created no certainty at the time of the gift to his
daughters that any particular piece of estate property would ever belong
to him. Ruthie could sell, gift, or mortgage any piece of the estate—
including the Cottonwood Ranch. Ruthie also could devolve Loyd III’s
share of the estate on another family member or even spend down the
entirety of the corpus as future circumstances unfolded.
      In sum, Ruthie had complete power to decide which estate
property, if any, Loyd III might one day own. We need not decide
whether Loyd III’s interest in the entire estate is better characterized
as vested subject to divestment or contingent, because the will grants
Loyd III no more than an expectancy in the Cottonwood Ranch or any
other particular asset.
                                    B
      In Clark v. Gauntt, the Commission of Appeals addressed
whether a grantor could convey an expectancy interest through general
language granting “[a]ll my right, title and interest in” a piece of real

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property. 20 In that case, the property had been the community property
of the grantor’s parents. When her mother died, the grantor, the couple’s
only child, inherited an undivided one-half interest in the property. She
then mortgaged the property, securing it with a deed that included the
above language. While a foreclosure suit was pending, the grantor’s
father died intestate, and she inherited the remaining one-half interest
in the property. The mortgagee then asserted a claim to the entire
property, arguing that the deed had conveyed “all” the grantor’s interest
in the property, including her expected inheritance.
      The Court rejected that claim, holding that the grantor had not
conveyed her expectancy through the broad language of the deed. An
expectancy of inheritance is “nothing more than a hope or a possibility
of title” and includes “no present right or interest in the property.” 21
Thus, the Court concluded, a deed or contract cannot convey “an
expectancy or future interest unless it clearly manifests the intention of
the prospective heir to sell, assign or convey his expectancy or future
interest.” 22 Because the law historically disfavored such conveyances,
the grantor’s intent to convey an expectancy or future interest must be
manifest. 23 The rule persists because it protects grantors from

      20 161 S.W.2d at 272–73. Adopted opinions of the Commission of
Appeals are “given the same force, weight, and effect as the opinions written
by the members of the Supreme Court itself.” Nat’l Bank of Com. v. Williams,
84 S.W.2d 691, 692 (Tex. 1935).
      21   Clark, 161 S.W.2d at 272.
      22   Id. at 273.
      23   Id. at 272–73.

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inadvertently conveying expectancies or future interests they may not
know they hold and never intended to convey.
       Our holding in Terrell v. Graham, almost forty years after Clark,
reflects Clark’s continued vitality. 24 In that case, two brothers each
owned an undivided one-half interest in a tract of land. 25 The brothers
executed reciprocal deeds, each conveying to the other “all” the disputed
property to “take effect and become absolute on my death.” 26 We read
the reciprocal deeds to retain a life estate in the grantor and convey an
“estate in expectancy” to the other brother. 27 Upon the first brother’s
death, the surviving brother’s estate became possessory; he also
regained the estate following his own life estate by operation of the deed,
and the two estates merged into a single fee simple interest.
       In Terrell, we acknowledged Clark and concluded that its
application did not defeat the brothers’ reciprocal deeds. 28 The deeds in
question expressly incorporated Article 1296 of the Revised Civil
Statutes, which at the time read: “An estate or freehold or inheritance
may be made to commence in futuro, by deed or conveyance, in like
manner as by will.” 29 This direct reference in the deeds to the statute

       24   576 S.W.2d 610, 611 (Tex. 1979).
       25   Id.
       26   Id.
       27   Id. at 612.
       28   Id.
       29Id. at 611 & n.1 (quoting Act of 1925, 39th Leg., R.S., S.B. 84 (repealed
1984)) (“This deed is written under Article 1296 R.C.S. of Texas, and shall take
effect and become absolute on my death.”).

                                       11
permitting creation and conveyance of a future estate “clearly
manifest[ed] the intention” to convey it, thus satisfying the Clark rule.
      Elise argues for the inverse of the Clark rule: a grantor must
expressly reserve a future interest to avoid conveying it. She relies on
Piranha Partners v. Neuhoff 30 and Cockrell v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co. 31
for the uncontroversial principle that general language conveying “all”
of an interest conveys all of the interest. An important distinction,
however, is that both Piranha Partners and Cockrell involved presently
owned interests that were apparent from the chain of title at the time of
the conveyance. 32 We agree with Elise that “[a]ll means all.” 33 But as we
said in Cockrell, “it is fundamental that a warranty deed will pass all of
the estate owned by the grantor at the time of the conveyance unless there
are reservations or exceptions which reduce the estate conveyed.” 34 In
this case, in contrast, Loyd III did not presently own the disputed
interest.
      Elise further argues that the Clark rule should not apply to vested
future interests, despite the opinion’s broad language including those
interests. Because Loyd III’s interest in the property gained through his
father’s will was no more than an expectancy, however, we need not

      30    596 S.W.3d 740 (Tex. 2020).
      31    299 S.W.2d 672 (Tex. 1956).
      32 Piranha Partners, 596 S.W.3d at 745–46 (analyzing the scope of an
assignment of presently owned overriding mineral interest); Cockrell, 299
S.W.2d at 673–74 (determining the effect of a subsequent conveyance on
previously executed mineral leases).
      33    Davis v. Mueller, 528 S.W.3d 97, 102 (Tex. 2017).
      34    Cockrell, 299 S.W.2d at 675 (emphasis added).

                                          12
decide whether Clark applies to a fully vested, indefeasible future
interest in a particular piece of property. We note, however, that each of
Elise’s cited cases involves a conveyance that expressly referred to the
instrument creating the future interest and therefore satisfied Clark. 35
       Finally, Elise argues that the phrase “all of my right, title and
interest” in the Cottonwood Ranch manifested Loyd III’s intent to
include the disputed future interest. This argument ignores the facts of
Clark, in which “[a]ll my right, title and interest in and to” the described
property conveyed the grantor’s present interest only. It did not convey
the expectancy interest the grantor later inherited. 36 Loyd III used
nearly identical language. “All” means all that the grantor owns in the
property at the time of the conveyance. 37 In 1998, Loyd III did not “own”
any interest in the Cottonwood Ranch through Loyd Jr.’s will. Rather,

       35  See Parker v. Blackmon, 553 S.W.2d 623, 623–24 (Tex. 1977) (sons’
conveyance of “[a]ll of our right, title and interest in the estate of [mother], of
any property of whatsoever kind or wheresoever situate that would be
bequeathed or devised to us by her will as a result of her death” included a
right to proceeds from the future sale of mother’s home when that right had
been specifically bequeathed to them in her will); Jinkins v. Jinkins, 522
S.W.3d 771, 776 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2017, no pet.) (father’s
conveyance of “all property subject to disposition by [father] under the joint
will of [grandfather] and [grandmother]” included father’s remainder created
by grandparents’ joint will); Hamilton v. Keller, 148 S.W.2d 1011, 1013 (Tex.
App.—Eastland 1941, no writ) (grandsons’ conveyance of “all their right, title,
interest, claim and demand of every kind and character whatsoever in and to
all the property of [grandmother] in which we had interest under the provisions
of said will” included remainder created by grandmother’s will).
       36   Clark, 161 S.W.2d at 272–73.
       37Cockrell, 299 S.W.2d at 675. We decline to comment on the effect of
such language in the distinguishable situation where the grantor holds only an
expectancy and no other interest in the property.

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he had an expectancy interest only, which is no ownership interest at
all.
       The deed gifting Loyd III’s interest to his daughters does not refer
to Loyd Jr.’s estate or to any expectancy Loyd III had from that estate
in the Cottonwood Ranch. Because nothing in the 1998 deed manifests
Loyd III’s intent to convey his future inheritance, we hold that it did not
pass through the 1998 deed.
                              *      *     *
       When he gifted his present interest to his daughters, Loyd III had
no more than an expectancy interest that he might inherit another part
of the Cottonwood Ranch from his father’s estate. A grantor may convey
such an interest only through a clearly manifested intent to do so.
Because the 1998 deed does not refer to Loyd III’s remainder in his
father’s estate, nor to any expectancy interest in the Cottonwood Ranch
from that estate, Loyd III did not convey the disputed interest to his
daughters. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.

                                         Jane N. Bland
                                         Justice

OPINION DELIVERED: December 30, 2022

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