Archive for the ‘Will Contest’ Category

Will Contests in Texas, Part 1

October 4, 2011

Part 1 – What are the statutory requirements for a Will in Texas.

The first place to start in a Will contest, is, not surprisingly, the Will itself. In Texas, a Will must be in writing in all but the most limited circumstances. If you knew the Decedent to have a Will, examine the one offered for probate. Is it the same document you knew to be the decedent’s Will? If not, is it consistent with what the Decedent relayed to you concerning the disposition of his Estate? Also, determine if the Will is from a familiar source. Most probate attorneys have some form of identification on their Wills. If you find it, ensure that it is a lawyer you knew the Decedent had used in the past or was at least familiar with. Feel free to give the attorney a call and inquire as to her recollection of the execution.

Second, the Will must be signed by the Decedent. If you were familiar with the signature of the Decedent, examine the Will and ensure that the signature matches what you knew to be the Decedent’s signature. However, it is important to note that almost any marking will suffice as a signature, just so long as it was the Decedent’s mark or a mark made by someone, for him, at his direction, and in his presence. If you feel the signature does not match up, consult a handwriting expert and obtain a professional opinion.

Third, the Will must be signed by the maker with the intent to express his wishes for a testamentary disposition of his property. In other words, the intention to make the document a Will. This is called “Testamentary Intent.” A letter may suffice as a Will, but it must clearly express the person’s desire to pass on property after his death. Anything short of that and the document will not be held to have been drafted with the requisite “intent.”

Finally, the drafter must have known and understood the contents of the document he was signing. While this element bleeds over slightly into testamentary capacity issues, the main thing to focus on here is did the drafter know what was in the Will, and did he understand what the document stated. If this was just some document that was drafted elsewhere and then shoved into the person’s face by a manipulative beneficiary, and the Decedent never knew or understood the contents, then it will not qualify as a valid Will.

These are the first questions to be asking yourself when you are concerned with the validity of a Will and contemplating a Will Contest in Texas. Tomorrow we will delve deeper into the requirements for a valid execution of a Texas Will.

Will Contests in Texas – A Four-Part Series

September 30, 2011

Next week I am starting a new four-part series regarding Will Contests in Texas. I get numerous calls every week from potential clients who, after explaining their situation to me, ask if they have any grounds to contest a Will. When it quickly became apparent that the same questions were arising regularly, I decided this subject would make a good blog topic.

My goal is to explain exactly what a Texas Will contest entails, what grounds are available for such a contest, and what issues regularly arise in such proceedings. In the following days, I will lay out what actual grounds are available for a such contests, and hopefully clear up some of the misconceptions out there about what can and cannot be contested when dealing with Texas Wills.

As a primer, there are basically two base groupings that all contests fall into. The first deals with the person writing the Will, and the second deals with the document itself. Therefore, starting Monday, we will look at the following issues surrounding Will Contests:

1. What are the statutory requirements for a valid Will in Texas?

2. What are the statutory requirements for a valid Will execution in Texas?

3. What does “testamentary capacity” mean?

4. What is an “insane delusion” and what constitutes “undue influence” in the drafting of a Will?

So tune in tomorrow as we delve into the statutory requirements for a properly drafted Texas Will.

This Week in Probate Litigation Appeals

May 5, 2011

Case: In the Estate of Minnie Ola Kremer
Court: Ninth Court of Appeals – Beaumont

In this Will contest from Beaumont, we get one of the rare cases where undue influence was proven in the trial court, and managed to hold up at the Court of Appeals. Pearl Graef probated the 1989 will of her sister, Minnie Ola Kremer. Nearly two years later, Charles Lester Smith, a friend of Minnie’s, filed a motion to set aside the 1989 Will and instead probate a Will allegedly written by Minnie in 2004.

After a trial, the jury found that Minnie lacked testamentary capacity when she executed the 2004 Will and that Smith procured the 2004 Will by exercising undue influence over Minnie. The jury also found that Smith failed to bring his proceeding in good faith and therefore denied him attorney’s fees.

Smith appealed the jury’s findings. In his first issue, he challenged the probate court’s admission of Minnie’s nursing home records. According to Smith, such records were inadmissible because they were not supported by expert testimony. At trial, Smith objected under Rule 403 of the Texas Rules of Evidence that the probative value was outweighed by the prejudicial effect.

The Court of Appeals stated that the trial court has the discretion to admit or exclude evidence. The Court noted that relevant medical records are admissible as records of regularly conducted activity if they have been properly authenticated. However, Smith did not complain of improper authentication. Therefore, the Court concluded that the records were relevant and admissible.

In his second issue, Smith objected to the lack of expert medical testimony to prove that the Decedent lacked testamentary capacity when she signed the 2004 Will. The Court once again shot this down stating that testamentary capacity need not be proved by expert medical testimony and the requisite proof is within the common knowledge of laypersons.

In his third and final issue, Smith contends that there was not sufficient evidence to prove undue influence. Because such cases are rare, this case is valuable to anyone looking to try an undue influence claim as the Court gives a great rundown of the elements needed and what was produced at trial in this matter.

The Court first laid out the factors to consider in such a case including: (1) the nature and type of relationship existing between the testator, the contestants and the party accused of exerting such influence; (2) the opportunities existing for the exertion of the type of influence or deception possessed or employed; (3) the circumstances surrounding the drafting and execution of the testament; (4) the existence of a fraudulent motive; (5) whether there has been an habitual subjection of the testator to the control of another; (6) the state of the testator‟s mind at the time of the execution of the testament; (7) the testator‟s mental or physical incapacity to resist or the susceptibility of the testator‟s mind to the type and extent of the influence exerted; (8) words and acts of the testator; (9) weakness of mind and body of the testator, whether produced by infirmities of age or by disease or otherwise; and (10) whether the testament executed is unnatural in its terms of disposition of property.

In reviewing all of the evidence, the Court concluded that the jury could have concluded that Minnie and Smith were friends who had a creditor-debtor relationship, and in light of the relationship between the parties, the jury could have reasonably concluded that Minnie’s gift was an unnatural disposition of her estate. Additionally, the Court found that the jury could also have reasonably inferred that the circumstances involved in the creation and execution of Minnie’s 2004 Will did not reflect the normal manner under which testators create wills. The jury could have also considered that Smith, not Minnie, paid for the attorney’s services, and that Smith arranged for his friends to serve as witnesses at the will signing ceremony.

Finally, the Court noted that when Minnie executed the 2004 Will, she was ninety years of age. She was in poor health and unable to care for herself. She had only a sixth grade education. The jury could have reasonably concluded that Minnie was susceptible to being unduly influenced during the ceremony in light of her minimal educational background, her poor hearing, and her generally poor state of health around the time she signed the 2004 Will, together with evidence showing that Minnie was not provided with supplemental oxygen during the will ceremony, and that neither before or during the ceremony, did Minnie question why the 2004 Will left the home in which Pearl was living to the Smiths. The jury could reasonably conclude from all of the circumstances that Minnie did not have the strength of mind or body to exercise her own will when she executed the 2004 Will.

In light of the fact that the Court must look at the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury verdict in this matter, the Court stated that there was sufficient evidence to find undue influence.

What does this mean for you? If you feel someone you know has been a victim of undue influence, call us today for a free consultation.


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