In a suit in the district court to set aside testamentary
dispositions and adjudge the property to the plaintiffs and
partition it among them as heirs, a defendant who, being also an
heir, would share in the relief if obtained should not be aligned
as a plaintiff for the purpose of testing jurisdiction by diversity
of citizenship if such defendant be adversely interested as
legatee.
Under Constitution and statutes of Texas, the county court has
no equitable jurisdiction of a suit
inter partes to annul
a disposition in a will and partition the property among the
plaintiffs as heirs where title to land is involved and the amount
in controversy exceeds $1,000.
Under the Constitution of Texas, the district courts of the
state have no jurisdiction to annul by an original proceeding the
action of a county court in probating a will, and a suit under
Stats. Art. 5699 to contest the validity of a will so probated must
be brought in the county court, and calls for an exercise of
original probate jurisdiction.
A suit which in an essential feature is a suit to annul a will,
and which, under the state law, is in character merely supplemental
to proceedings for probate and cognizable only by the probate
court, is not within the jurisdiction of the district court of the
United States, though diversity of citizenship exist and the
requisite jurisdictional amount be in controversy.
Affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 246 U. S. 200
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The United States district court dismissed for want of
jurisdiction a bill in equity brought by appellants, and certified
in substance that the dismissal was based upon the ground that the
bill and its exhibits disclosed no infraction of any right arising
under the Constitution or laws of the United States; that the
matter was cognizable solely in the County Court of Collin County,
Texas, a court of probate jurisdiction, and that the record
disclosed no diversity of citizenship upon which the federal
jurisdiction might be based, because it appeared that one of the
defendants who should be considered as a plaintiff and the
remainder of the defendants were in fact citizens of the same
state.
The case comes to us by direct appeal, upon the jurisdictional
question only, under § 238, Judicial Code.
The bill sets up diversity of citizenship and the fact that the
amount in controversy exceeds that which is requisite for
jurisdiction. It asserts no federal right. It alleges that the
plaintiffs (seven in number) are citizens of states other than
Texas, while of those named as defendants six (including Cora D.
Spencer) are citizens of Texas and residents of Collin County in
the Sherman Division of the Eastern District of that state, and the
seventh is a municipal corporation of that state.
The averments of the bill are in substance as follows: that
about the year 1866, Moses Hubbard and Mary Jane Hubbard, his wife,
settled on a parcel of real estate in Collin County, Texas, and
from that time continuously until the dates of their respective
deaths lived as citizens and inhabitants of that county, and during
their joint lifetime cohabited together as husband and wife; that
the said Moses died in 1906, leaving his wife surviving, but no
descendant or other heir; that she died in 1914, without children
or husband, but leaving her surviving
Page 246 U. S. 201
the following heirs at law: a sister, Rachael E. Kirtley, two
brothers, Albert E. Sutton and Delana M. Sutton, and the children
of a deceased brother, Lewis Sutton, namely, Cora D. Spencer,
Elizabeth E. Davis, Ida Krickbaum, George D. Sutton, and Lewis
Sutton, Jr., and that afterwards the last named died intestate,
unmarried, and without descendants, leaving his mother, Helen M.
Marshall, and his sisters and brother, Cora D. Spencer, Elizabeth
E. Davis, Ida Krickbaum, and George D. Sutton, as his heirs. The
persons named are stated to be the only heirs at law of Mary Jane
and Moses Hubbard. All of them are plaintiffs in the suit except
Cora D. Spencer, who is made a defendant.
The bill alleges, further that Moses and Mary Jane Hubbard
accumulated community property, real and personal (specified in the
bill), of the value of about $100,000 situate in Collin and Denton
Counties, all of which descended to the said Mary Jane as survivor
of the community.
That in the year 1897, Moses Hubbard, being then "subject to a
mania or unsound idea relative to the memory of his deceased
daughter," attempted a disposal of his wife's community property by
a purported will (executed by his wife also and in form a joint and
several will), by the terms of which it was attempted to establish
in the community property after it should become separate property
of Mary Jane Hubbard a certain charitable trust in perpetuity, in
the name of the deceased daughter. Plaintiffs allege that this
trust was void for various reasons specified, and that, if the
instrument had any effect in law, it created a naked trust whereof
the said Mary Jane Hubbard was sole beneficiary. That afterwards
and in the month of January, 1913, the defendant English, joining
with himself the defendants Finley, Robinson, and Foster, acting as
trustees of the charity, filed a petition in the district court of
Collin county against
Page 246 U. S. 202
Mary Jane Hubbard and another wherein it was alleged that the
will of 1897 was a joint will, constituting an agreement binding
upon both Moses and Mary Jane Hubbard, under which she received
rights, emoluments, and privileges which she would not have had
otherwise, and that she had accepted the will, and at all times
since its probating had accepted and exercised those rights,
privileges, and emoluments, by reason whereof the will was
irrevocable by her, and that a trust was thereby created in behalf
of the said English, Finley, Robinson, and Foster; that said
petition prayed for a citation thereon and judgment that a trust be
declared in favor of the petitioners, but plaintiffs herein allege
that no citation was issued, that Mary Jane Hubbard had no notice
of the proceedings, and that she was deceived into signing a
purported waiver and disclaimer which was without consideration and
void; that the judgment was never given by any judge or person
possessing judicial power within the State of Texas, and that the
petition was in effect an application for the construction of the
paper as the will of Moses Hubbard, of which the district court had
not jurisdiction in the first instance, and for which construction
there was then and yet pending in the county probate court of
Collin County a petition signed by the said purported trustees
whereupon the judgment of the said county court would be binding
upon them without the assumption of power in the district court of
said county.
That, in addition to the community property, Mary Jane Hubbard
accumulated real and personal property amounting in value to about
$18,000 and that in her last sickness, while she was clouded in her
intellect and was not of sound or disposing mind or memory, she was
unduly influenced by the defendant English to execute an instrument
in the form of a will purporting to dispose of her accumulations
and separate property, by the 12th paragraph of which she gave and
bequeathed all the residue
Page 246 U. S. 203
of her property to her niece Cora D. Spencer; that this will
"ought to be annulled and set aside and held for naught;
nevertheless, these plaintiffs do not desire to interfere with the
distribution made by the defendant, Clayton, purporting to act as
executor of said will, but they bring this bill for the purpose of
having it annulled to the extent only that the twelfth paragraph .
. . be decreed . . . not to be a testamentary disposition of that
portion of her separate estate which had once been community estate
of the said Moses Hubbard and Mary Jane Hubbard;"
and that the community property should be decreed to pass to the
plaintiffs pursuant to the statutes of Texas as estate not devised
or bequeathed, and should be divided among the plaintiffs in
certain proportions specified.
The bill avers that the defendant English has usurped and taken
possession of seven tracts of real estate and certain moneys,
notes, and credits particularly described, and has rented the lands
and converted to his own use their annual profit.
The prayer is that the defendants English, Finley, Robinson, and
Foster account concerning the rents, issues, profits and income of
said real estate and personal property; that the joint will of 1897
and every claim, judgment, or right based thereon be set aside and
held for naught; that the supposed will signed by Mary Jane
Hubbard, dated in 1914, and the twelfth clause thereof be cancelled
and set aside and annulled, and that the property described in the
bill and the earnings and rentals thereof be decreed to be the
property of the plaintiffs as heirs at law of Mary Jane Hubbard,
deceased, and be partitioned between them. There is also a prayer
for general relief.
The objects of the suit, in their logical order, appear to be as
follows: (1) to treat the joint will of 1897 as inefficacious to
dispose of the community property, either
Page 246 U. S. 204
because this became the separate property of Mary Jane Hubbard
at her husband's death or because of Moses Hubbard's mental
incapacity or the illegality of the terms of the trust; (2) to set
aside a judgment said to have been obtained in the Collin County
District Court by defendant English and others, devisees under the
joint will, establishing their title to the community property as
against Mary Jane Hubbard; (3) to have her will annulled at least
to the extent that the twelfth paragraph, which gives and bequeaths
all the residue of her property to Cora D. Spencer, be decreed not
to be a testamentary disposition of that portion of the estate of
testatrix which had been community property, and (4) that the
community property, having thus been shown to have been separate
estate of Mary Jane Hubbard and not to have been devised by her, be
decreed to have passed to the plaintiffs as her heirs at law and be
partitioned between them.
Upon this statement, it will be apparent that the court below
erred in holding, as it did, that the defendant Cora D. Spencer
should be treated as one of the plaintiffs and aligned with them
for the purpose of determining the question of diversity of
citizenship. Provided plaintiffs attained their first three
objects, her interest would be the same as theirs with respect to
the prayer for partition; but before this result could be reached,
plaintiffs must prevail as to their third object, and with respect
to this her interest was altogether adverse to theirs. Therefore
she was properly made a party defendant, that being her attitude
towards the actual and substantial controversy.
See Removal
cases, 100 U. S. 457,
100 U. S. 468;
Pacific R. Co. v. Ketchum, 101 U.
S. 289,
101 U. S. 298;
Barney v. Latham, 103 U. S. 205,
103 U. S. 211;
Harter v. Kernochan, 103 U. S. 562,
103 U. S. 566;
Helm v. Zarecor, 222 U. S. 32,
222 U. S.
36.
This brings us to the question whether the subject matter of the
suit is within the jurisdiction of a court of the United
States.
Page 246 U. S. 205
By a series of decisions in this Court, it has been established
that, since it does not pertain to the general jurisdiction of a
court of equity to set aside a will or the probate thereof or to
administer upon the estates of decedents
in rem, matters
of this character are not within the ordinary equity jurisdiction
of the federal courts; that, as the authority to make wills is
derived from the states, and the requirement of probate is but a
regulation to make a will effective, matters of strict probate are
not within the jurisdiction of courts of the United States; that,
where a state, by statute or custom, gives to parties interested
the right to bring an action or suit
inter partes, either
at law or in equity, to annul a will or to set aside the probate,
the courts of the United States, where diversity of citizenship and
a sufficient amount in controversy appear, can enforce the same
remedy, but that this relates only to independent suits, and not to
procedure merely incidental or ancillary to the probate; and,
further, that questions relating to the interests of heirs,
devisees, or legatees, or trusts affecting such interests, which
may be determined without interfering with probate or assuming
general administration, are within the jurisdiction of the federal
courts where diversity of citizenship exists and the requisite
amount is in controversy.
Broderick's
Will, 21 Wall. 503,
88 U. S. 509,
88 U. S. 512;
Ellis v. Davis, 109 U. S. 485,
109 U. S. 494;
Farrell v. O'Brien, 199 U. S. 89,
199 U. S. 110;
Waterman v. Canal-Louisiana Bank Co., 215 U. S.
33,
215 U. S.
43.
It is the contention of appellants that the United States
district court had original jurisdiction of this cause (there being
diversity of citizenship and a sufficient amount in controversy)
because jurisdiction over a suit in equity of the same character
would have existed in the county or district courts of the
state.
In order to test this, we must consider the nature and extent of
the jurisdiction of the courts referred to, as established by the
Constitution of Texas and statutes
Page 246 U. S. 206
passed in pursuance thereof (Vernon's Sayles'
Tex.Civ.Stats.1914), the material provisions of which are as
follows: Under Const. Art. 5, § 6, and Stats. Arts. 3206,
1763, 1764, 1766, and 1771, the county court has the general
jurisdiction of a probate court, with power to probate wills, grant
letters testamentary or of administration, settle accounts of
executors and administrators, etc.; exclusive original jurisdiction
in civil cases when the matter in controversy exceeds $200 and does
not exceed $500, and concurrent jurisdiction with the district
court when the matter in controversy exceeds $500 and does not
exceed $1,000, but no jurisdiction of suits for the recovery of
land or for the enforcement of liens upon land, and general
authority to hear and determine any case, either of law or equity,
but subject to certain limitations, including those just mentioned.
Under Const. Art. 5, § 8, and Stats. Arts. 1705, 1706, 1712,
and 3207, the district court has
"appellate jurisdiction and general control in probate matters
over the county court established in each county, for the probating
of wills, granting letters testamentary or of administration,
settling the accounts of executors and administrators,"
etc.; also "original jurisdiction and general control over
executors and administrators under such regulations as may be
prescribed by law;" original jurisdiction of all suits for the
trial of title to land and for the enforcement of liens thereon,
and of all suits, without regard to any distinction between law and
equity, when the matter in controversy exceeds $500; and, subject
to limitations not now pertinent, general jurisdiction over any
cause cognizable by courts either of law or equity.
It will be seen that the contention must be overruled at once so
far as concerns the equitable jurisdiction of the county court,
because, in the case before us, the title to land is involved and
the matter in controversy exceeds $1,000. The jurisdiction of the
district court is not thus
Page 246 U. S. 207
limited, and, under local decisions (
Japhet v. Pullen,
63 Tex.Civ.App. 157, and cases cited), it may be assumed that an
independent suit in equity could be entertained by that court, and
therefore. under the decisions of this Court to which reference has
been made, might be brought in the United States district court for
the purpose of construing the joint will of Moses and Mary Jane
Hubbard as inefficacious to dispose of the community property, and
to set aside, for fraud or on other grounds, the judgment recovered
by the defendants English and others against Mary Jane Hubbard
establishing their title to that property, and that, if the title
of complainants as heirs at law of Mary Jane Hubbard could thus be
shown, the jurisdiction to partition the property would follow as
of course. But, as already pointed out, even could complainants
succeed in showing that Mary Jane Hubbard at the time of her death
was entitled to the community property, her will giving all the
residue of her property to Cora D. Spencer still stands in the way
of their succeeding to it as heirs at law, and hence their prayer
to have that will annulled with respect to the residuary clause is
essential to their right to any relief in the suit.
But it is established by repeated decisions of the Supreme Court
of Texas that, under the present constitution, the district courts
have no jurisdiction to annul by an original proceeding the action
of a county court in probating a will, their jurisdiction in the
premises being confined to a review by appeal or certiorari, which
are in effect but a continuation of the probate proceedings. It is
further held that, under a statutory provision (Art. 5699)
reading,
"[a]ny person interested in any will which shall have been
probated under the laws of this state may institute suit in the
proper court to contest the validity thereof, within four years
after such will shall have been admitted to probate, and not
afterward,"
such a suit
Page 246 U. S. 208
must be instituted in the court in which the will was admitted
to probate, that is to say in the county court, and that it calls
for an exercise of original probate jurisdiction.
Franks v.
Chapman, 60 Tex. 46;
Franks v. Chapman, 61 Tex. 576,
579, 582, 583;
Heath v. Layne, 62 Tex. 686;
Fisher v.
Wood, 65 Tex.199, 204.
And see Dew v. Dew, 23
Tex.Civ.App. 676;
Hilgers v. Hilgers, 159 S.W. 851.
The present suit being, in an essential feature, a suit to annul
the will of Mary Jane Hubbard, and a proceeding of this character
being by the laws of Texas merely supplemental to the proceedings
for probate of the will and cognizable only by the probate court,
it follows from what we have said that the controversy is not
within the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States.
Decree affirmed.