Lewis v. First Nat. Bank of Midland, 6046

Decision Date17 September 1969
Docket NumberNo. 6046,6046
Citation445 S.W.2d 629
PartiesStella Highsmith LEWIS et al., Appellants, v. The FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF MIDLAND, Texas, Administrator of the Estate of Myrtle Cato Mendel, Deceased, et al., Appellees. . El Paso
CourtTexas Court of Appeals

Fred C. Chandler, Sr., Ozona, for appellants.

Hart Johnson, Fort Stockton, Ben Goodwin, Tyler, Barkley, Cutcher & Alderson, Taylor, Thompson, Knight, Simmons & Bullion, J. P. Jones, Dallas, Turpin, Smith, Dyer, Hardie & Harman, Midland, for appellees.

OPINION

WARD, Justice.

This is an appeal from an action in District Court of Pecos County, Texas to declare the heirship of Myrtle Cato Mendel, deceased, on the maternal, or Highsmith, line of the family. This portion relating to the maternal line of the family was severed from that portion of the controversy relating to the paternal line, which case is also now pending on appeal. The trial court determined that the appellants are not heirs at law of the deceased.

The transcript and statement of facts in this appeal was filed in the office of the Clerk of this court on March 17, 1969, and the appellants' brief was due for filing herein on or before April 16, 1969. On June 9, 1969 the appellants made application for permission to file their brief, and again, on July 2, 1969, filed their second motion for permission to file their brief. Both motions were denied by this court, the motions being in terms remarkably similar to the unsuccessful motion set forth in Lee v. Owen, 404 S.W.2d 84 (Tex.Civ.App., San Antonio 1966, no writ).

Appellees now urge that the appeal should be dismissed or, in the alternative, that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed . We are of the opinion that the appellees are entitled to have the judgment of the trial court affirmed. Rule 415, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, provides that where an appellant has failed to file his brief in the time prescribed, the court may decline to dismiss the appeal, whereupon it shall give such direction to the cause as it may deem proper. We have reviewed the record to determine if fundamental error exists, and we have found none. Julian v. Carrollton Independent School District, 346 S.W.2d 189 (Texarkana Civ.Spp., no writ).

Myrtle Cato Mendel died intestate and left no surviving children or their descendants, no surviving brothers or sisters or their descendants, no surviving father or mother, and no surviving husband . On the maternal line of the family, the case now before us, there was no surviving grandfather or grandmother. To determine her heirs at law herein, the case is controlled by the last sentence of § 38, subsection (a), paragraph 4 of the Texas Probate Code, Vol. 17A, Vernon's Annotated Civil Statutes:

'* * * If there be no surviving grandfather or grandmother, then the whole of such estate shall go to their descendants, and so on without end, passing in like manner to the nearest lineal ancestors and their descendants.'

It is undisputed in the record--in fact it is stipulated--that the appellees are among the direct lineal descendants of the deceased maternal grandparents of Myrtle Cato Mendel. They are all descendants of the brothers and sisters of Bennie Alberta Highsmith Cato, who was the mother of Myrtle Cato Mendel. Sarah A. McCutcheon Highsmith was the mother of Bennie Alberta Highsmith Cato and the mother of said br...

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