Estate of Michael Lynn Luce ( 2018 )


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  •                    In the
    Court of Appeals
    Second Appellate District of Texas
    at Fort Worth
    ___________________________
    No. 02-17-00097-CV
    ___________________________
    ESTATE OF MICHAEL LYNN LUCE, DECEASED
    On Appeal from County Court at Law No. 2
    Parker County, Texas
    Trial Court No. CIV-16-0132
    Before Walker, Meier, and Kerr, JJ.
    Memorandum Opinion by Justice Kerr
    Concurring Memorandum Opinion by Justice Meier (to follow)
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    This is the case of the blinking testator. In October 2015, Michael Lynn Luce
    was in a serious accident that left him a quadriplegic. A week after he was admitted to
    the hospital, Michael was intubated, which rendered him unable to speak. Paralyzed
    from the chest down and unable to speak, Michael was able to communicate by
    blinking his eyes to indicate “yes” and “no.” Using this blinking system, Michael’s
    attorney was able to draft a will based on Michael’s blinked responses to a series of
    leading questions, and through this system, Michael directed a notary to sign the will
    for him.
    After Michael died in November 2015, GayeLynne Luce, his estranged wife,
    filed an application to probate an earlier will of Michael’s. Michael’s sister, Tina Poole,
    filed an application to probate the 2015 will. After a jury trial, the trial court admitted
    the 2015 will to probate and appointed Tina as independent executor but awarded
    GayeLynne nearly $200,000 in attorney’s fees and expenses. GayeLynne and Tina
    both appealed. As explained below, we reverse in part and affirm in part.
    I.
    Background
    Michael and GayeLynne met in 1987. Both had children from previous
    marriages. Michael had seven-year-old twin daughters, Brandy and Melissa Luce.
    GayeLynne had three sons: nine-year-old Nathaniel Byrd and seven-year-old twins,
    Kevin and Jeremiah (Jeremy) Byrd. When Michael and GayeLynne married in 1989,
    2
    Kevin and Jeremy lived with them. Nathaniel lived with his father, and Brandy and
    Melissa lived with their mother about 20 minutes away.
    Even though Brandy and Melissa lived nearby, they came to visit Michael and
    GayeLynne only every four to six weeks. And by the end of Michael and GayeLynne’s
    first year of marriage, the girls rarely visited their father. In contrast to his distant
    relationship with his daughters, Michael shared a closer relationship with Kevin and
    Jeremy, with Michael’s twice attempting to adopt them when they were children.
    In 1998, Michael executed a will appointing GayeLynne as independent
    executor and bequeathing his entire estate to her if she survived him by 60 days, or if
    she did not, to a trustee for the benefit of his children named in the will: Nathaniel,
    Kevin, Jeremy, Brandy, and Melissa. In 2007, Michael legally adopted Kevin and
    Jeremy, who were then adults.1 But according to GayeLynne, Michael’s relationship
    with his daughters remained distant and strained until Michael’s death.
    Michael and GayeLynne’s relationship was also not without conflict. According
    to GayeLynne, Michael had a bad temper and mental-health issues and was violent
    with her. During their 26-year marriage, they had separated four times, and
    1
    At some point, Michael crossed out Nathaniel’s name in the 1998 will,
    handwrote, “Nathaniel not to be included. Kevin & Jeremy Byrd adopted April 9,
    2007 Henderson County, Texas,” and signed his name. In March 2009, Michael
    crossed out the named trustee and alternate independent executor and made an
    amendment to the will. According to GayeLynne, the amendment only changed the
    alternate independent executor to Jeremy. But GayeLynne did not offer that
    amendment with the 1998 will for probate because she could not find it.
    3
    GayeLynne had filed for divorce twice. Each time, however, they were able to work
    things out. But in June 2015, GayeLynne and Michael separated again, and
    GayeLynne filed for divorce the following month.
    The divorce was still ongoing when, on October 11, 2015, Michael was in an
    ATV accident that left him a quadriplegic. When he was admitted to the hospital
    immediately after the accident, medical records admitted into evidence at trial revealed
    that he was alert and oriented as to person, time, and place. Those records also
    reflected that the accident had not caused any head or brain injuries. Upon admission,
    Michael told hospital staff that he was going through a divorce and that if he became
    unable to make his own decisions, he wanted Brandy or Melissa to be his
    decisionmakers or, if they were not available, his sister. He made clear that even
    though he was still married to GayeLynne, he did not want her making any decisions
    for him.
    On the morning of October 18, 2015, Michael—who was still hospitalized—
    went into respiratory failure and was intubated, leaving him unable to speak. Even so,
    he was still alert and oriented as to person, place, and time.
    Later that day, attorney Kevin Ferrier came to the hospital’s intensive-care unit
    to meet with Michael—who was still intubated and unable to speak—about making a
    will. Ferrier met with Michael alone and determined Michael’s wishes through a series
    of leading questions that Michael answered by blinking his eyes to indicate “yes” or
    “no.” Through this system, Ferrier was able to determine that Michael wanted to
    4
    revoke all prior wills and wanted to leave his entire estate to Melissa and Brandy.
    Ferrier then went back to his office, drafted the will in accordance with Michael’s
    wishes, and returned to the hospital. He read the will to Michael privately and then
    read the will to Michael again in front of a notary and two witnesses. In the presence
    of Ferrier and the witnesses, the notary signed the will for Michael because he was
    physically unable to sign or make his mark. Then, while still in Michael’s presence, the
    witnesses signed the will and the notary notarized their signatures. Throughout the
    entire execution process, only Michael, Ferrier, the two witnesses, and the notary were
    in the hospital room.
    Michael died over a month later, on November 26, 2015. On December 8,
    2015, GayeLynne filed an application to probate the 1998 will. A week later, Tina filed
    an application to probate the 2015 will2 and an opposition to GayeLynne’s probate
    application. In January 2016, GayeLynne filed an opposition to Tina’s probate
    application.
    The will contest was tried to a jury over four days in December 2016 in front
    of Judge Curtis Jenkins, the then-presiding judge of Parker County Court at Law
    Number Two. 3 GayeLynne and Tina testified, along with—by video deposition—
    2
    The 2015 will appointed Tina as independent executor.
    3
    GayeLynne and Tina both filed their probate applications in Parker County
    Court. See Tex. Est. Code Ann. §§ 31.001, 32.002(a) (West 2014); Tex. Gov’t Code
    Ann. §§ 25.1861(a), .1863(a) (West Supp. 2018). On Tina’s motion, the trial court
    properly transferred the will contest to Parker County Court at Law No. 2. See Tex.
    5
    Ferrier, Jason Pickering (one of the witnesses to the 2015 will), Bobbie Hobbs (the
    notary who had notarized the witnesses’ signatures and had signed the 2015 will for
    Michael), and Dr. Barry Rath (a neuropsychologist who had examined Michael two
    days after the will’s execution). The jury unanimously found that (1) both wills met the
    statutory execution requirements and were signed with testamentary intent;
    (2) Michael had the testamentary capacity to direct the signing of the 2015 will; (3) he
    did not direct the signing of the 2015 will because of undue influence; (4) the
    2015 will revoked the 1998 will; (5) GayeLynne did not act in good faith and with just
    cause in prosecuting her suit for the purpose of defending and having the 1998 will
    admitted to probate; and (6) Tina acted in good faith and with just cause in
    prosecuting her suit for the purposes of defending and having the 2015 will admitted
    to probate and in contesting GayeLynne’s probate application.
    On December 22, 2016, Judge Jenkins signed a final judgment based on the
    jury’s verdict and admitted the 2015 will to probate. On January 1, 2017, Judge Lynn
    Marie Johnson—who had defeated Judge Jenkins in the May 2016 primary election
    and later won the general election in November 2016—became the presiding judge of
    Parker County Court at Law Number Two.
    Est. Code Ann. § 32.003(a) (West 2014); Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 25.1863(b); Parker
    (Tex.) Dist. Ct. Loc. R. Assignment Docketing & Transfer of Cases, Civil Cases
    (requiring contested probate matters in Parker County to be filed in County Court at
    Law No. 2).
    6
    GayeLynne timely moved to vacate, modify, correct, or reform the judgment
    or, alternatively, for a new trial. In March 2017, Judge Johnson granted the motion
    with respect to the jury’s good-faith-and-with-just-cause finding against GayeLynne
    and determined that GayeLynne was entitled to attorney’s fees.4 Judge Johnson
    denied the remainder of the motion.
    In October 2017, Judge Johnson heard GayeLynne’s and Tina’s motions for
    attorney’s fees and expenses. The trial court denied Tina’s motion but awarded
    GayeLynne nearly $200,000 in attorney’s fees and expenses.
    GayeLynne and Tina each filed notices of appeal. After this case was
    submitted, the trial court removed Tina as independent executor and appointed John
    Dowdy as independent administrator of Michael’s estate. On Dowdy’s motion, we
    substituted him for Tina as the appellee / cross-appellant in this appeal. See Tex. R.
    App. P. 7.1(b).
    II.
    GayeLynne’s Appeal
    GayeLynne raises three issues: (1) the trial court erred by admitting the
    2015 will to probate; (2) the trial court abused its discretion by not allowing Jeremy to
    4
    See Tex. Est. Code Ann. § 352.052(a) (West Supp. 2018) (“A person designated
    as executor in a will or an alleged will, or as administrator with the will or alleged will
    annexed, who, for the purpose of having the will or alleged will admitted to probate,
    defends the will or alleged will or prosecutes any proceeding in good faith and with
    just cause, whether or not successful, shall be allowed out of the estate the executor’s
    or administrator’s necessary expenses and disbursements in those proceedings,
    including reasonable attorney’s fees.”).
    7
    testify and by excluding parts of Ferrier’s, GayeLynne’s, Hobbs’s and Tina’s
    testimonies and associated documentary evidence; and (3) the evidence is legally and
    factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding that the 2015 will was not the result
    of undue influence. We address each of these issues in turn.
    A. The trial court correctly admitted the 2015 will to probate.
    In her first issue, GayeLynne asserts that the trial court erred by admitting the
    2015 will to probate because it is not a valid will. Because the 2015 will had not been
    admitted to probate, Tina—as the proponent of that will—bore the burden at trial to
    prove that it was properly executed and that Michael had testamentary capacity at the
    time of execution. See Croucher v. Croucher, 
    660 S.W.2d 55
    , 57 (Tex. 1983); Douthit v.
    McLeroy, 
    539 S.W.2d 351
    , 352 (Tex. 1976). Tina made out a prima facie case on these
    issues by introducing the 2015 will—which is self-proving—into evidence. 5 See Estate
    of Danford, 
    550 S.W.3d 275
    , 281 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2018, no pet.); see
    also In re Estate of Arrington, 
    365 S.W.3d 463
    , 467 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]
    2012, no pet.); James v. Haupt, 
    573 S.W.3d 285
    , 288 (Tex. Civ. App.—Tyler 1978, writ
    ref’d n.r.e.). The burden of producing evidence then shifted to GayeLynne as the
    will’s opponent to overcome the prima facie case, but the burden of persuasion
    5
    The 2015 will meets the requirements for a self-proving will. See Tex. Est.
    Code Ann. § 251.101(2) (West 2014), § 251.1045 (West Supp. 2018). A self-proved
    will cannot otherwise be treated differently from a will that is not self-proved and may
    be contested in the same manner as a will that is not self-proved. Tex. Est. Code Ann.
    §§ 251.102(b), .106 (West 2014).
    8
    remained with Tina. See 
    Danford, 550 S.W.3d at 28
    ; 
    James, 573 S.W.2d at 288
    . On
    appeal, GayeLynne argues that Tina failed to carry her burden because there is no
    evidence, or alternatively insufficient evidence, to support the jury’s findings that the
    2015 will was duly executed according to the statutory signature requirement and that
    Michael had testamentary capacity to execute the 2015 will.
    1. Standards of review
    We may sustain a legal-sufficiency challenge only when (1) the record is wholly
    devoid of evidence of a vital fact, (2) legal or evidentiary rules bar us from giving
    weight to the only evidence offered to prove a vital fact, (3) the evidence offered to
    prove a vital fact is no more than a mere scintilla, or (4) the evidence establishes
    conclusively the opposite of a vital fact. Ford Motor Co. v. Castillo, 
    444 S.W.3d 616
    ,
    620 (Tex. 2014) (op. on reh’g); Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Co. v. Martinez, 
    977 S.W.2d 328
    ,
    334 (Tex. 1998), cert. denied, 
    526 U.S. 1040
    (1999). In determining whether there is
    legally sufficient evidence to support the finding under review, we must consider
    evidence favorable to the finding if a reasonable factfinder could and must disregard
    contrary evidence unless a reasonable factfinder could not. Cent. Ready Mix Concrete Co.
    v. Islas, 
    228 S.W.3d 649
    , 651 (Tex. 2007); City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 807,
    827 (Tex. 2005).
    When reviewing an assertion that the evidence is factually insufficient to
    support a finding, we set aside the finding only if, after considering and weighing all
    the record evidence pertinent to that finding, we determine that the credible evidence
    9
    supporting the finding is so weak, or so contrary to the overwhelming weight of all
    the evidence, that the answer should be set aside and a new trial ordered. Pool v. Ford
    Motor Co., 
    715 S.W.2d 629
    , 635 (Tex. 1986) (op. on reh’g); Cain v. Bain, 
    709 S.W.2d 175
    , 176 (Tex. 1986); Garza v. Alviar, 
    395 S.W.2d 821
    , 823 (Tex. 1965). When
    conducting a factual-sufficiency review, a court of appeals must not merely substitute
    its judgment for that of the trier of fact. Golden Eagle Archery, Inc. v. Jackson, 
    116 S.W.3d 757
    , 761 (Tex. 2003). The trier of fact—the jury in this case—is the sole judge of the
    witnesses’ credibility and the weight to be given to their testimony. See 
    id. When, as
    here, there was no objection to the jury charge, we review the legal
    and factual sufficiency of the evidence in light of the charge submitted. Romero v. KPH
    Consolidation, Inc., 
    166 S.W.3d 212
    , 221 (Tex. 2005) (citing Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v.
    Sturges, 
    52 S.W.3d 711
    , 715 (Tex. 2001)); St. Joseph Hosp. v. Wolff, 
    94 S.W.3d 513
    ,
    530 (Tex. 2002).
    2. The statutory signature requirement
    Estates code section 251.051(2) requires that a will be signed by the testator or,
    as relevant here, by another person on the testator’s behalf in the testator’s presence
    and under the testator’s direction. Tex. Est. Code Ann. § 251.051(2) (West Supp.
    2018); see, e.g., Trezevant v. Rains, 
    19 S.W. 567
    , 568 (Tex.), rev’d on other grounds, 
    23 S.W. 890
    (Tex. 1892) (concluding that signature requirement was satisfied where testatrix—
    who was completely prostrate and too weak to sign her will—specifically asked her
    daughter to guide her hand and wrist in signing the will). Here, in finding that the
    10
    2015 will was signed with testamentary intent and executed in accordance with the
    statutory signature requirements, the jury implicitly found that Hobbs signed the will
    on Michael’s behalf in his presence and under his direction. GayeLynne argues that
    the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury’s finding that
    Michael directed Hobbs to sign the 2015 will.
    It is undisputed that Michael was unable to speak at the time the 2015 will was
    executed and that because of his quadriplegia, he could not sign his name or make his
    mark. Ferrier testified that when he arrived at the hospital, a nurse told him that
    Michael was able to communicate by blinking, so Ferrier and Michael established a
    “signal system” in which Michael would blink once to answer “yes” and twice to
    answer “no,” or vice versa. Even though Ferrier could not remember at trial which
    system he and Michael had established, Ferrier testified that he was able to
    communicate with Michael based on Michael’s blinked responses to a series of leading
    questions. Through these questions and Michael’s blinked responses, Ferrier
    established an attorney-client relationship with Michael and determined that Michael
    wanted to make a new will that revoked any earlier ones.
    Ferrier also testified that because Michael’s medical condition rendered him
    physically unable to sign or make his mark, Ferrier had researched Texas Government
    Code section 406.0165, which provides that
    A notary may sign the name of an individual who is physically unable to
    sign or make a mark on a document presented for notarization if
    directed to do so by that individual, in the presence of a witness who has
    11
    no legal or equitable interest in any real or personal property that is the
    subject of, or is affected by, the document being signed.
    Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 406.0165(a) (West 2013). Based on section 406.0165, Ferrier
    determined that a notary could sign the will for Michael, and when Ferrier drafted the
    will, he included the following under Michael’s signature line: “Signature affixed by
    notary in the presence of ____________ (insert name of disinterested witness), a
    disinterested witness, under section 406.0165 of the Texas Government Code.” See 
    id. § 406.0165(b)
    (requiring notary who signs a document under section 406.0165 to write
    the same or substantially similar sentence under her signature).
    When Ferrier returned to the hospital with the drafted will, he met with
    Michael privately to explain the execution process and that the law allowed a notary to
    sign the will for him. Through the blinking system, Michael confirmed to Ferrier that
    he understood the execution process, that Hobbs was signing the will for him, and
    that he was requesting Hobbs to sign for him. According to Ferrier, Michael directed
    Hobbs to sign the will on his behalf in Ferrier’s presence.
    Pickering, one of the 2015 will’s witnesses, also testified about its execution.6
    Ferrier explained the blinking system to Pickering, the other witness (Cara Brown),
    and Hobbs. But like Ferrier, Pickering could not remember whether one blink meant
    “yes” and two blinks meant “no” or vice versa. Even so, Pickering testified that
    6
    Pickering did not know Michael but happened to be at the hospital that day
    visiting a friend who was also in the ICU.
    12
    Michael made it very clear though the blinking system that he wanted the notary to
    sign the will for him.
    Hobbs, the notary, similarly testified that Ferrier explained the blinking system
    to her and to the two witnesses, but she too could not remember whether one blink
    meant “yes” and two blinks meant “no” or vice versa.7 Hobbs asked Michael if he
    wanted her to sign the will for him, and he answered “yes” using the blinking system.
    Hobbs testified that Michael understood that she was signing the will for him, and
    there was no question in Hobbs’s mind that Michael wanted her to sign the will for
    him. Hobbs further testified that she signed the will at Michael’s direction. After
    Hobbs signed the will for Michael, Brown signed her name in the blank provided to
    indicate that she was the disinterested witness government code section
    406.0165 requires.8 See 
    id. GayeLynne argues
    that this evidence is legally and factually insufficient to
    support the jury’s finding that Michael directed Hobbs to sign the 2015 will for him
    because, at best, Michael merely consented to her signing for him. To support her
    argument, GayeLynne relies heavily on Muhlbauer v. Muhlbauer, 
    686 S.W.2d 366
    (Tex.
    App.—Fort Worth 1985, no writ). In that case, the testator signed a will while his wife
    (who was the primary beneficiary) guided his hand. 
    Id. at 368,
    373. The attorney who
    Hobbs, a mobile notary, did not know Michael.
    7
    Like Pickering, Brown was at the hospital that day visiting someone and did
    8
    not know Michael.
    13
    had drafted the will testified that he did not remember whether he or the testator
    asked the wife to guide the testator’s hand, but there was “[n]o question” that the
    testator consented to his wife guiding his hand. 
    Id. at 370–72.
    The attorney also
    testified that the testator was never given the opportunity to make his mark or an
    “X.” 
    Id. at 372.
    According to the wife, the testator was physically unable to make his
    mark, and she guided his hand because he did not have the strength to guide it
    himself. 
    Id. at 373–75.
    But she also testified that the testator was able to use his hands
    and arms well enough to smoke a pipe and to raise his wristwatch up to his eyes (the
    testator was legally blind). 
    Id. at 373–74,
    377. Based on this evidence, the trial court
    refused to admit the will to probate after orally finding that the will was not signed at
    the husband’s direction. 
    Id. at 376.
    On appeal, the wife argued that the trial court’s refusal to admit the will to
    probate was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. 
    Id. at 368–
    69. This court determined that “[i]t is clear that the language [of section 251.051(2)’s
    predecessor] is directory in nature and provides only that the will be signed by the
    testator in person or alternatively only by another for him by his direction and in his
    presence.” 
    Id. at 376.
    We went on to hold that the statute requires that “the signing of
    the will by another person for the testator must be done in pursuance of the
    previously expressed direction of the testator.” 
    Id. at 377.
    After reviewing the
    evidence, we affirmed, determining that the trial court’s refusal to admit the will to
    probate—a refusal based on an implied finding that the will was not signed at the
    14
    husband’s direction—was not against the great weight and preponderance of the
    evidence. See 
    id. Muhlbauer is
    distinguishable. Here, we are not asked to determine whether the
    evidence was factually sufficient to support the factfinder’s finding that the will was not
    signed at the testator’s direction but rather whether the evidence is sufficient to support
    the jury’s finding that the will was signed at Michael’s direction. Also, unlike Muhlbauer,
    it is undisputed that Michael could not speak and could not physically sign his name
    or make his mark. Ferrier, Pickering, and Hobbs each testified that using the blink
    system, Michael directed Hobbs to sign the 2015 will for him. Viewing the evidence
    under the applicable standards of review stated above, we hold that there is some
    evidence to support the jury’s finding that Michael directed another person to sign the
    will for him and that this finding is not against the great weight and preponderance of
    the evidence. We therefore overrule this part of GayeLynne’s first issue.
    3. Michael’s testamentary capacity
    The jury also found that Michael had testamentary capacity to sign the
    2015 will. GayeLynne argues that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to
    support this finding given the severity of Michael’s medical condition, his isolation
    from his immediate family, and his inability to communicate other than by blinking
    “yes” or “no” in response to Ferrier’s leading questions, which were based solely on
    information that Tina provided. GayeLynne also complains that Michael never
    expressed any desire to draft a new will, that the new will was solely at Tina’s
    15
    direction, and that the 2015 will—without any explanation—leaves Michael’s entire
    estate to his estranged daughters and excludes GayeLynne and his sons. Specifically,
    GayeLynne contends that the evidence is insufficient to prove that Michael
    understood the contents of the 2015 will and that he knew the “natural objects of his
    bounty and their claim on him” because the will excludes his sons.
    Michael’s medical records that were introduced at trial reveal that Michael did
    not suffer a head or brain injury because of the accident. When he was admitted to
    the hospital immediately after the accident, he was alert and oriented as to person,
    time, and place. Regarding GayeLynne, Michael’s hospital admission notes read as
    follows:
    States that he is going through a divorce right now and would like [h]is
    two daughters Melissa or Brandy to be his decision makers in the event
    he isn[’]t able to make decisions for himself. States that if they are not
    available his sister could also make decisions. Makes it clear he does not
    want his wife making any decisions for him even though the divorce is
    not final yet.
    A week later, on the morning of October 18, Michael went into respiratory
    failure and was intubated. That afternoon, Tina’s husband called Ferrier—an estate-
    planning and probate attorney for whom Tina’s daughter-in-law had previously
    worked as a legal assistant—to tell him that Michael wanted to see an attorney about
    estate planning. Ferrier testified that he had already anticipated doing some estate
    planning for Michael because Tina had contacted Ferrier about the accident the week
    before.
    16
    Ferrier further testified that he was familiar with testamentary-capacity issues
    and that if he ever questioned a client’s capacity to make a will, he would refer the
    client to a physician for a capacity determination. Ferrier further testified that in the
    past, he had refused to draft a will or codicil for a client because the client lacked
    capacity.
    When Ferrier arrived at the hospital mid-afternoon on October 18, Tina took
    him to the ICU so that the nurses knew why he was there; Tina then left. According
    to Ferrier, even though Michael was paralyzed and intubated, he was awake, alert, and
    lucid. Michael’s nurse explained his injuries to Ferrier and informed him that
    Michael’s pain medications had been suspended for twelve to fifteen hours. The nurse
    also told Ferrier that Michael could communicate by blinking his eyes.
    Ferrier met with Michael alone and determined that they could communicate
    using the blinking system. By asking Michael a series of leading questions, Ferrier was
    able to determine Michael’s wishes based on Michael’s blinked responses. Michael
    communicated to Ferrier that he wanted to make a new will disposing of his assets
    and property, who he wanted to inherit under the new will, and that he intended to
    revoke any prior wills.
    Ferrier further testified that Michael understood the nature and extent of his
    assets and knew who his family members were. Ferrier knew that Michael and
    GayeLynne were in the process of divorcing, and Michael made clear to Ferrier that
    he did not want his wife to take under the new will. Ferrier had learned the identities
    17
    of Michael’s children from the members of Michael’s family who were at the hospital
    that day (Tina and her husband; Michael’s sister Patricia and her husband; Brandy and
    her husband; and Melissa and her husband). Tina had discussed Kevin and Jeremy
    with Ferrier, but it was unclear to Ferrier whether Michael had formally adopted
    them. Ferrier and Michael discussed Kevin and Jeremy, but Michael “made it perfectly
    clear he wanted his two daughters to be the sole beneficiaries.”
    During his meeting with Michael, Ferrier would periodically confirm that
    Michael understood what was going on and that the will’s provisions were what he
    wanted. Throughout the process, Ferrier felt that he and Michael were “on the same
    page” and were able to communicate even though they communicated solely through
    the blinking system. According to Ferrier, Michael was of sound mind, and Ferrier
    had no concerns about Michael’s capacity.
    After meeting with Michael, Ferrier left the hospital and went to his office to
    prepare the will according to Michael’s instructions. In a section titled “Identity of the
    Family,” the will states that GayeLynne is Michael’s spouse but that he is “specifically
    not making any provisions for her in this Will because [they] are in the process of
    divorcing.” In the same section, the will states: “At the time of execution of this Will,
    I have two daughters, namely, Melissa Ann Long and Brandy Jo Luce.” The will
    makes no mention of Kevin and Jeremy.
    When Ferrier returned to the hospital with the will that evening, Michael was as
    lucid and clear-headed as he was earlier. Ferrier met with Michael alone and read the
    18
    will to him. Using the blinking system, Michael confirmed to Ferrier that the will
    Ferrier had prepared was what Michael wanted. At the time he read the will to
    Michael, Ferrier believed that Michael had sufficient mental ability to understand what
    they were discussing, to understand the effect of the act of signing a will, to
    understand the nature and extent of his property, to know his next of kin and the
    natural objects of his bounty, to collect the elements of the business to be transacted,
    and to hold those elements in his mind long enough to perceive their relationship to
    each other and to make a reasonable judgment as to those elements.
    Ferrier read the will to Michael again in the presence of the two witnesses and
    the notary. As Ferrier went through the will, he periodically asked Michael questions
    to again confirm that Michael understood and agreed with the will’s provisions.
    Pickering testified that Michael “clearly” and “absolutely” understood what was going
    on. And to clear up any doubts in his mind, Pickering independently asked Michael if
    he understood that he was making a will and if the will was what he wanted. Through
    the blinking system, Michael answered “yes” to both inquires. Both Pickering and
    Hobbs testified that Michael understood what was going on, that he understood that
    the document Ferrier had prepared and read was a will, that he understood the will’s
    provisions and their effects, and that the will was what Michael wanted.
    Two days after the will’s execution, Dr. Rath examined Michael. Michael was
    still unable to speak because he was intubated, but he was able to communicate with
    Dr. Rath by either slightly nodding his head “yes” and “no” or by casting his gaze at
    19
    index cards labeled “yes” and “no.”9 As a result of the examination, Dr. Rath
    determined that Michael was fully competent and able to make his own decisions,
    including financial and medical decisions. 10 Dr. Rath opined that when Michael
    executed the 2015 will two days before the examination, Michael had sufficient mental
    ability to make a will.
    A person must be of sound mind to execute a valid will. See Tex. Est. Code
    Ann. § 251.001 (West Supp. 2018). “Sound mind” means having testamentary
    capacity. Bracewell v. Bracewell, 
    20 S.W.3d 14
    , 19 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    2000, no pet.). Testamentary capacity requires that the testator, at the time the will is
    executed, have sufficient mental ability to understand he is making a will, the effect of
    making the will, and the general nature and extent of his property. Horton v. Horton,
    
    965 S.W.2d 78
    , 85 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1998, no pet.); Tieken v. Midwestern State
    Univ., 
    912 S.W.2d 878
    , 882 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 1995, no writ). He must also
    know his next of kin and the natural objects of his bounty, the claims upon them, and
    have sufficient memory to collect in his mind the elements of the business transacted
    and hold them long enough to perceive their obvious relation to each other and form
    9
    Pickering also testified that Michael was able to nod his head “just very little,”
    and that when he asked Michael if the will was what he wanted, Michael blinked “yes”
    and “nudged his head a little bit.” But Ferrier testified that Michael could not nod.
    Regardless, Ferrier, Pickering, Hobbs, and Dr. Rath were uniform in their testimony
    that they were able to communicate with Michael.
    Dr. Rath’s examination notes, which were admitted into evidence, also reflect
    10
    his opinion that Michael was “fully competent and able to make his own decisions.”
    20
    a reasonable judgment about them. 
    Horton, 965 S.W.2d at 85
    ; 
    Tieken, 912 S.W.2d at 882
    . The jury here was instructed on all these elements.
    Even though Michael was seriously injured in the ATV accident, he did not
    suffer any head or brain injury. Ferrier, Pickering, Hobbs, and Dr. Rath each testified
    that even though Michael was unable to speak because he was intubated, he was alert
    and lucid and had the mental capacity to understand what was going on and to make
    his own decisions at the time the 2015 will was executed. See 
    Horton, 965 S.W.2d at 86
    (“Evidence of physical infirmities, without more, does not tend to prove that a
    testator is incapable of knowing his family or his property, or understanding the effect
    of signing the will.”). Ferrier testified extensively regarding the steps he took using the
    blinking system to ensure that Michael wanted to execute the 2015 will, that the will
    disposed of Michael’s property in accordance with his wishes, and that he understood
    the will’s provisions. Ferrier, Pickering, and Hobbs testified that through the blinking
    system, Michael communicated that the 2015 will was what he wanted.
    GayeLynne suggests that because the will omits any mention of Kevin and
    Jeremy, it incorrectly identifies Michael’s family, thus indicating that Michael did not
    know his next of kin and the natural objects of his bounty. But Ferrier specifically
    questioned Michael about his sons, and Michael was clear that he wanted only his
    daughters to inherit. Even though there was evidence that Michael was estranged
    from his two daughters for most of their lives and enjoyed a closer relationship with
    his sons, Michael was in the process of divorcing GayeLynne (his adopted sons’
    21
    biological mother) and made it clear to hospital staff a week before the 2015 will was
    executed that he did not want her involved in making decisions for him and wanted
    his daughters to make those decisions. A testator is not obligated to bequeath
    anything to his spouse or to any or all his children, adopted or biological. See Estate of
    Good, 
    274 S.W.2d 900
    , 902 (Tex. Civ. App.—El Paso 1955, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (“It is the
    common idea . . . that children have the right to some of the property of parents, but
    it is the law of Texas that a citizen of this state may by his will dispose of his property
    without regard to the ties of nature and relationship, and may do so in defiance of the
    rules of justice or the dictates of reason . . . .”).
    Accordingly, viewing the evidence under the applicable standards of review
    stated above, we hold that some evidence supports the jury’s finding that Michael had
    testamentary capacity to sign the 2015 will and that this finding is not against the great
    weight and preponderance of the evidence. We therefore overrule the remainder of
    GayeLynne’s first issue.
    B. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by excluding GayeLynne’s
    evidence or error, if any, did not cause the rendition of an improper
    judgment.
    In her second issue, GayeLynne contends that the trial court erred by excluding
    Jeremy’s testimony entirely and by excluding parts of Ferrier’s, GayeLynne’s, Hobbs’s,
    and Tina’s testimonies and associated documentary evidence. She asserts that the
    excluded evidence was relevant to Michael’s testamentary capacity to execute the
    2015 will and to her claim that the 2015 will was the product of Tina’s undue
    22
    influence. She argues that the trial court’s exclusion of this evidence was reasonably
    calculated to cause, and probably did cause, the rendition of an improper judgment.11
    See Tex. R. App. P. 44.1(a)(1).
    1. Standard of review
    We review the trial court’s admission or exclusion of evidence for an abuse of
    discretion. State v. Bristol Hotel Asset Co., 
    65 S.W.3d 638
    , 647 (Tex. 2001). A trial court
    abuses its discretion if the court acts without reference to any guiding rules or
    principles—that is, if the act is arbitrary or unreasonable. Low v. Henry, 
    221 S.W.3d 609
    , 614 (Tex. 2007); Cire v. Cummings, 
    134 S.W.3d 835
    , 838–39 (Tex. 2004). An
    appellate court cannot conclude that a trial court abused its discretion merely because
    the appellate court would have ruled differently in the same circumstances. E.I. du
    Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Robinson, 
    923 S.W.2d 549
    , 558 (Tex. 1995); see also 
    Low, 221 S.W.3d at 620
    .
    11
    GayeLynne timely filed a formal bill of exception containing largely the same
    evidence she presented in her offers of proof at trial and the same exhibits the trial
    court admitted at trial “for record purposes only.” See Tex. R. App. P. 33.2(e)(1). Tina
    objected to the bill. When, as here, the parties do not agree on a bill’s contents, the
    trial judge, after notice and hearing, must (1) find the bill is correct, sign it, and file it
    with the trial-court clerk; (2) suggest corrections to the complaining party, and if the
    complaining party agrees to the corrections, sign and file the bill with the trial-court
    clerk; or (3) if after making suggested corrections, the complaining party will not agree
    to the corrections, return the bill to the complaining party with the judge’s written
    refusal on it. Tex. R. App. P. 33.2(c). Here, the trial judge did not hear the bill, sign
    the bill, or suggest corrections. Thus, any errors complained of in GayeLynne’s bill of
    exception that were not presented in her offers of proof and exhibits admitted for
    record purposes only are not preserved for our review. See Bryan v. Watumull,
    
    230 S.W.3d 503
    , 516–17 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2007, pet. denied).
    23
    2. Jeremy’s testimony
    GayeLynne did not disclose Jeremy as a person with knowledge of relevant
    facts. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 194.2(e). Nor did she list him on her fact-witness list, which
    she filed a day after the December 5 scheduling-order deadline. But during her case-
    in-chief, GayeLynne attempted to call Jeremy as a witness. After Tina rested,
    GayeLynne tried to call Jeremy again, this time as a rebuttal witness.12 Each time, Tina
    objected because GayeLynne had not disclosed Jeremy as a person with knowledge of
    relevant facts. See 
    id. The trial
    court sustained Tina’s objections and did not allow
    Jeremy to testify.13
    In response to a disclosure request about persons with knowledge of relevant
    facts, a party must provide the name, address, and telephone number of such persons
    along with a brief statement of each identified person’s connection with the case. Tex.
    R. Civ. P. 192.3(c), 194.2(e), 194.3. A party cannot call to testify a nonparty witness
    whom she should have identified during discovery unless she can establish either
    good cause for failing to identify the witness or that the failure would not unfairly
    surprise or unfairly prejudice the opposing party. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 193.6(a); Beam v.
    During rebuttal, GayeLynne intended to have Jeremy rebut Tina’s testimony
    12
    and authenticate a text message exchange with Tina that she denied having with him.
    13
    According to GayeLynne’s offer of proof, Jeremy was going to testify
    regarding his close relationship with Michael, which began when Jeremy was seven
    years old; Michael’s attempts to adopt Jeremy as a child; Michael’s nonexistent
    relationship with his daughters; Michael’s involvement with Jeremy’s children; Tina’s
    failure to inform Jeremy of Michael’s accident; and Tina’s alleged removal of
    $400,000 from Michael’s bank account shortly before he died.
    24
    A.H. Chaney, Inc., 
    56 S.W.3d 920
    , 922 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2001, pet. denied); see
    also Fort Brown Villas III Condo. Ass’n v. Gillenwater, 
    285 S.W.3d 879
    , 881 (Tex. 2009)
    (recognizing that rule 193.6’s exclusionary sanction is automatic unless one of the
    rule’s exceptions applies). The party seeking to admit the testimony bears the burden
    to establish good cause or lack of unfair surprise or unfair prejudice. See Tex. R. Civ.
    P. 193.6(b). It is within the trial court’s discretion to determine whether that party has
    met this burden. Bellino v. Comm’n for Lawyer Discipline, 
    124 S.W.3d 380
    , 383 (Tex.
    App.—Dallas 2003, pet. denied).
    GayeLynne does not dispute that she failed to disclose Jeremy as a person with
    knowledge of relevant facts in response to Tina’s disclosure requests. Nor does she
    dispute that she failed to list Jeremy on her witness list. Instead, she contends, her
    failure did not unfairly surprise or unfairly prejudice Tina because Tina listed Jeremy
    on her own witness list, and GayeLynne’s witness list incorporated Tina’s. 14 See Tex.
    R. Civ. P. 193.6(a)(2).
    Tina was aware of Jeremy’s relationship to the case: he was a contingent
    beneficiary under the 1998 will, and Tina’s witness list identified Jeremy as
    GayeLynne’s son and Michael’s adopted son.15 But the record does not indicate that
    Tina knew what Jeremy would testify to if GayeLynne called him to testify, because
    14
    On appeal, GayeLynne does not argue that there was good cause for her
    failure to disclose Jeremy. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 193.6(a)(1).
    On her witness list, Tina listed Jeremy’s contact information as “unknown.”
    15
    25
    she did not disclose Jeremy and he had not been deposed. GayeLynne’s filing a
    witness list incorporating Tina’s witness list—which named more than 50 witnesses—
    less than a week before trial was insufficient notice of GayeLynne’s intent to call
    Jeremy as a witness. Based on this record, the trial court did not abuse its discretion
    by concluding that GayeLynne did not establish lack of unfair surprise or unfair
    prejudice and therefore by excluding Jeremy’s testimony. 16 See Tex. R. Civ. P.
    193.6(a)–(b).
    3. GayeLynne’s testimony and associated documentary evidence
    The trial court sustained Tina’s relevancy objections and excluded
    (1) GayeLynne’s testimony comparing Michael’s nonexistent relationship with his
    daughters and their children to his close relationship with Jeremy, Kevin, and their
    children; (2) GayeLynne’s testimony about Michael’s efforts to adopt Jeremy and
    Kevin while they were children; (3) Michael’s obituary listing Melissa, Brandy, Jeremy,
    and Kevin as his children; (4) a 2011 obituary for Brandy’s stillborn child that did not
    list Michael as one of the child’s grandparents; and (5) the 2007 court order granting
    16
    On appeal, GayeLynne does not assert that she was not required to disclose
    Jeremy because he was a rebuttal witness, much less explain how Jeremy’s testimony
    could not have been reasonably anticipated before trial. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 192.3(d)
    (stating that a party is not required to disclose the identity of “rebuttal or impeaching
    witnesses the necessity of whose testimony cannot reasonably be anticipated before
    trial”); Jurek v. Herauf, No. 14-07-00727-CV, 
    2009 WL 179204
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [14th Dist.] Jan. 27, 2009, no pet.) (mem. op.) (“A rebuttal witness still has
    to be disclosed if the need to call that witness reasonably should have been
    anticipated.”). Because GayeLynne does not raise these arguments, we do not address
    them. See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(f), (i).
    26
    Michael’s application to adopt Kevin and Jeremy. GayeLynne argues that the trial
    court erred by excluding this evidence because it was relevant to Michael’s
    testamentary capacity and to her undue-influence claim.
    As noted, testamentary capacity requires that a testator have sufficient mental
    ability to make a will. See 
    Horton, 965 S.W.2d at 85
    ; 
    Tieken, 912 S.W.2d at 882
    . In a will
    contest, “the proper inquiry is whether the testator had testamentary capacity on the
    day the will was executed.” 
    Horton, 965 S.W.2d at 85
    (citing Lee v. Lee, 
    424 S.W.2d 609
    ,
    611 (Tex. 1968)). But the testator’s state of mind at other times can be used to prove
    his state of mind on the day he executed the will if the evidence shows that a
    condition affecting his testamentary capacity was persistent and likely was present at
    the time the will was executed. Long v. Long, 
    196 S.W.3d 460
    , 465 (Tex. App.—Dallas
    2006, no pet.); see 
    Croucher, 660 S.W.2d at 57
    (“Evidence of incompetency at other
    times can be used to establish incompetency on the day the will was executed if it
    ‘demonstrates that the condition persists and has some probability of being the same
    condition which obtained at the time of the will’s making.’” (quoting 
    Lee, 424 S.W.2d at 611
    )). To successfully challenge a testator’s mental capacity with circumstantial
    evidence from time periods other than the day on which the will was executed, the
    will contestant must establish that (1) the evidence offered indicates a lack of
    testamentary capacity; (2) the evidence is probative of the testator’s capacity (or lack
    thereof) on the day the will was executed; and (3) the evidence provided is of a
    satisfactory and convincing character, because probate will not be set aside on the
    27
    basis of evidence that creates only a suspicion of mental incapacity. See 
    Horton, 965 S.W.2d at 85
    .
    GayeLynne argues that the evidence regarding Michael’s relationship with his
    children is relevant to whether Michael “knew the ‘nature of his bounty and their
    claims upon them’” because the 2015 will disinherited Kevin and Jeremy, with whom
    he had a close and loving relationship, and designated Melissa and Brandy—from
    whom he was estranged—as primary beneficiaries. Relevant evidence tends to make a
    fact of consequence to the action more or less probable than it would be without the
    evidence and is generally admissible. Tex. R. Evid. 401, 402. GayeLynne’s excluded
    testimony was not probative of Michael’s mental ability to know his next of kin and
    natural objects of his bounty on the day of the 2015 will, nor does it indicate a lack of
    testamentary capacity at any time, much less Michael’s capacity on the day the
    2015 will was signed. Accordingly, with respect to Michael’s testamentary capacity, the
    trial court did not err by excluding GayeLynne’s evidence regarding Michael’s
    relationship with his children.
    But GayeLynne’s testimony and documentary evidence might have been
    relevant to her undue-influence claim. “[U]ndue influence implies the existence of a
    testamentary capacity subjected to and controlled by a dominant influence or power.”
    Rothermel v. Duncan, 
    369 S.W.2d 917
    , 922 (Tex. 1963). To establish undue influence,
    the contestant (here, GayeLynne) must prove the existence and exertion of an
    influence that subverted or overpowered the testator’s mind at the time he executed
    28
    the will such that the testator executed a will that he otherwise would not have
    executed but for such influence. See id.; 
    Long, 196 S.W.3d at 467
    .
    The final element focuses on whether the will’s disposition of property is
    unnatural. 
    Rothermel, 369 S.W.2d at 923
    . A disposition may be unnatural, for example,
    if it excludes a testator’s natural heirs or favors one heir at the expense of others who
    ordinarily would receive equal treatment. See Long v. Long, 
    125 S.W.2d 1034
    ,
    1036 (1939). The disinheritance of close relatives or loved ones is not necessarily an
    unnatural disposition. See, e.g., Guthrie v. Suiter, 
    934 S.W.2d 820
    , 832 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [1st Dist.] 1996, no writ) (concluding that exclusion of testator’s only living
    son from will not unnatural given strained and distant relationship between him and
    his mother). “But a testator’s preference for one heir over others of an equal or
    similar degree of kinship may be unnatural if the record does not disclose a reasonable
    basis for the preference or contains proof that calls the preference into question or
    discredits it.” Yost v. Fails, 
    534 S.W.3d 517
    , 525 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2017,
    no pet.), rev’d on other grounds, Archer v. Anderson, 
    556 S.W.3d 228
    , 239 & n.78 (Tex.
    2018) (citing 
    Rothermel, 369 S.W.2d at 923
    –24; Curry v. Curry, 
    270 S.W.2d 208
    ,
    213 (Tex. 1954); Craycroft v. Crawford, 
    285 S.W. 275
    , 278–79 (Tex. Comm’n App. 1926,
    holding approved, judgm’t adopted)).
    Here, even if GayeLynne’s evidence regarding Michael’s relationship with his
    children was relevant to the last prong of her undue-influence claim, we cannot say its
    exclusion probably caused rendition of an improper judgment. Whether a particular
    29
    disposition is unnatural is usually for the factfinder to decide based on the
    circumstances. 
    Yost, 534 S.W.3d at 525
    . Here, as we explain more fully in part II(C)
    below, the jury heard evidence that at the time of the accident, GayeLynne and
    Michael were in the middle of divorce and that when Michael was admitted to the
    hospital, he was adamant that he did not want GayeLynne making medical decisions
    for him but wanted his daughters or sister to do so. And when Michael met with
    Ferrier a week later to draft the will, Michael made clear to Ferrier that he did not
    want GayeLynne, Kevin, and Jeremy to inherit. Accordingly, even if the trial court
    erred by excluding GayeLynne’s evidence regarding Michael’s relationship with his
    children, we hold that it probably did not cause the rendition of an improper
    judgment on GayeLynne’s undue-influence claim.
    4. Ferrier’s testimony and associated documentary evidence
    GayeLynne next complains that the trial court abused its discretion by
    excluding parts of Ferrier’s testimony and the exhibits used at his deposition. As
    noted, Ferrier testified through video deposition at trial. At the close of Tina’s direct
    examination of Ferrier, Tina objected to GayeLynne’s playing the cross-examination
    for the jury because GayeLynne had not notified Tina that she intended to use any
    video depositions at trial. Following much discussion, the trial court allowed
    GayeLynne to play her cross-examination of Ferrier and agreed to allow Tina to
    object to GayeLynne’s cross-examination questions.
    30
    After the trial court sustained Tina’s first objection, it instructed the jury,
    “Jurors, there will be an objection, there will be an answer. Put it out of your mind.
    You’re instructed not to consider any evidence that comes in to which I’ve sustained
    an objection.” GayeLynne asserts that this instruction resulted in the exclusion of the
    following evidence:
    • Ferrier knew that Michael had two daughters;
    • Ferrier had a discussion with Tina about whether Michael had legally
    adopted Kevin and Jeremy;
    • at the time Ferrier drafted the will, it was unclear to him whether
    Michael had legally adopted the boys;
    • Ferrier could not recall if Tina had told him whether Michael had
    adopted the boys; and
    • when drafting the will, Ferrier did not take the time to determine
    whether Michael had legally adopted the boys.
    But the record shows that GayeLynne’s complaints on appeal have no basis:
    the trial court did not actually sustain objections to the questions that elicited the
    above responses from Ferrier. In other words, the trial court did not exclude this
    evidence.
    GayeLynne also asserts that the trial court erred by not allowing her to present
    exhibits at trial that corresponded with exhibits that were used to cross-examine
    Ferrier during his deposition. Once again, our review of the record shows that this
    complaint has no basis because the trial court did not refuse to admit at trial the
    exhibits used during Ferrier’s deposition.
    31
    5. Hobbs’s testimony and associated documentary evidence
    GayeLynne contends that the trial court erred by not allowing her to play
    Hobbs’s entire cross-examination to the jury and by excluding Hobbs’s previously
    executed affidavit, which GayeLynne had used during the deposition to impeach
    Hobbs. GayeLynne asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by excluding this
    evidence under rule 193.6(a).
    Yet again, our review of the record shows that GayeLynne’s appellate
    complaints are unsupported. First, as with Ferrier’s cross-examination, the trial court
    did allow GayeLynne to play Hobbs’s entire deposition testimony for the jury.
    Although the trial court did sustain some of Tina’s objections during Hobbs’s cross-
    examination and sustained her objection to Hobbs’s affidavit, none of Tina’s
    objections to Hobbs’s testimony or to her affidavit was based on the rule 193.6(a).
    Accordingly, GayeLynne has waived this issue. Cf. Cantu v. Horany, 
    195 S.W.3d 867
    ,
    871 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006, no pet.) (“[W]hen an appellee urges several objections
    to a particular piece of evidence and, on appeal, the appellant complains of its
    exclusion on only one of those bases, the appellant has waived that issue for appeal
    because he has not challenged all possible grounds for the trial court’s ruling that
    sustained the objection.”).
    6. Bank records
    Finally, GayeLynne complains that the trial court abused its discretion by not
    admitting into evidence bank records allegedly showing that Tina transferred almost
    32
    $400,000 from Michael’s bank account to her own shortly before he died. GayeLynne
    intended to use these records to impeach Tina, who denied transferring the money.
    But Tina objected to the bank records because GayeLynne did not timely produce
    them, and the trial court sustained Tina’s objection. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 193.6(a).
    Amended or supplemental discovery responses made less than 30 days before
    trial are presumed untimely. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 193.5(b). A party who fails to make,
    amend, or supplement a discovery response in a timely manner cannot introduce into
    evidence documents that were not timely disclosed unless the proponent of that
    evidence proves good cause for the failure or the failure will not unfairly surprise or
    unfairly prejudice the other party. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 193.6(a)–(b). “To escape rule
    193.6’s automatic exclusion provision, the burden is on the party seeking to admit the
    evidence to establish good cause or the lack of unfair surprise or unfair prejudice.”
    White v. Perez, No. 2-09-251-CV, 
    2010 WL 87469
    , at *1 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Jan.
    7, 2010, pet. denied) (mem. op.).
    Tina’s production requests to GayeLynne included a request for bank records.
    GayeLynne produced some bank records to Tina but admitted that she did not
    supplement her production responses with the bank records at issue until less than
    two weeks before trial, which was presumptively untimely. See Tex. R. Civ. P.
    195.3(b). A party may not impeach a witness with documents not timely produced in
    response to a specific discovery request for those documents unless she satisfies one
    of rule 193.6(a)’s exceptions. See Lopez v. La Madeleine of Tex., Inc., 
    200 S.W.3d 854
    ,
    33
    856–57, 859–63 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006, no pet.). GayeLynne made no attempt to
    show in the trial court—nor does she argue on appeal—that she had good cause for
    failing to timely supplement her discovery responses or that her failure would not
    unfairly surprise or unfairly prejudice Tina. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial
    court did not abuse its discretion by excluding the bank records. See Tex. R. Civ. P.
    193.6(a)–(b).
    Having concluded that the trial court either did not abuse its discretion by
    excluding GayeLynne’s evidence, or alternatively, that the exclusion did not harm
    GayeLynne, we overrule her second issue.
    C. The evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s no-undue-influence finding.
    In her final issue, GayeLynne argues that even if the trial court’s evidentiary
    rulings were correct, the evidence presented at trial is legally and factually insufficient
    to support the jury’s finding that the 2015 will was not the result of undue influence.
    The jury was instructed that “undue influence” means that (1) “an influence existed
    and was exerted”; (2) “the influence undermined or overpowered the mind of the
    decedent at the time he signed the document”; and (3) “the decedent would not have
    directed the signing of the document but for the influence.” See 
    Rothermel, 369 S.W.2d at 922
    . As the party contesting the 2015 will’s execution, GayeLynne had the burden
    at trial to prove each of these elements. See 
    id. Exertion of
    undue influence cannot be inferred by opportunity alone. 
    Id. at 923.
    There must be some evidence that the influence was not only present but was in
    34
    fact exerted in connection with the making of the will. 
    Id. Although weakness
    of mind
    and body caused by infirmities of disease, age, or otherwise may be considered as
    material in establishing the testator’s physical incapacity to resist or the susceptibility
    of his mind to an influence exerted, such weakness does not establish that his mind
    was in fact overpowered or subverted at the time the will was executed. See 
    id. In most
    cases, the exertion of undue influence is subtle “and by its very nature usually involves
    an extended course of dealings and circumstances.” 
    Id. at 922.
    But not every influence exerted by one person on another’s will is undue. 
    Id. Influence is
    not undue unless it destroys the testator’s free agency and the testament
    produced expresses the will of the person exerting the influence. 
    Id. Even if
    one
    requests, entreats, or importunes another to execute an instrument that makes a
    favorable disposition, the entreaties and importunities will not render the instrument
    invalid based on undue influence unless they were so excessive that they subverted the
    will of the maker. See 
    id. Undue influence
    may be exerted—among other ways—
    through force, duress, intimidation, excessive importunity, or deception used to try to
    subvert or overcome the testator’s will and induce the testator to execute the
    instrument contrary to his will. 
    Id. Because no
    two undue-influence cases are the same, the outcome of any case
    turns on its own unique facts. 
    Yost, 534 S.W.3d at 525
    . Undue influence may be
    shown by direct or circumstantial evidence. 
    Rothermel, 369 S.W.2d at 922
    . A single
    circumstance standing alone is insufficient to show undue influence, but several
    35
    circumstances, when considered together, may suffice. See 
    id. But circumstantial
    evidence must do more than raise suspicion. 
    Id. at 922–23.
    The distinction between
    evidence that suffices to show undue influence and that which is merely suspicious
    defies articulation; it essentially is a matter of degree. 
    Yost, 534 S.W.3d at 525
    (citing
    Boyer v. Pool, 
    280 S.W.2d 564
    , 566 (Tex. 1955)). If the circumstances are equally
    consistent with undue influence and its absence, then undue influence is not proved.
    
    Rothermel, 369 S.W.2d at 922
    .
    GayeLynne contends that the 2015 will was the result of Tina’s undue influence
    because at the time the will was executed, Michael was in physical and mental distress;
    Tina isolated Michael from GayeLynne and his sons; Michael was entirely dependent
    on Tina; Tina was directly involved in the planning, preparation, and execution of the
    will; and the will’s property disposition was inconsistent with the 1998 will and was
    unnatural because it disinherited his wife and sons.
    Michael was indisputably in a state of severe physical distress at the time the
    2015 will was executed. Unable to move or speak, he was confined to a hospital room
    and was totally reliant on others. But there is no evidence that Michael was
    experiencing the type of “mental distress” that made him susceptible to undue
    influence. Michael had not suffered a head or brain injury, and as we detailed above,
    he was alert and lucid when he executed the will.
    It is also undisputed that Michael was isolated from his wife and adopted sons.
    Tina admitted that she never informed GayeLynne, Kevin, or Jeremy about the
    36
    accident. GayeLynne did not find out that Michael was in the hospital until a friend
    told her on November 18, over a month after the accident. Before then, GayeLynne
    had unsuccessfully tried to contact Michael by calling friends, family members,
    hospitals, and the police. According to GayeLynne, during this time, Tina left her a
    telephone message “saying that Michael was perfectly fine.”
    After GayeLynne learned about Michael’s accident, Tina told her that she was
    not allowed at the hospital and threatened to have her arrested if she came there.
    When Kevin and Jeremy went to visit Michael in the hospital sometime after
    November 18, Tina and Melissa told them that GayeLynne was not allowed to come
    to the hospital. GayeLynne never went to the hospital and had no contact with
    Michael before he died on November 26.
    But Michael’s isolation from GayeLynne and his sons and his leaving them out
    of the 2015 will is not altogether surprising. At the time of the accident, he and
    GayeLynne (his adopted sons’ biological mother) were separated, and they were in the
    middle of a contested divorce. Despite GayeLynne’s testimony that at the time of the
    accident she and Michael were considering reconciling, there was evidence that the
    divorce was contentious. And when Michael was admitted to the hospital, he made
    clear to hospital staff that he did not want GayeLynne making medical decisions for
    him, explicitly telling staff that he wanted his daughters or his sister to do so.
    Contrary to GayeLynne’s assertions on appeal, Tina was not “directly involved
    in the planning, preparation[,] and execution of the 2015 will.” Tina contacted Ferrier
    37
    and provided information about Michael’s family to Ferrier,17 but she was not
    involved in the will’s preparation and execution. As explained above, Ferrier met with
    Michael privately to discuss the will, and Michael made clear to Ferrier that he did not
    want GayeLynne, Kevin, and Jeremy to inherit. Indeed, his will states that he is
    “specifically not making any provisions for [GayeLynne] in this Will because [they] are
    in the process of divorcing.” Tina was not present when Ferrier drafted the will, when
    he walked through it with Michael, or when the will was executed.
    Viewing the evidence under the applicable standards of review, we hold that
    there is some evidence to support the jury’s no-undue-influence finding and that the
    jury’s failure to find undue influence is not against the great weight and
    preponderance of the evidence.
    III.
    Dowdy’s Appeal18
    Dowdy also raises three issues: (1) the newly elected successor judge (Judge
    Johnson) lacked authority to set aside the jury’s finding that GayeLynne did not act in
    good faith and with just cause in seeking to have the 1998 will admitted to probate;
    (2) alternatively, the trial court erred by setting aside that jury finding; and
    Ferrier admitted that he knew Michael’s family and was familiar with some of
    17
    Michael’s assets because he had done some estate planning for another family
    member (not Tina) and because Tina’s daughter-in-law had worked as his paralegal.
    18
    As noted, Dowdy replaced Tina as the appellee / cross-appellant in this
    appeal. Because we have not heard otherwise, we assume that Dowdy is continuing to
    prosecute the issues that Tina raised in her cross-appeal.
    38
    (3) alternatively, the trial court erred by awarding attorney’s fees to GayeLynne but
    not to Tina.
    As noted, GayeLynne timely filed a postjudgment motion asking the trial court
    to, among other things, set aside the jury’s adverse good-faith-and-with-just-cause
    finding on no-evidence grounds and to enter judgment awarding her attorney’s fees.
    Judge Johnson granted the motion only as to that finding and determined that
    GayeLynne was entitled to attorney’s fees. See Tex. Est. Code Ann. § 352.052(a)
    (providing that an executor who in good faith and with just cause tries to probate a
    will is entitled to recover her attorney’s fees from the estate even if the executor failed
    in probating her proposed will). Judge Johnson later signed an order awarding
    GayeLynne about $200,000 in attorney’s fees and expenses.
    A. Judge Johnson had authority to set aside the jury finding.
    In his first issue, Dowdy contends that Judge Johnson lacked authority to set
    aside the jury’s good-faith-and-with-just-cause finding against GayeLynne because
    Judge Johnson did not preside over the trial. For support, Dowdy relies on Ad
    Villarai, LLC v. Pak, 
    519 S.W.3d 132
    (Tex. 2017).
    The issue in Pak was whether a newly elected district-court judge or the former
    judge she replaced could enter findings of fact following a bench trial over which the
    former judge had presided before his term expired. 
    Id. at 134.
    As relevant here, the
    supreme court held that because successor judges do not have inherent or statutory
    authority to file fact findings on behalf of predecessors displaced by an election, any
    39
    fact findings made by successor judges are void.19 See 
    id. at 137–40.
    Based on this part
    of the court’s holding in Pak, Dowdy argues that because fact findings after a bench
    trial have the same force and dignity as a jury’s findings, a successor judge who
    replaces a predecessor judge after an election has no authority to set aside a jury
    verdict or rule on any undisposed motions. See 
    id. at 140.
    But we do not read Pak to extend that far. First, Pak was limited to findings of
    fact, see 
    id. at 135,
    n.1, and did not address a successor judge’s authority to rule on any
    undisposed motions or to set aside a jury finding. Second, a successor judge’s making
    fact findings based on evidence she did not hear is not equivalent to a successor
    judge’s ruling on a motion to set aside a jury finding. The former involves fact-
    finding; the latter does not.
    A trial court may disregard a jury verdict and render judgment notwithstanding
    the verdict (JNOV) if no evidence supports one or more of the jury’s findings or if a
    directed verdict would have been proper. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 301; Tiller v. McLure,
    
    121 S.W.3d 709
    , 713 (Tex. 2003); Fort Bend Cty. Drainage Dist. v. Sbrusch, 
    818 S.W.2d 19
             In reaching this holding, the supreme court determined that civil-procedure
    rule 18—which gives some authority to a successor judge when her predecessor dies,
    resigns, or becomes disabled—does not apply when the predecessor has been
    displaced by an election. 
    Pak, 519 S.W.3d at 138
    –39. The court also determined that
    neither the civil-procedure rules governing findings (rules 296 and 297) nor civil
    practice and remedies code section 30.002—which grants a former judge the authority
    to file fact findings and legal conclusions and permits a successor judge to do the
    same but only if the former judge dies before doing so—permits a successor judge to
    file findings. 
    Id. at 139–40;
    see Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 30.002 (West
    2015); Tex. R. Civ. P. 296, 297.
    40
    392, 394 (Tex. 1991). A directed verdict is proper only under limited circumstances:
    (1) when the evidence conclusively establishes the movant’s right to judgment or
    negates the opponent’s right; or (2) when the evidence is insufficient to raise a
    material fact issue. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. v. Fin. Review Servs., Inc., 
    29 S.W.3d 74
    ,
    77 (Tex. 2000); Playoff Corp. v. Blackwell, 
    300 S.W.3d 451
    , 454 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth
    2009, pet. denied) (op. on reh’g).
    “A judge may . . . make substantive legal decisions in a case where he did not
    preside over some or all of the trial so long as the decision does not require the judge
    to find facts based on evidence he has not heard.” Masa Custom Homes, Inc. v. Shahin,
    
    547 S.W.3d 332
    , 336 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2018, no pet.) (citing cases). When ruling on
    a motion to set aside a jury finding, a trial court is determining whether, as a matter of
    law, the evidence conclusively establishes the movant’s right to judgment or negates
    the opponent’s right or whether the evidence is sufficient to raise a fact issue. In the
    process of doing so, the trial court is not asked to find facts. Accordingly, we
    conclude that Judge Johnson had the authority to set aside the good-faith-and-with-
    just-cause finding against GayeLynne and therefore overrule Dowdy’s first issue.
    B. Judge Johnson erred by setting aside the jury finding.
    As part of his second issue, Dowdy alternatively argues that even if Judge
    Johnson had authority to set aside a jury finding, she erred by disregarding the jury’s
    good-faith-and-with-just-cause finding against GayeLynne. We agree.
    41
    To determine whether the trial court erred by rendering a JNOV, we view the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict under the well-settled standards
    that govern legal-sufficiency review. See Ingram v. Deere, 
    288 S.W.3d 886
    , 893 (Tex.
    2009); Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Miller, 
    102 S.W.3d 706
    , 709 (Tex. 2003). We must credit
    evidence favoring the jury verdict if reasonable jurors could and must disregard
    contrary evidence unless reasonable jurors could not. See Tanner v. Nationwide Mut. Fire
    Ins. Co., 
    289 S.W.3d 828
    , 830 (Tex. 2009); Cent. Ready Mix Concrete Co. v. Islas,
    
    228 S.W.3d 649
    , 651 (Tex. 2007).
    A party with the burden of proof at trial is entitled to JNOV on a particular
    issue only if the evidence establishes that issue as a matter of law. Henry v. Masson,
    
    333 S.W.3d 825
    , 849 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2010, no pet.) (citing Cain v.
    Pruett, 
    938 S.W.2d 152
    , 160 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1996, no writ)). A trial court may not
    set aside a negative jury finding and substitute its own affirmative finding unless the
    evidence conclusively establishes the issue. See 
    Tanner, 289 S.W.3d at 830
    . Because
    good faith is ordinarily a fact question for the jury to decide based on the case’s
    circumstances, we must uphold a jury finding that the party did not try to probate a
    will in good faith unless the evidence conclusively establishes the party’s good faith.
    See 
    Yost, 534 S.W.3d at 529
    ; see also Ray v. McFarland, 
    97 S.W.3d 728
    , 729–30 (Tex.
    App.—Fort Worth 2003, no pet.).
    The jury charge defined “good faith” as “an action that is prompted by honesty
    of intention or a reasonable belief that the action was probably correct,” and “with
    42
    just cause” as meaning that “the actions were based on reasonable grounds and there
    was a fair and honest cause or reason for the actions.” GayeLynne testified that she
    gave “no validity or credence” to her husband’s drafting the 2015 will and that she
    believed that the 1998 will—under which she was the only beneficiary—was Michael’s
    last will and testament.
    But as we have explained in detail, at the time of the 2015 will’s execution,
    GayeLynne and Michael were in the process of divorcing. Michael’s medical
    records—all of which GayeLynne stated that she had read before trial—reflected that,
    when Michael was admitted to the hospital a week before the will’s execution, he told
    hospital staff that because of the divorce, he did not want GayeLynne to make
    decisions for him and wanted his daughters to do so. His medical records also
    reflected that he had not suffered any brain or head injury because of the accident and
    that when the will was executed, Michael was alert and oriented as to person, place,
    and time and had not had any pain medication for several hours. The jury also heard
    videotaped deposition testimony from four witnesses regarding the drafting and
    execution of the 2015 will and Michael’s testamentary capacity.
    This evidence (of which GayeLynne was aware before trial) is some evidence to
    support the jury’s finding that GayeLynne did not act in good faith in trying to have
    the 1998 will admitted to probate, and we certainly cannot say that GayeLynne
    conclusively proved the opposite. Accordingly, the trial court erred by disregarding
    the jury’s good-faith-and-with-just-cause finding against GayeLynne and by implicitly
    43
    finding that she acted in good faith and with just cause to be entitled to an award of
    attorney’s fees and expenses for probating the 1998 will. We thus sustain this part of
    Dowdy’s second issue, which is dispositive of his appeal. 20 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1.
    IV.
    Conclusion
    Having overruled Dowdy’s first issue and sustained the dispositive part of his
    second, we (1) reverse the part of the trial court’s March 7, 2017 order modifying the
    trial court’s December 22, 2016 judgment by setting aside the jury’s good-faith-and-
    with-just-cause finding against GayeLynne and awarding her an unspecified amount
    of attorney’s fees; (2) affirm the remainder of the trial court’s March 7, 2017 order;
    (3) reverse the trial court’s October 30, 2017 order awarding GayeLynne
    $199,653.66 in attorney’s fees and expenses; and (4) affirm the trial court’s October
    27, 2017 and October 31, 2017 orders denying Tina’s request for attorney’s fees and
    20
    Because we hold that the trial court erred in setting aside the jury’s good-faith-
    and-with-just-cause finding against GayeLynne, we do not address the other part of
    Dowdy’s second issue: that Judge Johnson erred by failing to state any basis to
    support her order setting aside that finding. Nor do we address Dowdy’s third issue in
    which he complains that if Judge Johnson had authority to disregard the jury’s good-
    faith-and-with-just-cause-finding against GayeLynne and to award GayeLynne
    attorney’s fees and expenses, Judge Johnson abused her discretion by not also
    awarding Tina—as the executor designated in the 2015 will—attorney’s fees and
    expenses under estates code section 352.052(a). See Tex. Est. Code Ann. § 352.052(a).
    Because Dowdy does not assert that Tina was entitled to attorney’s fees and expenses
    under section 352.052(a) independent of such an award to GayeLynne under that
    section, we will not address Dowdy’s final issue.
    44
    expenses as the executor designated in the 2015 will. Having overruled GayeLynne’s
    issues, we affirm the trial court’s December 22, 2016 judgment.
    /s/ Elizabeth Kerr
    Elizabeth Kerr
    Justice
    Delivered: November 15, 2018
    45