bonfarr said:
I found the plot for Taylor Sheridan's next show. Just add in the Aunt's ties to the cartel and toss in a sex crazed bimbo wife and daughter and some a Cowboy spinning on an horse and you have another hit.
Quote:
4 years ago, both of my grandparents passed away, starting a court battle that's put 200 years of Texas history for sale.
The estate includes hundreds of acres near Marble Falls, TX, that have been in my family since before Texas was Texas. Stephen F. Austin himself granted this land to my ancestor, Captain Jesse Burnam, in the 1820s, one of the original "Old Three Hundred" families. There are stories of him fighting off Native Americans and fighting in wars!
That land stayed in our family for five generations. There's a state historical marker on it, placed by the Texas Historical Commission in 2014.
My family has never had money in the bank kind of wealth. But I wouldn't sell this land for millions of dollars. Some things matter more than money, and history and nature are two of them.
My aunt, the executor, has managed this estate about as badly as it's possible to manage one, burning hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees fighting my mom and uncle, to the point that land had to be sold just to cover the bill. Yes, there was a will involved, but it's complicated...
Now, more than 150 acres of it are listed for sale by my aunt. My aunt has no heirs of her own tied to this place.
And beautiful, spring fed land that survived the Texas Revolution, five generations of my family, and a war with Mexico might get bulldozed for a subdivision.
What I'm hoping for is that it doesn't end with a developer.
If you know a rancher, a conservation buyer, a family, or a land trust looking for real Texas Hill Country land with real history, let me know.
Unfortunately, this kind of thing is more common than you know. As a Landman, ( A real one) I see this sort of thing all the time when I'm checking Title on Ranches, properties etc. Most rarely make it past 3 generations, one thats been here since the Old 300 is super rare.
On every project I have at least one that is in a similar situation as the one you described. Aunts, Uncles, Cousins all wanting theirs, not thinking of the greater good. Seen it a million times.
Don't blame yourself, nothing you could do. I've seen it in my own family as well. Moronic Wife 2.0 thinking she was entitled to the entire Estate. She was the dog that caught the car, she didn't know what to do with it when she caught it. Sold it for WAY under what it was worth. The stupidity was staggering.