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After the death of Sarita Kenedy East, litigation
concerning her estate continued for more than
two decades. The following article, although not
100% accurate, provides a glimpse of how the story
was reported in the news.
EAST, SARITA KENEDY
(1889-1961). Sarita Kenedy East, South Texas rancher
and philanthropist, daughter of John G. and Marie
Stella (Turcotte) Kenedy, was born on September
19, 1889, in Corpus Christi, Texas. Her grandfather
was Mifflin Kenedy, founder of the vast La Parra
Ranch in what was then Cameron County (now Kenedy
County). She spent much of her childhood at La
Parra, and her father named the new town of Sarita,
located on the Kenedy ranch, for his daughter
upon the town's founding around 1904. Sarita attended
Incarnate Word Academy in Corpus Christi and then
H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College in New Orleans.
She also made her debut in New Orleans. She did
not complete college, but instead returned to
La Parra. On December 8, 1910, she married Arthur
Lee East, a South Texas rancher. They did not
have any children.
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After Arthur East died in 1944,
Mrs East and her brother John G. Kenedy, Jr.,
were in charge of the 400,000-acre Kenedy ranch.
Upon her brother's death in 1948, Sarita and her
sister-in-law Elena Suess Kenedy became the sole
heirs to the ranch. Sarita East also owned the
San Pablo Ranch near Hebbronville and Twin Peaks
Ranch in Colorado. She served as a county commissioner
of Kenedy County and was on the board of directors
of Alice National Bank. In addition to her business
dealings, she engaged in philanthropy, especially
to Catholic charities. In 1952, she received the
Ecclesia et Pontifice medal and membership in
the Ladies of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem
from Pope Pius XII for her service to the church.
She was also named an honorary member of the Franciscans
and the Oblates of Mary Immaculate. In her
1948 will she bequeathed La Parra ranch headquarters
and 10,000 acres of land to the Oblate fathers
and 13,000 acres to the Diocese of Corpus Christi.
The rest of her vast estate was divided among
relatives and ranch kin.
In 1948, Mrs. East met Christopher Gregory, a
Trappist monk who had taken the name Brother Leo.
Two years earlier, Brother Leo had been released
from his vow of silence and assigned to raise
funds for new Trappist monasteries. He was on
a fund-raising trip through South Texas when he
met Sarita East, and over the next few years he
became her advisor and traveling companion. In
the 1950s, Mrs. East allowed oil and gas exploration
on her ranch which, up to that time, had largely
been an untapped resource. During that time she
gave money to the Trappist monks and visited monasteries
throughout the world. In 1959, with other family
members and Brother Leo, she went on a South American
tour, one of several trips she made, and donated
$300,000 to build a mission in Chile. That same
year Brother Leo introduced her to J. Peter Grace,
Chairman of the Board of W. R. Grace and Company,
in New York. The three began the work of forming
a charitable Foundation. On January 21, 1960,
they established The John G. and Marie Stella
Kenedy Memorial Foundation, with Sarita Kenedy
East as sole member. Mrs. East also wrote another
will leaving the bulk of her estate to the Foundation.
Over the next few months she wrote a series of
codicils to her will that increasingly gave more
control of the Foundation to Brother Leo and Grace.
Just before her death she named Brother Leo sole
member of the Foundation. Sarita Kenedy East died
of cancer on February 11, 1961, in New York City
and was buried at La Parra Ranch.
Within months after her death a group of South
Texans, including Elena Suess Kenedy, members
of the Turcotte family, and the Diocese of Corpus
Christi, filed a lawsuit disputing Brother Leo's
control of the Foundation, charging that Leo and
Grace exerted undue influence over Mrs. East while
she was disoriented by medication. Other relatives
also contested her 1960 will and wished to reinstate
her 1948 will dividing the estate among various
beneficiaries. Over the course of the battle more
than 200 people claimed to be legitimate heirs.
In 1964, a settlement regarding the Foundation
resulted in the splitting of assets. Grace and
the New York group relinquished control of the
Foundation over Brother Leo's objections. The
bulk of the funds, approximately $100 million,
went to the control of the South Texans, but Grace
received oil royalties (not to exceed $14.4 million)
from the estate and established a smaller Foundation
in New York, the Sarita Kenedy East Foundation,
worth approximately $13 million. In 1966 Brother
Leo filed an appeal against the decision; after
a further series of appeals the Texas Supreme
Court ruled against him. In June 1981, the United
States Supreme Court refused to hear his appeal,
thereby affirming the rights of the Texas relatives
to retain control of the Foundation. Through a
series of court battles over the years the 1960
will was upheld over the 1948 will, and the assets
of the Foundation and most of the Kenedy estate
remained intact. As Mrs. East wished, the ranch
headquarters went to the Oblate fathers. The estate,
which had been held in escrow by the Alice National
Bank, was finally turned over to the Foundation
in 1982. In 1984, basically the first year that
the Foundation officially operated, it had $100
million in assets and was the largest charitable
Foundation in South Texas. It was stipulated that
at least 10 percent of the income go to the Corpus
Christi Diocese, with a total of 90 percent of
funds going for religious activities and the other
10 percent going to secular agencies.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Corpus Christi Caller-Times,
August 26-29, September 23-27, December 16-19,
1984. Stephan G. Michaud and Hugh Aynesworth,
If You Love Me You Will Do My Will (New York:
Norton, 1990). Vertical Files, Barker Texas History
Center, University of Texas at Austin.
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