Adams' v. Beaumont

10 S.W.2d 1106, 226 Ky. 311, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 16, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 S.W.2d 1106 (Adams' v. Beaumont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams' v. Beaumont, 10 S.W.2d 1106, 226 Ky. 311, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 96 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Tinsley—

Affirming.

E. T. Adams, a resident of Jessamine county, Kentucky, was killed by a railroad, train in Florida on the 18th day of February, 19’26. There was found on his person at the time of his death a typewritten paper in the form of a will, to which the name <£E. T. Adams” was subscribed with-pen and ink, but no witness subscribed it. It, with other effects found on his person, was sent to and received by his widow, the appellant Evangeline P. Adams, at Wilmore, Ky. In due course the paper was produced in the Jessamine county court, and there probated as and for the last will and testament of E. T. Adams. From the judgment of the county court, probating it as the will of Adams, an appeal was prosecuted to the Jessamine circuit court. To sustain the will so established, the appellants introduced as witnesses the widow and the two sons of the decedent, J. L. Graugh, a banker, and J. M. Lowry.

Each of the sons testified that at the family breakfast table, about four months prior to his death, their father, the said E. T. Adams, announced to them and their mother that he intended, that day, to write his will; that immediately he arose from the table and went into an adjoining room, and to his typewriter, and began writing; that they each passed back and forth through the room several times while their father was engaged in writing, and while neither of them was close enough to or did actually read what the father was writing, they say that they know he was engaged in writing his will. Neither of them saw the paper at any time until is was probated as their father’s will.

The widow testified that on the occasion just mentioned, after her husband had finished writing, he came into an adjoining room where she was, with two typewritten sheets of paper in his hand, one of which he handed to her, with the remark that it was a carbon copy of his will, and which he wished her to keep, and the other *313 one, which he folded and placed in his pocket. She neither read, nor heard read, nor saw her husband sign, the paper he placed in his pocket; that the paper probated as his will was received by her along with some other personal effects of her husband, sent to her from Florida after his death.

The paper probated in the county court and the carbon copy which the widow testified was given to her by her husband at the time of writing were introduced in evidence and identified by the widow. The probated will is copied into the record, and the original carbon copy is annexed to the record. The record contains a stipulation to the effect that if C. L. Byrd, R. D. Douglas, and F. W. Black, residents of and near Weirsdale, Fla., were .present, they would each state that at the time of the death of E. T. Adams they made a search of his clothing and person and took therefrom some personal effects, among which was the paper probated as his last will and testament. The witnesses Gfaugh and Lowry each identified the name “E. T. Adams” subscribed to said paper as the genuine signature of E. T. Adams.

''be appellee offered no evidence whatever. The case was tried without a jury, and at the conclusion of appellants ’ evidence the court found and adjudged:

“That the will of E. T. Adams, deceased, dated October 23, 1925, and admitted to probate by order of the Jessamine county court March 30,1926, is not the last will and testament of said E. T. Adams.”

The propounders appeal, insisting that, as the uncontradicted testimony shows the paper to have been actually written on a typewriter by the said E. T. Adams and signed by him, it meets the requirements of the statute, and should be established as his last will and testament.

There is no competent evidence that the deceased, E. T. Adams, wrote the paper in question. While each of the sons testified that at the breakfast table their father said he was going to write his will that day, and shortly afterwards went into an adjoining room and to his typewriter and began to write, neither of them saw or read what he was writing. The father made no statement to either of them at the time as to what he was writing nor afterwards as to what he had written, and neither of them saw the paper now claimed as a will until *314 it was offered for probate. The testimony of Mrs. Adams as to wbat her husband, the deceased, said to her at the time is clearly incompetent. Section 606 of the Civil Code of Practice; Russell et al. v. Tyler, 224 Ky. 511, 6 S.W.(2d) 707. Obviously such testimony is not sufficient to establish the fact that Dr. Adams wrote the paper now claimed to be his last will and testament.

The right to dispose of property by will is governed and controlled entirely by statute, and the Legislature of this state has seen fit to prescribe the conditions under which that may be done, and the requisites necessary to that end, in section 4828 of the statutes, which reads as follows:

“No will shall be valid unless it is in writing with the name of the testator subscribed thereto by himself^ or by some other person in his presence and by his direction; and, moreover, if not wholly written by the testator, the subscription shall be made or the will acknowledged by him in the presence of at least two credible witnesses, who shall subscribe the will with their names in the presence of the testator.”

That statute was enacted and adopted as part of the Revised Statutes of 1851 (2 Rev. Stat. 1860, p. 458), and is substantially the same as the first legislative enactment on this subject in this state, an act approved February 24, 1797 (Bradford, c. 105, p. 377), from which we quote:

“That every person aged twenty-one years, or upwards, being of sound mind and not a married woman, shall have power, at his or her will and pleasure by last will and testament in writing, to devise all the estate, right, title and interest in possession, reversion or remainder, which he or she hath, or at the time of his or her death, shall have of, in, or to lands, tenements or hereditaments, or annuities, or rents, charged upon, or issuing out of them, so as such last will and testament be signed by the testator or testatrix, or by some other person in his or her presence, and by his or her directions; and moreover, if not wholly written by himself or her1 self, be attested by two or more competent witnesses, subscribing their names in his or her presence ”

There can be no doubt that, at the time of the enactment of each of the statutes quoted, the only means of *315 writing a will was by pen and ink or pencil in the hands of the scrivener; there was then no such instrument as a typewriter, and a will “wholly written by” a testator was understood to mean and did mean that it was wholly in the handwriting of the testator; such a will was, therefore, called and known in law as a “holograph” will— “that which is written in one’s own hand” (2 Bouv. Law Diet., p. 1448), and such a will is so called and designated in this state (Graham v. Edwards, 162 Ky. 771, 173 S. W. 127).

The very first reported case which came before this court, in which such a will was involved, is that of Hannah v. Peake, 2 A. K. Marsh. 133.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 S.W.2d 1106, 226 Ky. 311, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-beaumont-kyctapphigh-1928.