Barksdale v. Hopkins

23 Ga. 332
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 23 Ga. 332 (Barksdale v. Hopkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barksdale v. Hopkins, 23 Ga. 332 (Ga. 1857).

Opinion

By the Court.

Benning, J.

delivering the opinion.

Tyrrel Barksdale propounded a writing in the Court of Ordinary of Upson county, for probate, as the will of Mrs. Macharme Bunkley. The writing was dated in 1848.

To the admission of the writing to probate, Edward G. Harvey, Eusebius A. Hopkins and his wife, Anna, as persons "of the next of kin” to Mrs. Bunkley, entered a caveat, resting on several grounds.

Among the grounds was this : “ That the said pretended will was revoked by the testatrix during her life time; to-wit: first, by actually cancelling and obliterating the seal attached thereto, with the intention of thereby exhibiting the animus revocandi; and secondly, by subsequently, on the 38th January, 1851, (a mistake doubtless for 1850,) executing, in the presence of three credible witnesses, an instrument in wri j ting, whereby, she expressly revoked all former wills by her made.”

What is thus contained in this ground, is all that the caveat said about this instrument in writing” of 1850. The [335]*335caveat did not say, whether the caveators offered the instrument itself, for probate, or not.

The issue, then, raised by the allegation respecting this instrument, was, whether the instrument revoked the writing of 1848, propounded by Barksdale for probate.

This issue was one raised in the Court of Ordinary, but carried, by appeal, into the Superior Court. In respect to this issue, therefore, the Superior Court became a probate Court; and consequently, whatever was admissible as evidence on the issue, whilst it was in the Court of Ordinary, was, in like manner, admissible, on the issue after it got into the Superior Court.

This being an issue — I may say the issue — and this issue being thus in the Superior Court, as a probate Court, it came on for trial; and on the trial of it, the counsel for the caveators, presented the instrument in writing pleaded by them in the caveat, as aforesaid, to one of the subscribing witnesses to the instrument, and offered to prove it by him.

The instrument thus presented to the witness, was one of which the commencement was as follows: State of Georgia, Upson County. I, Macharme Bunkley, being in feeble health, yet of sound disposing mind and memory, do constitute and ordain this my last will and testament, revoking all others.” The rest of the instrument, in twenty-two items,” purported to make dispositions of her property, and to appoint an executor. The instrument purported to be signed by her, to be subscribed by three persons as witness-es, and to be dated the 28th of January, 1850.

If this instrument was valid as a will, and the clause of revocation was a part of it, as the part of a will, then it is plain, that the instrument as a valid will containing this clause, would sustain the allegation ofrevocation, in the caveat; and if the instrument was not valid asa will, yet, if the clause of revocation was not a part of it as the part of a will, but was a separate, independent, writing of revocation; or if the clause, though a part of the instrument as the part of a will, [336]*336was also something additional, by virtue of which something it was to have operation, whether the rest of the instrument had operation or not, then, it is equally plain, that the instrument, though itself not valid as a will, yet, as containing a valid writing of revocation, would sustain the allegation of revocation, contained in the caveat.

In any case, therefore, it is manifest, that evidence in proof of the instrument, would be pertinent.

This being so, the counsel for the caveators, offered as aforesaid, in proof of the instrument, the evidence of one of its subscribing witnesses.

To the admission of this evidence, the counsel for the propounder, presented objections of which, the following is the substance:

1st. They said, that in every case, in which an instrument is to be used as a will, one single case excepted, the only evidence admissible in proof of the instrument, is the judgment of a probate Court, establishing the instrument as a will 5 that the single excepted case is that in which, the instrument itself, being offered for probate, to a probate Court; that this instrument was not itself being offered for probate to the Court; therefore, that, if the purpose of the caveators, was to use this instrument, including the revocatory words, as a will, then the evidence of a person subscribing the instrument as a witness, was not admissible in proof of the instrument.

2dly. They said, that if an instrument written for a will, has in it words revocatory of all other wills, those words can be operative, only in case the instrument shall be operative as a will; that therefore, if the purpose of the caveators, was to use the revocatory words in the instrument by themselves, to show a revocation of the will of 1848, the purpose was an illegal one, and that no evidence of any sort, was admissible in aid of an illegal purpose.

Were these objections good ?

And first is it true, that in a probate Court, (the Court was sitting as an appellate probate Court,) an instrument intended [337]*337to be used as a will, to show that another instrument propounded as a will, has been revoked, cannot be proved by any other evidence, than that of a judgment of probate, except in the single case in which, the instrument, not having been admitted to probate, is itself offered for probate ?

Now that this proposition may be true, a second one has to be true; viz., this: that in a probate Court, a will can have no revocatory efficacy, unless it has been admitted to probate, or is offering itself for probate. Is, then, this latter proposition true?

If a man by will gives property to A., and by a second will gives the same property to B., and B. dies before A., or B. is a person, that by reason of some disability, cannot take the property given, the second will revokes the first; and yet, in both of these cases, the second will is void. Com. Dig. “Estate by Devise.” “ Revocation. (F. 1.) and note. This proposition, I believe, is not disputed.

These are cases in which, it cannot be true, that the revoking will was admitted to probate: the revoking will was void. They are cases too, in which, it cannot be true, that the revoking will offered itself for probate; that a will professing itself to be revoked, should yet offer itself for probate, is absurd.

This second proposition, then, is not true. What is the true proposition on the subject, to be deduced from these cases? It would seem to be this: that whenever a will is efficacious for the purpose of revoking a former will, a probate Court may take notice of it for that purpose, although such will is one that has not been admitted to probate, or, even one that is not capable of being admitted to probate.

And this same proposition would seem to follow also,from the nature of the jurisdiction of a probate Court. That Court has power to say what is, and what is not, a will, and therefore, has power to say, what is, or is not, a cause of preventing a writing from being a will. Having this power, it can determine for itself, whenever the occasion requires it, wheth[338]*338er a writing is a will or not: it dont have to wait for some other Court to determine that question for it.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ga. 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barksdale-v-hopkins-ga-1857.