Bell v. Davis

1916 OK 100, 155 P. 1132, 55 Okla. 121, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 25, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1916 OK 100 (Bell v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. Davis, 1916 OK 100, 155 P. 1132, 55 Okla. 121, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 122 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

This is a proceeding in error to review the action of the district court of Tulsa county denying the probate of a paper purporting to be the will of Tuckabachee, a full-blood Creek Indian; the case being in the district court on appeal from an order of the county court admitting the will to probate.

The will was drawn with care, and, so far as it shows upon its face, appears to have been executed in the man *123 ner and with all the formality required by statute. It has at the end the signature of the testator, and appears on its face to have been properly attested and witnessed. It disposes of three different kinds of landed estates, viz., the homestead and surplus allotments of the testator, and other lands which the testator had taken as the heir of a deceased son. It also disposed of considerable personal property. The contest arose over the execution of the will, and the claim of faulty execution is based upon the fact that the testator did not speak the English language, and that one of the witnesses who spoke the English language did not speak Creek, the language of testator, but that said witness who did not speak Creek was asked to witness the will, and heard ■the testator declare it to be his will, through the medium of an interpreter, who understood both languages, and who also signed the will as a witness.

We find from the record that Tuckabachee, the testator, a full-blood Creek Indian about 95 years of age, who spoke the Creek language, but who did not speak English, called to his assistance one Dave M. Beaver, a friend, who spoke both languages, advised him that he wanted to make a will disposing of his property, and procured the said Beaver to telephone to Mr. Grimes, an attorney of Tulsa with whom the testator was acquainted, to come out to his house and prepare the will; that on the day following Mr. Grimes, together with a Mr. Kramey and Mr. Smith, went out to Tuckabachee’s house, where they found him sick, but in the full possession of his mental faculties; they also found Dave Beaver, who acted as an interpreter for testator, and who translated to the attorney the- testator’s desires, minutely and particularly, as to the disposition of the various proper *124 ties; that the attorney prepared the will at the testator’s bedside from this interpretation; that as it was being prepared, and after its preparation, each item of .devise and all the terms and particulars of the will were correctly translated and interpreted to testator, who expressed his satisfaction with the same, and who asked the interpreter, Dave M. Beaver, to subscribe his name to the document as his will and testament, which was done; that he also requested, through the interpreter, that Kramer and Grimes and the interpreter attest and witness the execution of his will, which was done; and that after the execution of the will testator, through the interpreter, handed the will to Mr. Grimes for safekeeping until the occasion should arise for its use. The facts further show that testator at the time of the execution of the will had neither wife nor children living to survive him. There is probably no positive proof that he did not have at the time a living parent, but, as it is so improbable that a man 95 years of age would have, and as no one has ventured to claim that he did have, we shall assume that he had no living parents.

The court found, and the evidence abundantly supports the finding, that testator at the time of making the will “was of sound and disposing mind and memory, and knew what property he had and knew what disposition he wanted to make of it.” The sole reason for refusing the probate of the will will be found in the language of the court:

“But the court finds that- the said Tuckabaehee did not declare to the witnesses John T. Kramer and Charles W. Grimes, or to either of them, that said document was his last will and testament, nor did he request them to sign same as witnesses, and that the only person to whom *125 he so declared said document to be his last will and testament, and whom he requested to sign same, was "the said David Beaver, and 'there was, in fact, but one attesting witness to said will, and that said will was not made, executed, and attested according to law.”

In other words, that it was not sufficient for the testator to declare to said witnesses that the- document was his last will and testament, and to request them to sign same as witnesses, through the-medium of an interpreter. There is no point made here of any fraud or misrepresentation in the interpretation of the will, or as to other matters in connection with its execution, or that the interpreter did not faithfully and fully translate the matters, or that the will does ■ not represent the desires of testator and the dispositions he wished to make of his property. The case stands on the bald question of the sufficiency of its execution.

Inasmuch as one of the defendant in error’s counsel, in an attempt to justify the action of the court in refusing probate of the will, argues at length questions affecting merely its construction, or the legality of certain of the devises therein contained, matters which were not properly ifi issue below, and which, we may add, had no place in the issues, we feel that' it is not inappropriate again to call attention to just what questions may be raised in opposing the probate of a will.

In Taylor v. Hilton, 23 Okla. 354, 100 Pac. 537, 18 Ann. Cas. 385, it was pointed out:

That “the only issue [triable] was the factum of the will or the question of devisavit vel non,” and, further, “where on a trial of such issue without a jury the court finds the testamentary paper produced to be the last will of the testatrix, it is error to reject from probate any part thereof.”

*126 In Nesbit v. Gragg, 36 Okla. 703, 129 Pac. 705, the above rule was again announced, and a judgment of the district court admitting on appeal a will to probate was reformed, striking from the judgment parts thereof which undertook to construe the will and to determine the legality of certain devises made therein. These cases, however, arose under the law of Arkansas in force in Indian Territory prior to th'e erection of the state; but from an examination of the authorities cited in support of Taylor v. Hilt-on, supra, the first case on the subject, it will be found that the opinion rested upon the general state of judicial decisions in many states, and it was not so held merely because the Supreme Court of Arkansas had' so construed the statute. But later, the case of In re Allen’s Will, 44 Okla. 392, 144 Pac. 1055, was decided by this court, in which the same rule was announced as being the proper practice and the proper construction of the statutes of Oklahoma relating to the probate of wills. In the latter case a number of authorities are cited from different states, and especially from the State of South Dakota, from whence our statute came. As was pointed out in the Allen Case, supra, our statute relating to the probate of wills (sections 6201 and 6210, Rev.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 100, 155 P. 1132, 55 Okla. 121, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-davis-okla-1916.