Cajoleas v. Attaya

111 So. 359, 145 Miss. 436, 58 A.L.R. 1457, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 158
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1927
DocketNo. 26037.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 111 So. 359 (Cajoleas v. Attaya) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cajoleas v. Attaya, 111 So. 359, 145 Miss. 436, 58 A.L.R. 1457, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 158 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

*440 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On October 5, 1925, Constantine Scarlatos, who had for many years previously resided in Lamar county, Miss., died in the city of New Orleans, leaving a considerable estate, consisting of real, and personal property located in the town of Lumberton, Miss. On October 10, 1925, George Attaya filed a petition for letters of administration upon the estate of the deceased, and a decree was entered by the chancery court of Lamar county, appointing him as such administrator. He qualified by filing the proper oath and executing a bond in the sum of ten thousand dollars, and thereupon letters of administration were issued to him.

On November 9, 1925, thereafter, George J. Cajoleas filed a petition for the probate of the last will and testament of the said Constantine Scarlatos, deceased, this petition having been signed and sworn to in Pearl River county on November 7, 1925. With this petition there were filed two separate affidavits, dated November 7, 1925> in which the affiants were denominated the sub *441 scribing witnesses to a certain instrument of writing purporting to be the last will and testament of Constantine Scarlatos, deceased, and in which it was averred that the said deceased, signed, published, and declared said instrument as his last will and testament on the 20th day of July, 1925, the date of the said instrument, in the presence of the affiants and other witnesses, but no copy of the purported will was attached to or in any way made a part of these affidavits. Also on the same day there was filed, along with the said petition and affidavits, an instrument purporting to be the last will and testament of Constantine Scarlatos, hut neither this instrument nor a copy thereof was attached to or made an exhibit to the petition to probate, or the affidavits in support thereof.

On the same day a decree was entered by the chancellor in vacation, admitting to probate as the last will and testament of the deceased the instrument which had that day been filed among the papers in the -ease. In this decree, the application of Cajoleas for letters testamentary was continued until December 7th, and a separate decree was entered directing the clerk, to issue process to George Attaya, adminstrator, to appear and show cause why he should not be removed as administrator and his letters of administration revoked, which citation was accordingly issued and served.

On December 7, 3925, the administrator filed an answer to the petition for probate and for his removal from office, which answer, under the new Chancery Practice Act, raised the legal sufficiency of the proceedings whereby the will had been admitted to probate, and at the request of the administrator’s attorneys this answer was treated by the court as a demurrer to the proceedings for probate of the alleged will. In this answer the administrator denied that any proof whatever of said purported will had been offered, and averred that, although the said, separate affidavits made reference to an alleged will of said deceased, still there was nothing whatever in said affi *442 davits or attached thereto by which any particular instrument might be identified as the last will and testament of the said deceased, and that neither the petition for probate nor the affidavits filed in support thereof identified any particular instrument as the said last will and testament. It further denied that the deceased did in fact leave a valid will and testament, and averred that the purported last will which had been offered for probate was false, fraudulent, and forged.

On December 7,1925, the date fixed for further hearing on the application for letters testamentary, the entire matter was argued before the chancellor upon the legal questions raised by the petition for probate and the objections thereto in the answer of the administrator, and the matter was taken under advisement for'decision by the chancellor. On December 22d, at a regular term of the court, the chancellor entered a decree vacating the vacation decree admitting the alleged will to probate, because the proofs which had been submitted on November 9th, on ex parte affidavits, were insufficient to justify the admission to probate of the instrument on file among the papers, for the reason that this instrument was not identified in the petition for probate nor in the affidavits in-support thereof as being the last will and testament of the deceased referred to therein. The petition of Cajo-leas for letters testamentary was also denied, but the decree provided that he might again present the alleged will for probate with such other and further proof and identiiicaton thereof as he might be able to furnish. On the same day, the petitioner, C'ajoleas, filed a petition praying for an appeal to this court, and a decree was entered granting him an appeal to settle the principles of the case, but this appeal was never perfected.

Thereupon, on December 22, 1925, the administrator filed a caveat against the admission of said purported will to probate, in which it was averred that the said instrument was not the last will and testament of the de *443 ceased; that tlie deceased had never at any time executed a last will and testament; and that the said purported will was, in fact, false, fraudulent, and forged.

On June 26, 1926, Oajoleas filed a demurrer to this caveat, on the ground principally that the said administrator had no such interest in the estate as would entitle him to contest the alleged will or to maintain an objection to the probation thereof, and on July 6, 1926, a decree was entered overruling this demurrer; whereupon, on July 15th, the said demurrants prayed for an appeal to this court, and filed the required bond to perfect this appeal from the decree overruling the demurrer to the caveat.

There appears, in the record immediately following the petition for probate of this alleged will, a certified copy of the proceedings of the civil district court of the parish of Orleans, admitting to probate the said alleged last will and testament, which copy of these proceedings is not made an exhibit to the petition, and appears to have been filed for the first time on December 22, 1925, the day on which the chancellor entered the decree deny ing the probate of the will.

Appellants first contend that the court below erred in revoking the decree which had been entered by the chancellor, on an ex parte hearing in vacation, admitting the alleged will to probate. This decree, which revoked the prior vacation decree, was rendered on December 22, 1925, during a regular term of the court. Upon the rendition of this decree, the appellants at once prayed for an appeal therefrom to settle the principles of the case. Section 35, Code of 1906 (section 10!, Hemingway’s Code), provides that:

“An appeal may be granted by the chancellor in term time, or in vacation, from any interlocutory order or decree whereby money is required to be paid, or the possession of property changed, or when he may think proper in order to settle the principles of the cause, or to *444

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Bluebook (online)
111 So. 359, 145 Miss. 436, 58 A.L.R. 1457, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cajoleas-v-attaya-miss-1927.