Cannon v. Apperson

82 Tenn. 553
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 82 Tenn. 553 (Cannon v. Apperson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cannon v. Apperson, 82 Tenn. 553 (Tenn. 1885).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Several cases have been submitted to us, after full argument, growing out of the will of Wade H. Bolton, and the administration of his estate by the defendant, E. M. Apperson, the executor. Bolton died July 20, 1869, having made his will on the 10th of August, 1868, which was duly proved and admitted to record at the August term, 1869, of the probate court of Shelby county. E. M. Apperson was appointed execu[557]*557tor by the will, and qualified as such on August 10, 1869. Bolton died without children, leaving a widow? Lavinia A., who afterwards on August 4, 1871, intermarried with the complainant, Lewis H. Cannon, and he died, pending this litigation,' on August 7, 1883. The widow dissented from Bolton’s will on September ■6, 1869. The testator had been the member of a large trading firm, composed of himself, his brother, Isaac L. Bolton, Tom Dickens and Washington Bolton, and known as Bolton, Dickens & Co., which expired by limitation in 1857. In the year 1868, Sarah W. Bolton, as the personal representative of her late husband; Washington Bolton, then deceased, filed a bill against the other members of the old firm of Bolton, Dickens & Co., for an account of the partnership business. In this suit, Dickens filed a cross-bill for the same purpose. The litigation thus commenced was conducted with great bitterness by the parties, and was the cause of intense personal ill-feeling between the complainant and Dickens on the one side and the testator on’ the other, and their respective friends and partisans, resulting eventually, pending the suit, in the death by violence of both the testator and Dickens, as well as *of several other persons. It is this suit which is so often mentioned in the will of Wade H. Bolton, and which the majority of the legatees were required to aid in defending. It was finally determined by this court at its April term, 1880, in the month of May of that year, the opinion being reported in 4 Lea, 569. Shortly after its determination, Apperson, as executor, paid most of the money legacies, treating [558]*558them as conditional and as being then due. The legatees thus paid received the money and gave receipts in full for their respective legacies. They afterwards brought suits against the executor for an .account and to recover interest, which suits are now before us on appeal. Two of the legacies the executor refused to pay, upon the ground that the condition upon which they were given had not been complied with, and the further ground that the legatees were respectively indebted to the estate in'more than the sum bequeathed. The suits brought to recover these legacies are also before us. The widow of the testator also filed a bill against the executor for a general account, and the adjustment of her rights, and the residuary legatee, made a party to that suit, filed a cross-bill for 'the same purpose. These bills are also before us. The bills of all the legatees who have appealed were dismissed by the chancellor, and the Referees report that his decrees should be affirmed. An account of the administration was ordered and taken in the suit of the widow, and under the cross-bill of the residuary legatee, and a decree rendered settling the rights of the parties, from which they all appealed. They have also filed exceptions to the report of the Referees, which in effect open the ease as between them.

The will was written by the testator himself, but duly acknowledged before, and attested by witnesses, and is in the following words and figures:

I, "Wade H. Bolton, at my home place in Shelby county, Tennessee, being in good health, of sound mind and' disposing memory, knowing the uncertainty of life [559]*559and the certainty of death, make and publish in my office, at home, this as my last will and testament.

First. After all my just debts and liabilities and funeral expenses are paid, .it is my will and desire-that my ashes may repose at the Pleasant Ridge Church burying ground, three miles below my homestead, and a suitable monument erected to my memory by my executor. ■

Second. I give and bequeath to my beloved wife, Lavinia Ann Bolton, if she survives my death, a lifetime dower in three hundred acres of land on my homestead, Hoboken plantation, in Shelby county, Tennessee, and a fee-simple title in all my personal part of my estate in Tennessee, except my gold watch, money, bonds, bank stocks, and my stock of all description that I die seized and possessed of.

Third. I give and bequeath to Lavinia Ann Bolton,, my wife, if she survives my death, ten thousand dollars in money in fee-simple title forever, in addition to my life policy of ten thousand dollars insured in the Carolina Life Insurance Company, at Memphis, Tennessee, for her use and benefit, provided that she does not dissent from this will and involve my estate in unnecessary litigation.

Fourth. T give and bequeath Seth W. Bolton five-thousand dollars, provided that he lends an assisting-hand and helps to defeat this gigantic swindle that old Tom Dickens and his tool, Sarah W. Bolton, has instituted against his father’s estate and mine in the chancery court at Memphis, and the onus of proof shall be upon him to show to my executor that he [560]*560'has done all he could to defeat the same; then my executor shall, in the event if Seth W. Bolton be married, or does marry a white woman .of his own choice, shall invest the five thousand. dollars in a piece of land for their use, support and maintenance, title to be made to them and their children of their body. But should Seth W. Bolton remain in celibacy, which he is quite likely to do, my executor is instructed to loan out the five thousand dollars at interest and pay him the interest annually as long as he lives, and nothing more.

Fifth. I give and bequeath to Mary L. Bolton, now the wife of E. C. Patterson, and the children of her body' by Patterson, five thousand dollars, provided that her and her husband, E. C. Patterson, does all they can in assisting me to defeat this gigantic swindle of old Tom Dickens and his tool, Sarah W. Bolton, has instituted against I. L. Bolton’s estate and mine in chancery court at Memphis, and the onus of proof shall be on them to show my executor they have done all they can to defeat the same. In this event my executor shall have five years to pay the same, without being coerced by law.

Sixth. I give and bequeath my niece, Lucassia Bolton, now the wife of Joseph A. Andrews, if she survives my death, five thousand dollars, to be invested in a piece of land for their mutual interest and support, provided her and her husband, Joseph A. Andrews, is my friend and co-worker in helping -all they can to defeat this gigantic swindle of old Tom Dickens and Sarah ~W. Bolton, his tool and ally, in [561]*561the fraud against me and Isaac L. Bolton’s estate, and the onus of proof shall be on them to show my executor they have done all they could to defeat the same.

. Seventh. I give and bequeath my niece, now Miss Wade Bolton, five thousand dollars, provided she is and so remains a true and faithful friend of mine, and does all she can to defeat this gigantic swindle of the old land pirate, Tom Dickens, and Sarah W. Bolton, his ally, against her father’s estate' and mine in chancery court at Memphis, and the onus of proof •shall be upon her to show she has done all she could to defeat the same.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Tenn. 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-v-apperson-tenn-1885.