Didlake v. Ellis

131 So. 267, 158 Miss. 816, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 112
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1930
DocketNo. 28902.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 131 So. 267 (Didlake v. Ellis) 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
Didlake v. Ellis, 131 So. 267, 158 Miss. 816, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 112 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

*818 McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, complainants in the court below, filed their bill against the appellees, defendants in the court below, seeking to cancel and revoke the probate of a will. A demurrer was sustained to the original bill, and an amended bill -was filed to which likewise a demurrer was sustained. Thereupon a second amended bill was filed and to this a demurrer was sustained, and appeal was prosecuted here. The bill, leaving off its formal parts, is as follows:

“That your complainants, Virginia and R. S. Didlake are the children of one John Didlake, late of Copiah county, Mississippi, who died intestate, and your com *819 plainants, Emma M. Tlierrell and J. I). Martin, are the sole and only heirs at law of Emma Nidlake Martin, a daughter of John Nidlake, who died intestate; and these four complainants comprise all of the heirs at law of the said John Nidlake, who died intestate; and your complainants, Ed Nidlake, Neva Nidlake Jones, Lilly Nid-lake Gant, and Lucy Nidlake Puckett, are the children and only heirs at law of James Nidlake, late of Copiah county, Mississippi, who died intestate; and your complainants, Charlie Nidlake, Jennie Nidlake, Henry Nid-lake, and Mary Nidlake Godwin, late of Copiah county, Mississippi, who died intestate. That Martha Thomas Nidlake Miller did, prior to her death, execute a certain instrument as her last will and testament, and the same did constitute her last will and testament at the time of her death, wherein she left all of her property to her daughter, Eunice Miller Lockwood, for the term of her life, the entire estate at the death of the said Eunice Miller Lockwood, to go to John Nidlake, James Nidlake and George Nidlake, with the exception of a specific grant of five dollars to Philip Nidlake, hut your complainants are unable to produce this will because the same was falsely and fraudulently destroyed by the said Eunice Miller Lockwood during her lifetime, and after the death of her mother, Martha Thomas Nidlake Miller. That the destruction of the will by7- the said Eunice Miller Lockwood at the time the said will was destroyed was concealed from your complainants, and your complainants were led to believe that another instrument was the last will of the said Martha Thomas Nidlake Miller, and this instrument was forged in the handwriting of Eunice Miller Lockwood, and was such a perfect simulation of the handwriting of the said Martha Thomas Nidlake Miller that your complainants were unable to discover the destruction of the said will by the said Eunice Miller Lockwood and the forgery of the alleged will by the said Eunice Miller Lockwood until your complainants were approached by one "Robins within two years next preced *820 ing‘ tlie filing of tlie original bill herein, and. were advised by tlie said Robins tliat some tune after tlie deatfi of tlie said Martha Thomas Didlake Miller, that he was shown the title papers to a certain tract of land located in Copiah county, Mississippi, and as a basis of her title, the said Lockwood showed a will from her mother, wherein she was only given a .life estate, and that there was nothing to put your complainants on inquiry as the said Eunice Miller was the natural object of tne bounty of her mother, and the instrument forged by the said Eunice Miller Lockwood was such a perfect simulation of the handwriting of the said Martha Thomas Didlake Miller, that they could not be put upon inquiry until after the fact had been disclosed to them by the said Robins. That notwithstanding the fact that the first mentioned instrument constituted and was the sole and last will of the said Martha Thomas Didlake Miller at the time of her death, the said Eunice Miller Lockwood did, on the-day of -, 19 — , and after the death of the said Martha Thomas Didlake Miller, falsely and fraudulently forge and- utter a certain instrument, purporting to be the last will and testament of the said Martha. Thomas Didlake Miller, and being tlie same instrument last above mentioned, and concealed the fact that she forged such instrument, from these complainants and their ancestors, and this will, as above stated, was such a perfect simulation of the handwriting of the said Martha Thomas Didlake Miller, and the said Eunice Miller Lockwood being the natural object of bounty from her mother, the said Martha Thomas Didlake Miller, tliat your complainants did not learn of any facts, nor could they have discovered any such facts by the use of reasonable diligence, that the said Eunice Miller Lockwood did falsely and fraudulently forge and file said forged instrument and purported will, or that the same was admitted to probate without notice, until the said Robins told them of the facts last above mentioned. That the complainants herein, under the terms of the last will and testament of the said Martha Thomas Didlake Miller were entitled to the proportion of her *821 estate as represented by tier brothers and sisters as above set out, the said John, James, George and Philip Didlake being brothers of. the said Martha Thomas Did-lake Miller, and the said Martha Thomas Didlake Miller departed this life in Copiah county, Mississippi, on or about the 12th day of August, 1909, leaving at the time of her death, large properties consisting of lands, stocks, bonds and choses in action, and other personal property. Complainants would show that the following particular persons are interested in the estate of the said Martha Thomas Didlake Miller, either as inheritors under the fraudulent and void will, or as purchasers or devisees therefrom, to-wit: W. T. Ellis, a resident citizen of Orlando, Florida, but whose post office address is unknown to your complainants, after diligent search and inquiry, J. W. Grantham, a resident citizen of. Hinds county, Mississippi, and W. S. Grantham, a resident citizen of Copiah county, Mississippi, and James L. Lovelace, and W. D. Lovelace of Hinds county, Mississippi. That subsequent to the filing and probation of the said forged will, by the said Eunice Miller Lockwood, the said Eunice Miller Lockwood departed this life, and the said complainants are now entitled to all of the property owned by the said Martha Thomas Didlake Miller at the time of her death in the possession of the said Eunice Miller Lockwood, at the time of her death, or any real estate or property that was conveyed by the said Eunice Miller Lockwood to any person whatsoever, and that the named defendants herein are interested in said estate, the said W. T. Ellis having inherited certain of the property herein from the said Eunice Miller Lockwood, having married her prior to her death, and was her widower at the time of her death; and the said J. W. & W. S. Grantham purchased west one-half of east-one-lialf and the southwest Quarter and all of the northeast quarter south and east of the Illinois Central Railroad Company’s right of way in section 28, township 3, range 1, west, and the east one-half *822 of northeast quarter of section 29, and the southwest quarter and ail of the northwest quarter south and east of the Illinois Central Railroad Company’® right of way and the east one-half of section 32, and all of section 33, - and the west one-half of west one-half of section 34, all in township 3, range 1, west, in Hinds county, Mississippi, containing 1837 acres more.or less and known as the Ellis-wood Plantation, having purchased the same from Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
131 So. 267, 158 Miss. 816, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/didlake-v-ellis-miss-1930.