Dillard v. Nix

45 S.W.3d 359, 345 Ark. 215, 2001 Ark. LEXIS 375
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 7, 2001
Docket00-1454
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 45 S.W.3d 359 (Dillard v. Nix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillard v. Nix, 45 S.W.3d 359, 345 Ark. 215, 2001 Ark. LEXIS 375 (Ark. 2001).

Opinion

Ray Thornton, Justice.

Grace Marie Nix executed a will on February 2, 1979, and the will was attested on that date by the attorney who prepared the will and by his secretary. A codicil was added to the will on April 11, 1989, and the codicil was also witnessed by Eugene Fitzhugh, the attorney who prepared the will, and by his secretary Sheila Eoff White. Following Ms. Nix’s death, her surviving spouse, George Nix, appellee, offered the will and its codicil for probate on November 9, 1999.

Appellants, Andrea Dillard, Annette Barry, and Joseph Dillard, Jr., Ms. Nix’s children from a previous marriage, contested the validity of the will and its codicil on two grounds. Appellants argued that the witnesses who signed the attestation clauses did not have a sufficient recollection of the execution of the documents. Appellants also argued that even if the will and codicil were properly executed, Ms. Nix, by making numerous marks and interlineations on portions of the will expressed her intention to revoke the will and codicil.

The probate court conducted a hearing on the matter and found that the will and the codicil were valid and that the markings on the will did not reflect an intention to revoke the will, but rather, because the markings were not witnessed, they were of no legal significance and should not be considered as having any effect. Accordingly, the probate court ordered that the will and codicil be admitted to probate and appointed George Nix as personal representative of Ms. Nix’s estate. It is from this order that appellants bring this appeal, and we affirm the probate court.

We review probate proceedings de novo, and we will not reverse the decision of the probate court unless it is clearly erroneous. Amant v. Callahan, 341 Ark. 857, 20 S.W.3d 896 (2000). When reviewing the proceedings, we give due regard to the opportunity and superior position of the probate judge to determine the credibility of the witnesses. Id.

In their first point on appeal, appellants argue that Ms. Nix’s will should not have been admitted to probate because appellee failed to prove that the will had been properly executed. Specifically, .appellants argue that appellee failed to prove that the attesting witnesses remembered witnessing the will. Arkansas Code Ann. § 28-25-103 (1987) articulates the procedure to be followed when executing a will. The statute provides:

(a) The execution of a will, other than holographic, must be by the signature of the testator and of at least two (2) witnesses.
(b) The testator shall declare to the attesting witnesses that the instrument is his will and either:
(1) Himself sign; or
(2) Acknowledge his signature already made; or
(3) Sign by mark, his name being written near it and witnessed by a person who writes his own name as witness to the signature; or
(4) At his discretion and in his presence have someone else sign his name for him. The person so signing shall write his own name and state that he signed the testator’s name at the request of the testator; and
(5) In any of the above cases, the signature must be at the end of the instrument and the act must be done in the presence of two (2) or more attesting witnesses.
(c) The attesting witnesses must sign at the request and in the presence of the testator.

Id. Arkansas Code Ann. § 28-40-117 (1987) explains the procedure whereby a party proves the validity of an attested will. The statute in relevant part states:

(a) An attested will shall be proved as follows:
(1) By the testimony of at least two (2) attesting witnesses, if living at known addresses within the continental United States and capable of testifying; or
(2) If only one (1) or neither of the attesting witnesses is living at a known address within the continental United States and capable of testifying, or if, after the exercise of reasonable diligence, the proponent of the will is unable to procure the testimony of two (2) attesting witnesses, in either event the will may be established by the testimony of at least two (2) credible disinterested witnesses. The witnesses shall prove the handwriting of the testator and such other facts and circumstances, including the handwriting of the attesting witnesses whose testimony is not available, as would be sufficient to prove a controverted issue in equity, together with the testimony of any attesting witness whose testimony is procurable with the exercise of due diligence.
^ ‡ ^
(d) The provisions of this section as to the testimony of subscribing witnesses shall not exclude the production of other evidence at the hearing on the petition for probate, and the due execution of the will may be proved by such other evidence.

U.

In the case now on review, two people signed an attestation clause, stating that they had witnessed Ms. Nix acknowledge and sign her will. The testimony of both attesting witnesses was presented at the hearing on appellee’s petition. We conclude that the testimony of the two attesting witnesses was sufficient to prove the validity of the will. Specifically, Eugene Fitzhugh testified that he had drafted a will for Grace Nix in 1979. He testified that he remembered both Grace Nix and George Nix coming into his office on the day Ms. Nix requested that the will be drafted. Mr. Fitzhugh stated that he witnessed Ms. Nix sign her will and that he witnessed his secretary, Sheila White, sign Ms. Nix’s will. He further stated that the procedure followed by his office during the execution of a will was as follows: “[T]he client would sign ... well, first I would call the secretary into the ... to my office. The client would sign the will and then we, my secretary and myself would witness the will.” Mr. Fitzhugh also testified that he had stated in an earlier deposition that he did not remember the circumstances surrounding the signing of Ms. Nix’s will. However, he further stated that after reviewing his files, he was able to recall the circumstances surrounding the execution of Ms. Nix’s will on the day of the hearing on appellee’s petition. Mr. Fitzhugh testified that he would not have acted as a witness on Ms. Nix’s will without having seen Ms. Nix sign it first. He further stated that he remembered Ms. Nix coming into his office in 1989 and asking him to add the codicil to the will. Mr. Fitzhugh testified that he wrote the codicil on the will and that he and Ms. White signed the codicil as witnesses.

The testimony of Sheila White was also admitted in evidence. She stated that she had worked for Mr. Fitzhugh for six or seven years starting in 1977 and that she had often served as an attesting witness. She stated that the procedure that they always followed was to attest the will after the testator signed the will. Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W.3d 359, 345 Ark. 215, 2001 Ark. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillard-v-nix-ark-2001.