Dunnam v. Prine

208 So. 2d 187, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1403
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1968
DocketNo. 44795
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 208 So. 2d 187 (Dunnam v. Prine) 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
Dunnam v. Prine, 208 So. 2d 187, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1403 (Mich. 1968).

Opinion

JONES, Justice.

This is a will contest coming from the Chancery Court of Forrest County, Mississippi, which court revoked the previous probate in common form and held the will void. For the reasons hereinafter stated, the case is reversed and remanded for a more complete hearing on the facts.

Mr. J. W. Prine, Sr., had been married twice. By his first wife he had nine children, and by the second wife, one. He died in September, 1966, at a time when the child of his second marriage was only six years of age. The children of his first marriage were all adults and either married or presumably had sufficient means of support. On or about August 26, 1966, Mr. Prine, a man of sixty-seven or sixty-eight years of age, made a will by which he devised all of his property to the young son and named one of his daughters, Mrs. Aliece Prine Utley, as executrix of the will.

The will was admitted to probate in common form about four days after the death of the testator. The decree admitting the will to probate was dated September 28, 1966. Mrs. Utley was appointed as executrix and qualified on the same day. She thereupon proceeded to administer the estate. On November 11, 1966, a decree was entered on the petition of the executrix authorizing her to lease the sawmill property belonging to the estate to two of the adult sons of the testator, J. W. Prine, Jr. and Clinton Ray Prine. This decree fixed the terms for the lease. The record is not clear as to whether the son operated such sawmill business or leased it; but five months later, eight of the adult children of the testator by his first marriage filed their petition in the Chancery Court of Forrest County against the minor son, James D. (Danny) Prine and Mrs. Aliece Utley, individually, seeking to have the probate of the will revoked. This petition for revocation was based on the grounds that the testator at the time of the execution of the will was not of sound mind and memory but was mentally incapacitated and that he was coerced into executing the will by the undue influence of the defendant, Mrs. Utley.

On March 20, 1967, Mrs. Utley filed her answer denying the allegations of the petition as to the incompetency of the testator and denying that he had been coerced into signing the will by any undue influence exerted by her. She denied that the [189]*189writing was not in fact and in truth the will of J. W. Prine, Sr. Honorable John M. Dunnam, Jr., an attorney at law of New Augusta, Mississippi, was appointed guardian ad litem of the said minor and adopted as the answer of the minor, the answer filed by Mrs. Utley. It is interesting to note that among those joining in the petition to revoke the probate of the will were the two sons, J. W. Prine, Jr. and Clinton Ray Prine, to whom the executrix had in November, 1966, obtained an order to lease the property, and Mrs. Annie Lee Prine, who was an attesting witness to the will and upon whose ex parte affidavit the will was admitted to probate.

Upon the trial, no testimony as to the mental capacity of the testator was introduced except that of laymen and two of the daughters-in-law of the testator, one of which was a witness to the execution of the will.

In June, 1966, the testator had secured a divorce from his second wife, to whom he had been married for about thirteen years, and the Chancery Court of Forrest County awarded to him the care and custody of the minor child. It was asserted by these lay witnesses that his mind began to go bad during that month. They did not dispute the fact, however, that the chancellor had seen and heard the testator in the divorce hearing, and had not only granted him the divorce, but also the custody of the child. It is further undisputed that the testator had made statements to the effect that he wanted this small child taken care of and to have an education. One of those testifying in an effort to destroy the will so stated. The witnesses gave evasive answers when asked whether or not the act of a father of ten children, nine of whom were adult and independent and one of whom was but six years old, in leaving his small estate to provide for the six-year-old son was a natural and expected act in conformity with the human inclinations and actions. It appears to us that such a disposition could be only the natural act of a sane man and father.

The testator was carried to the hospital three or four days before the day of the execution of the will on August 26, 1966. He left the hospital either that night or the next morning. None of the lay witnesses, except the attesting witness and her sister-in-law, saw him on August 26 — to say nothing of the time when he executed the will. Several of the witnesses testified that the testator did have lucid intervals.

One of the witnesses said he saw the testator a week or two before the testator entered the hospital and two or three days after the testator was discharged. Notwithstanding the fact that this witness did not see the testator on August 26, he was asked this question:

Now * * * based on your association with Mr. Prine, Mr. J. W. Prine, Sr., and based on your attempted conversations with him and he with you, and your observation of him, tell the court, in your opinion, whether or not on the twenty-sixth day August, nineteen and sixty six, he was mentally capable of understanding the execution of a will ?

To this question an objection was made on grounds that it was not established that the witness saw the testator on that day. The objection was overruled, and the answer was “[H]e was not.” The answer of the other lay witnesses to this question was that the testator was not competent on August 26. This question can be classed only as a hypothetical question.

The testator was then carried to Mobile, Alabama. This same witness, who had answered the hypothetical question by saying that the testator was not competent on the date of the will although he had not seen the testator, said on further examination he knew nothing of the condition of the testator’s mind after the testator was carried to Mobile. He admitted that he [190]*190did not see the testator after that time. The following examination occurred:

Q. So far as you know his mind could have been all right ?
A. After that.
Q. Yes, sir.
A. I couldn’t say about that after he left from home to go to Mobile. I couldn’t say what kind of state his mind was in, no, sir.
Q. You wouldn’t say it was good or bad?
A. No, sir, I wouldn’t say if I didn’t see him, (Emphasis added.)

This hypothetical question was asked of other laymen whose answers were to the same effect. These witnesses also admitted during their examinations that they could not tell anything about his mental state at a time when they did not see him. Of course, a layman could not reasonably know the condition of testator’s mind when he did not see the testator. The question propounded was a question for the experts. Certainly it would take an expert to tell from the appearances and actions of a man, observed prior to his entry in the hospital and after his discharge from the hospital, whether the man was competent or incompetent on a certain date between entry and discharge. Several of the witnesses said that the testator had lucid intervals. One who was not there could not know, and would not be in a position to know, whether a man who had lucid intervals was lucid or not at a particular time.

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Related

In Re Estate of Prine
208 So. 2d 187 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
208 So. 2d 187, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunnam-v-prine-miss-1968.