Ebert v. Ebert

200 S.E. 831, 120 W. Va. 722, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 155
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1938
Docket8745
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 200 S.E. 831 (Ebert v. Ebert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ebert v. Ebert, 200 S.E. 831, 120 W. Va. 722, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 155 (W. Va. 1938).

Opinion

Fox, Judge :

Charles Bennett Ebert, whose domicile was in Wood County, West Virginia, died on the 26th day of August, 1936, leaving a last Will and testament, which, omitting the signature, is in the words and figures following:

“Will ofj Charles Bennett Ebert, of Parkers-burg, Wood County, West Virginia.
“Not unmindful of my sons, Arthur Cecil and Millard Earl Ebert, I give all my estate both real and personal to my wife, Clara Augusta Ebert,' in fee simple. My wife to be administra-trix of my estate, without bond.
“Drawn at Parkersburg, Wood County, West Virginia, this sixteenth (16th) day of January, nineteen hundred and thirty-three (1933).”

The body of the will and signature thereto are in the handwriting of the testator, and the will was witnessed by Laura B. Oliver and A. G. Oliver, who signed their names as subscribing witnesses to a typewritten attestation thereof.

The will was offered for probate in the county court of Wood County on September 5, 1936, by the beneficiary thereunder, and on that day Arthur Cecil Ebert and Millard Earl Ebert, sons and sole heirs-at-law of the testator, filed in said court their notice of contest, wherein it was charged:

(1) “The said purported last will and testament was not executed in compliance with the formal requirements of law in relation to the execution of a last will and testament.”
*725 (2) “The purported last will and testament, now offered for probate, by Clara Augusta Ebert, the sole beneficiary and administratrix named therein, was made and executed as the result of fraud, duress, coercion, and undue influence used, practiced upon and exercised over the said Charles Bennett Ebert prior to, at and subsequent to the time of the making and execution of said will.”
(3) “The said Charles Bennett Ebert lacked the required capacity to make andf execute a valid will at the time of the making and execution of said purported Will.”

As stated in the brief filed by the contestants, the first and third grounds of contest were not urged, except to the extent of formally placing upon the proponent the burden of proof as to matters mentioned therein. This controversy, therefore, is confined to the allegation of fraud, duress, coercion and undue influence contained in the second paragraph quoted above.

When notice of contest was filed in the county court, the case was referred to a commissioner under the provisions of Code, 44-3-7. The commissioner to whom the case was referred resigned, and it was then re-referred to another commissioner. A hearing was had resulting in a report by the commissioner sustaining the will, and this report was confirmed by the county court of Wood County, whereupon the matter was appealed to the circuit court of Wood County and a trial de novo had, resulting in a verdict in favor of the contestants. This verdict was upon motion of the proponent set aside, and a new trial awarded the proponent, to which action of the court the contestants prosecute this writ of error.

Charles Bennett Ebert was seventy-two years of age at the time of his death. He was born in the City of Parkersburg, spent the greater part of his life there1, and occupied a prominent place in the business and civic life of that community. From his mother, who died in 1920, he inherited as her sole heir-at-law real estate and other property, of the value of approximately $60,000.00. In *726 his early life he was engaged in the manufacture of brick in Parkersburg, and for a number of years prior to 1911, he followed the occupation of installing brick plants throughout the country, and spent a good part of his time away from Parkersburg. In 1911 he returned to Park-ersburg and resided there until his death, having no particular occupation except that of looking after his extensive business interests principally connected with the management of his real estate, most of which he had inherited from his mother. He 'is shown to have been a man of good business judgment, firm in his opinions and not easily influenced. He remained in good health until immediately before his death, and there is no question raised upon the record 'in any way tending to show any lack of mental or1 physical vigor.

He was three times married. He first married Laura Richardson on July 1, 1886; of this marriage two children were born, Arthur Cecil Ebert, in 1887, and Millard Earl Ebert, in 1889, both of whom survived the testator and are the contestants in this proceeding, and will be hereinafter referred to as Cecil and Earl. Laura Richardson Ebert died in 1894. On July 4, 1898, the testator married1 Elizabeth Daisy Hagerty, from whom he obtained a divorce in 1908. On September 14, 1911, the testator married Clara Augusta Ripley McCoy, who then lived in Detroit, Michigan, and immediately following this marriage, he and his wife came to- Parkersburg where they resided up to the date of his death. No children were born of the second and third marriages.

It appears from the record that upon the death of Laura Richardson Ebert in 1894, the testator made arrangements for the rearing of his two- children, the contestants herein, and first placed them in the home of his mother, Frances V. Ebert, who then resided in Parkers-burg. When about twelve years of age, Cecil was sent to a school in Pittsburgh and Earl, then about ten years of age, was placed by his father in the home of his paternal aunt, Sallie Lang, who then lived in Clarksburg. Cecil remained in Pittsburgh for about a year, and then *727 went to the Lang home in Clarksburg. When about eleven years of age, Earl, without his father’s consent, left the Lang home and went to the home of his maternal grandparents, William and Margaret Richardson, in Parkersburg, apparently at the instigation of his maternal kin, where he remained until he joined his father in Detroit about the year 1909.. Cecil remained with Sallie Lang in Clarksburg for about a year after the departure of Earl, and then went' to the home of his paternal grandmother, Frances V. Ebert, in Parkers-burg, where he remained until he was about fifteen years of age when he, too, went to the home of his maternal grandparents, where he remained until he joined his father and Earl in Detroit about the year 1909. When Cecil was about fifteen years of age, it is in evidence that his father severely corrected him by the use of a horsewhip, which caused him to flee to the home of his maternal grandparents, and as the outgrowth of this incident, William Richardson, Cecil’s maternal grandfather, swore out a warrant for Charles Bennett Ebert, and Cecil testified against his father at the trial on said warrant. Later, some one of the maternal kin of Cecil instituted suits against Charles Bennett Ebert for the maintenance of his two sons, which appear to have been finally settled in a compromise entered into on May 3, 1907. This family history is related for the purpose of showing the relations between the father and his two sons prior to 1909, when it seems they reconciled their differences at the time they joined each other in Detroit.

But this is not the full picture of the relationship between this father and his two sons.

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.E. 831, 120 W. Va. 722, 1938 W. Va. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ebert-v-ebert-wva-1938.