Epperson v. Buck Inv. Co.

141 S.W.2d 887, 176 Tenn. 358, 12 Beeler 358, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 80
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 141 S.W.2d 887 (Epperson v. Buck Inv. Co.) 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
Epperson v. Buck Inv. Co., 141 S.W.2d 887, 176 Tenn. 358, 12 Beeler 358, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 80 (Tenn. 1940).

Opinion

Mk Chibe Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

From a decree overruling its demurrer to the bill, the defendant has appealed.

The bill was filed by the brother and heir of Mrs. Nannie Epperson Bass, domiciled in Louisiana and dying in that State November 28, 1932. The complainant asserts title to certain lands in Madison County and Crockett County, Tennessee, of which his sister died seized and possessed.

Mrs. Bass died testate and her will was probated in Louisiana but, according to the bill, it was insufficiently probated as a holographic will to pass title to lands in *360 this State. She devised all her property to her husband for life and at his death said property to'“at once vest in and be owned in fee” by his son. The husband and son conveyed the Tennessee lands to defendant Buck Investment Company.

A certified copy of the probate proceedings in Louisiana was presented to the county court of Madison County and such probated will was admitted to probate by the county court of Madison County under sections 8113-8117 of the Code, hereafter set out. All requirements of these sections as to notice, etc., were strictly followed.

The bill seeks to have the probate proceedings in Madison County declared null and void and such proceedings and the deed from Bass and his son to defendant Buck Investment Company removed as clouds on complainant’s title. And, in the alternative, if not entitled to this relief, the bill seeks for a construction of the will and for a declaration, upon the construction sought, establishing complainant’s title to the lands.

The will of Mrs. Bass is as follows:

“Know all that I Nane (sic) Epperson Bass do make, declare, and publish this to be my last will and testament.
“First I direct that all my just debts and furnal (sic) expenses be paid.
“Seccond (sic) I give devise and bequeath onto (sic) my husband B. A. Bass all propity (sic) owned by me at the time of my death, be' the same real, personal or mixed, wherever the same may be situated, for and during the term of his natural life, at his death the said property and all of it, shall at once vest in and be owned in fee by Daniel Nelson Bass, the son of the said B. A. Bass.
“Third, I name and appoint (sic) my said husband B. A. Bass the executors (sic) of this my last will and testa *361 ment, he to serve and act as such without bond or security of any kind.
“Nannie Epperson Bass.
“Signed, published and declared by the said Nannie Epperson Bass, to he her last will and testament in onr present, and in witness whereof we at her request, and in her present, and in the presence of each other have as attesting witnesses subscribed our names hereto on this-.
“This done executed and sign— by me entirely in my own handwriting.
“January 6,1930
“Nannie E. Bass.
“Witness:
“Prances M. LaPavor
“Mrs. C. A. Rowan.”

The order of the Louisiana court admitting the will to probate, omitting formal parts, recites that the instrument was presented by P. M. LaPavor and John 0. Voor-hees, witnesses, and after describing the will as one purporting to be the “olographic last will and testament” of the testatrix proceeds “which being by me exhibited to the aforesaid witnesses was by them recognized and declared to be entirely written, dated and signed by the testatrix, the said Nannie Epperson Bass, which they attest as having often seen her write and sign during her life time and that the said appearers did hereunto set their hands after due reading hereof on the day, month and year first above written.

“F. M. LaPavor

“John 0. Voorhees”

The argument for complainant is that the order of the probate court in Louisiana shows that this will was probated as a holographic will but it does not appear that *362 the handwriting of the testatrix was proved by three witnesses, nor that the paper writing was found among the valuable papers of testatrix nor lodged with another for safe-keeping, and that accordingly such will was ineffective to pass title to lands in Tennessee under section 8090' of the Code.

We think this will was probated as a holographic will, although one of the attesting witnesses to the will sfeems to have been examined. That is, if F. M. LaFavor and Flanees M. LaFavor are the same, person. Nevertheless, as the order indicates, both witnesses were testifying to the signature and handwriting of Mrs. Bass, rather' than the factum of this will. They could not have meant to say that they had “often” seen her write and sign this particular will.

This will being probated as a holopraphic will in Louisiana, not in compliance with the provisions of section 8090 of our Code, complainant insists that the will was not entitled to probate in this jurisdiction and the order of the Madison County court admitting it to probate was null and void.

That the will of Mrs. Bass was probated in Louisiana as a holographic will and not as a witnessed will is made plain by a comparison of section 1665 of the Louisiana Civil Code with the proceedings in the Louisiana court respecting this will. That section of the Code is as follows :

“The olographic testament shall be opened, if it be sealed and it must be acknowledged and proved by the declaration of two credible persons, who must attest that they recognize the testament as being entirely written, dated and signed in the testator’s handwriting.
“The judge shall interrogate the witnesses under oath touching their knowledge of the testator’s handwriting *363 and signature and shall satisfy himself that they are familiar therewith making’ mention of the whole in his proees verbal thereof.”

Section 1648 of the Louisiana Civil Code, dealing with what is there called a nnncnpative will nnder private signature — a witnessed will — provides:

“Nnncnpative testaments under private signature can not he executed until they have been proved by the declaration on oath of at least three of the witnesses, who were present when they were made.”

This brings us to a consideration of sections 8113 et seq. of the Code based on chapter 77 of the Pub. Acts of 1919. This Act was adopted as a Uniform Statute. It has been enacted in several States but so far as we are able to discover has been little construed in those States. "We find no decision dealing with the question here raised. Sections of the Code embodying this Act are as follows:

“8113.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 S.W.2d 887, 176 Tenn. 358, 12 Beeler 358, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epperson-v-buck-inv-co-tenn-1940.