Estate of Nicholson

2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 189, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 289
CourtCuyahoga County Probate Court
DecidedJune 10, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 189 (Estate of Nicholson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Nicholson, 2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 189, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 289 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Colonel Cyrus Sears, a brother, and the person named as executor in the paper-writing purporting to be the last will and testament or Arminda S. Nicholson, deceased, late of the village of Lakewood, Cuyahoga county, Ohio, on the 3d day of May, 1904, formally propounded in this court a certain paper-writing, dated at Lakewood, Ohio, on the 6th day of dune, 1903, as the last will and testament of Mrs. Arminda S. Nicholson. The application states that Mrs. Nicholson was a resident of the village of Lakewood, and departed this life, weaving no husband, on the 30th day of April, 1904, and leaving surviving her as her' direct heirs and next of kin, 'John Sears, a brother, of Sandusky, Ohio; Benjamin Sears, a brother, of Bucyrus, Ohio; and Cyrus Sears, a brother, of Harpster, Ohio.

It is proper to say, at the outset, that Mr. Cyrus Sears, a. very venerable, worthy, and intelligent citizen of Harpster, Ohio, while formally propounding the paper, does not urge the court to probate the paper as the last will, but rather appears in court as counsel for himself and others, and resists the probate and establishment of said paper as the last will, of Mrs. Nicholson. It became necessary for some one interested to introduce the matter by formal application, and Mr. Cyrus Sears did so, being named in the paper as executor.

The paper-writing itself is exhibited in court, and profert is made of it. The office and value of the exhibition of a paper-writing purporting to be a will, as evidence of its existence, and the fact of its execution, becomes perfectly apparent. If the will is lost or spoilated, the statute prescribes a special method and procedure for its probate, which is entirely unnecessary where the paper-writing itself can be produced in court in full, ample, and complete form, and is thus exhibited to the inspection of the court. When the question of the genuineness and authenticity of a writing is in question, the fact of the existence and exhibition of such paper is of clear evidential value.

[191]*191As already stated, Cyrus Sears and John Sears, two brothers, and next of kin, appear in court by counsel, and challenge the: regularity of the execution of the propounded paper-writing.. Mr. R. V. Sears, an attorney in Crawford county, Ohio, appears, as I understand it, for Mr. Benjamin Sears, and joins in the propounding of the will; and other able counsel representing-various legatees appear and have been heard.

It is due and proper for the court to state that it has been very profoundly interested in the exceedingly able and resourceful efforts of learned counsel on this application, and has received the compliment and great benefit of very exhaustive written briefs, besides the oral argument.

The questions involved in the case are not very complex or numerous. The whole matter resolves itself into the question of whether the paper-writing propounded was duly, legally and regularly subscribed or acknowledged by the testatrix, and. properly, legally and regularly attested and subscribed by the attesting witnesses. The attesting witnesses, whose testimony has; been taken at some length in support of the will, were Mr. J. W.. Southern and Mrs. Julia K. Southern, his wife, of Lakewood, Ohio, neighbors and quite intimate friends of the testatrix, Mrs.. Arminda S. Nicholson. As the court views the matter, it will not be necessary to discuss, at any length, the testimony offered. There is no serious dispute about the testimony, as it. is all a matter of record, and is not very lengthy.

The court deems it proper, in the first place, in making this, brief statement of its opinion, to state a few general facts and circumstances which may have some bearing upon the real questions at issue. Mrs. Nicholson was a widow. She had resided for many years previous to her death in the village of Lakewood, and was well known as a lady of high character, intelligence, and of a charitable and religious disposition. She had no children, and was seized and possessed of an estate of considerable value, amounting- to $150,000 to $200,000, as is stated by counsel, and not disputed. It is proper to say that the court is not thoroughly advised on this subject. The testimony did not go into the extent of the estate any further than it was admitted in argument. She had drawn, herself, three papers pur[192]*192porting to be wills, and two before the one now offered had been witnessed and subscribed by the same persons who are the subscribing witnesses to this paper-writing. It may not be out of place, in passing, to say that Mrs. Nicholson assumed to act upon her own counsel in framing and drafting these papers. They were emphatically holograph wills. It does not appear that she sought any professional advice whatever, and it is proven that the paper-writing presented, so far as it is written with a pen, is all in her handwriting, except the signatures and place of residence of the attesting witnesses. The paper contains twenty and more paragraphs or items. On the first page, and under the word “Third,” it is evident that in the physical construction of this paper, a piece of paper, ruled and very similar in all respects to the body of the paper, has been put on to the face of the sheet, by mucilage or other adhesive substance, and that underneath this paper there was originally 'written other words, which are entirely covered and obscured by this “rider.” The words written on this piece of attached paper are as follows:

“The land I own lying between Lake Avenue and the Lake, I want sold, and ten thousand dollars of the money given to the Eliza Jennings Home, to be added to the endowment fund of that institution. The remainder divided among brother Benjamin’s children.”

In passing, it should be stated that it is claimed that this change in the physical construction of the document, made by the superincumbent piece of paper with the writing on it, is not proven to have been made before the pretended execution and attestation of the instrument as a will, and should not, therefore, be probated because of this fact. The court is of the opinion -that the point made on the will in this respect may be disposed of in a few words. There is no testimony bearing upon the question as to when, how, and for what purpose this change was made in the original construction of the paper. The words that I have quoted are proven to be all in the handwriting of Mrs. Nicholson, and it is so framed into the will, as to what goes before, and what follows, that the literary construction is complete, and there is nothing in it that, on inspection, would [193]*193lead one to suppose that it was placed on the will, or the change so made, after the will was drafted, and intended to be subscribed, attested, and made complete. There is, therefore, as bearing upon this question of the regularity of this change, the presumption which obtains in all similar cases, that the paper, when it was intended to be made final by subscription and attestation, was in the condition that it is now found. If the handwriting had been the handwriting of some other person; if it had been written with a different pen or ink, or if there were any internal evidences that it was probably done at some other time than at the time, or previous to, the execution, the presumption might be rebutted, or testimony might be adduced that would tend to rebut the presumption; but the presumption of regularity; the presumption that the change was made prior to the attempted execution, is strengthened and fortified by the fact that it was all done by the hand of Mrs. Nicholson, the testatrix.

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2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 189, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-nicholson-ohprobctcuyahog-1904.