Fatheree v. Lawrence

33 Miss. 585
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 33 Miss. 585 (Fatheree v. Lawrence) 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
Fatheree v. Lawrence, 33 Miss. 585 (Mich. 1857).

Opinion

Handy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the order of the Probate Court of Copiah county, admitting to probate an instrument of writing, purporting on its face to be the last will and testament of Elizabeth Lawrence, deceased, which bore date the 7th September, 1833.

The paper was offered for probate at the July Term, 1856, of that court, by the present appellee, who is one of the legatees named in it; and the application was resisted by the appellants, as administrators of Thomas D. C. Lawrence, who claimed the property bequeathed by the will to the appellee. Upon the investigation of the case, the material facts proved were, in substance, as follows.

It appears, by written entries made upon the paper, that it had been filed for probate, in the Probate Court, on the 11th day of December, 1833; that it was recorded in the Record Book of Wills, and that it was taken from the files of that court, when it was propounded for probate on this occasion. Upon its face it purported to be the last will and testament of the testatrix in due form, and to be signed by her, thus: “Elizabeth W Lawrence, [s.];” and it was also signed by subscribing witnesses, thus: “ Test. George Ellis, George Ellis, Jr.;” and an affidavit appears written upon it as follows: “Probate Court, December Term, 1833. George Ellis, Junior, one of the witnesses to the within will, being duly sworn, did depose and say, that he saw Elizabeth Lawrence, the testatrix therein named, sign and seal the same, and heard her publish, pronounce, and declare the within writing to be her last will and testament, and that he saw George Ellis sign the same as the other witness, and that at the doing thereof, the said testatrix was of sound and disposing mind and memory, as far as he verily believes.

“George Ellis, Jr.

[616]*616“ Sworn to, and subscribed in open court, this 22d December, 1833.

Rowland Johnson, Oik. pro tem.”

It was admitted, that no order or entry of any kind was to be found among the minutes of proceedings of the Probate Court of that county, in relation to the will of Elizabeth Lawrence, although a minute-book of its orders and decrees was kept by that court.

George Ellis, Jr., one of the subscribing witnesses to that paper, was produced as a witness, and stated in substance, that Elizabeth Lawrence was sick some time at witness’s father’s house, and he thinks that the paper was written during that time, and that she died a short time after the date of the instrument; that it is in his handwriting, and he is satisfied that he wrote it, and believes that the name signed to the affidavit indorsed upon it, is his signature; that his father, George Ellis, the other subscribing witness to the instrument, died in October, 1833; that he believes that he, the witness, signed the name of the testatrix to the instrument, and does not think that he would have signed her name to it had he not been requested by her to do so; that all he recollects is, that there was a will of Elizabeth Lawrence, and he only recollects that, from the fact of his having written it; that he recollects nothing about the execution of the instrument, but thinks that he would not have attested and subscribed it, had not the instrument been duly executed ; but that he might have subscribed an illegal instrument, and does not know that he knew, what was a legal instrument; that he was living with his father, George Ellis, at the date of the instrument, and believes that Elizabeth Lawrence was there at that time; that the signature of the first attesting witness is in the handwriting of his father; that he cannot recollect whether he and his father subscribed their names as attesting witnesses to the instrument in the presence of the testatrix, and all that he distinctly recollects about the transaction is that Elizabeth Lawrence made a will, but from lapse of time, all the circumstances connected with and attending its execution have faded from his memory; that it was the common understanding among her relatives, as he believes, that she had made a will; that she was more than twenty-one years of age at the time, and he supposes that she was of sound and dis[617]*617posing mind, but as to that he could not speak positively, owing to lapse of time.

On cross-examination, he stated, that he believes that his recollection of the facts and circumstances connected with the execution and attestation of the will, was more perfect at the date of the affidavit indorsed upon it, than at the time of his present examination, by reason of the lapse of time; that he believes the will was executed in good faith, and that it was intended to be executed as other wills are. He further stated, that he had no independent recollection of writing the will, of signing it as a witness, or of signing the name of the testatrix to it; and that he only believes that he wrofe it, signed it as a witness, and signed her name thereto, from the handwriting, believing it to be his own.

It was further' shown, that Elizabeth Lawrence left three heirs at law, Thomas D. C. Lawrence (who is since dead, and the appellant’s father and wife are his administrators), William H. Lawrence, the father of the appellee, and Mrs. Chain; and it was admitted that Thomas D. C. Lawrence had possession, at the time of his death, of the slave bequeathed in the will to the appellee, and that he purchased the slave and her children, in the year 1840, from William H. Lawrence, the appellee’s father, from whom he took a bill of sale, and that the slave went into the possession of Thomas, under that bill of sale.

Other evidence was offered, for the purpose of showing that the practice in that court had been loose about the time this instrument was offered for probate in 1833; but the particulars of it are not material to the consideration of the case as it is here presented.

The subject-matter of this controversy has been heretofore before this court upon the question, whether this will was to be considered as having been legally admitted to probate, in virtue of the indorsements made upon it in the year 1833, and of its being recorded by the clerk in the book for the registration of wills in the Probate Office of Copiah county. That question was decided here in the negative, Fatheree v. Lawrence, 30 Miss. 416; upon the ground that it did not sufficiently appear that the Probate Court had either admitted, or refused to admit, the will to probate. And it is to be inferred, that it was in consequence of that decision that the instrument was again propounded for probate in the proceeding which is [618]*618now before us. The question for decision now is, whether the evidence adduced, upon the presentation of the will since the former decision, was sufficient to establish its due execution, and to entitle it to probate, and whether the court below erred in admitting it to probate.

It appears, from the evidence, that the instrument was attested by two witnesses, George Ellis and George Ellis, Jr.; the former of whom died shortly after its date, and the latter was called to testify in relation to the matter, after the lapse of nearly twenty-three years from the date of its execution. He proved his own signature and that of his father, the other subscribing witness; that the instrument was in his handwriting, and that the signature of the testatrix to it was also in his handwriting; but that, from lapse of time, all the circumstances attending its execution had faded from his memory.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Miss. 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fatheree-v-lawrence-miss-1857.