Faulkes v. Brummett's Adm'r

204 S.W.2d 493, 305 Ky. 434, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 826
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 27, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 S.W.2d 493 (Faulkes v. Brummett's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faulkes v. Brummett's Adm'r, 204 S.W.2d 493, 305 Ky. 434, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 826 (Ky. 1947).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Siler

Reversing.

Mildred Faulkes, the appellant, sought to propound *435 an instrument she asserted to be the last will of R. H. Brummett, deceased. Sam King, the court-appointed administrator of the decedent’s estate, and William Brummett and Lena Brummett Stivers, the two surviving children of the decedent, all appellees, stoutly opposed the same instrument.

Following a judgment of McCracken County Court rejecting this instrument, Miss Faulkes took an appeal to McCracken Circuit Court. Thereupon, following a verdict of a jury and a judgment of the circuit court against her, Miss Faulkes perfected this present appeal seeking reversal of that last judgment rejecting the purported will.

Appellant, in her brief, sets up 26 separate points, but we believe that her grounds for reversal can be condensed, for the purposes of this appeal, into her basic contention that the trial court erred in overruling her motion for a directed verdict.

R. H. Brummett, age 50, died of pneumonia in a Paducah hospital on October 23, 1945, after having entered that hospital on August 10, 1945, and after having-executed, according to appellant, the questioned instrument as his last will there at the hospital on August 17, 1945.

The questioned instrument has both clarity and good form. It indicates on its face that it was signed on August 17, 1945, by R. H. Brummett as the testator and also by L. B. Alexander, one of appellant’s present attorneys, and Eileen J. Davis, a student nurse at the hospital, as the two attesting witnesses. This instrument requires payment of debts and funeral expenses, gives appellant two pieces of real estate plus decedent’s dog-business plus $10,000 in cash, exclusive of inheritance taxes, and then nominates appellant as executrix without bond. This instrument makes no disposition whatever of the residual and larger part of decedent’s personal property. Therefore, this instrument, although it does not mention the Brummett children, yet it permits most of the personal property of this estate to vest in the two Brummett children through a straightforward operation of law. The personal property has been appraised at a little more than $77,000, including $46,000 in cash.'

*436 The decedent was divorced a number of years ago from his wife, the mother of appellee children. After that divorce, he and his two children boarded together for a time in Paducah. But in more recent years, a gulf of indifference had seemed to open up between this father and his two children, and this gulf was begun, so appellees contend, with the connivance of Miss Faulkes. In any event, both Brummett children got married some few years ago, moved to distant cities, began families of their own, thereafter wrote and visited their father only at infrequent periods.

Now Mr. Brummett was in the dog business, that is to say he bought, sold, handled and shipped coon dogs, and in that business he appears to have accumulated most of his fortune. Around 1933 and while he and his two children were boarding together in Paducah, he employed Miss Faulkes, then about 18 years of age, to help him operate his dog business. Appellees contend that she, while helping to run the dog business, also helped to create a hedge of creeping estrangement between themselves and their father. Appellant contends that these two children always strongly resented her own entry into this relationship with their father, even though her part was, she says, solely that of a faithful, efficient, industrious, loyal, hired helper during the 12 year period preceding Mr. Brummett’s death. Her evidence shows that she was an indefatigable worker, sometimes continuing all night on the job, and that for about 12 years she was both the mainspring and the sparkplug of Brummett’s dog business.

The two main issues of this ease were those of (A) whether the questioned document was the last will of B. H. Brummett and (B) whether that document, if established as the will, resulted from undue influence. ,

Issue A.

Substantial evidence was produced to show that this document was duly executed as the actual, authentic, genuine, intended, last will of Mr. Brummett. No one denied the Brummett signature. No one attacked the Brummett testamentary capacity. L. B. Alexander, a practicing attorney for 35 years and a former president of Kentucky State Bar Association, drew this document and witnessed its execution by Brummett. No one at *437 tacked the Alexander veracity. Eileen J. Davis, a young student nurse at the hospital, was the other attesting witness to this document. Hers was an unwilling and an uncertain testimony on this trial. Yet she did not deny her signature. Neither did she deny her presence at some sort of a documentary solemnization by Brummett upon the occasion in' question. While the statute requires attestation of wills by two witnesses, yet we have held in several cases that a will may be legally probated on the strength of only one of those witnesses if the other witness is missing or is defective in memory or is otherwise incapacitated. Polley v. Cline’s Ex’r, 263 Ky. 659, 93 S. W. 2d 363; Rowland v. Holt, 253 Ky. 718, 70 S. W. 2d 5.

These appellees produced some witnesses tending to show that Brummett stated after the date of this document and before his death that he had not made his will. If he made such a statement, its utterance was well explained by the manifestly unfinished state of his testamentary disposition as shown by this document itself. He had not disposed of the larger part of his personal property. He had intended, so Mr. Alexander explained, to add to this document certain, contemplated clauses of complete disposition of all the residual items of his estate. Therefore, Brummett, according to the conception lingering in his own mind up until death, had not made his will inasmuch as he had not completed its full and final expression. The probative value of this utterance of Brummett about not having made a will appears to have been completely deflated to the point of annihilation in the face of this document itself, which was carried into court with undenied signature, with legal form, with solemnized execution, with fulfillment of statutory requirements. This utterance of Brummett about not having made a will may have furnished a frail scintilla to support appellees’ theory that this document was not the Brummett will. But a mere scintilla of evidence is not enough evidence to authorize a court to submit an issue to a jury under our present-day law. Nugent v. Nugent’s Ex’r, 281 Ky. 263, 135 S. W. 2d 877. Therefore, wo must conclude that appellees produced no probative evidence to support their theory relating to issue A, the theory that the questioned instrument was not the last will of R. H. Brummett.

*438 Issue B.

And now having determined that all the evidence of probative value established this questioned instrument as the Brummett will, we now reach the second question, that of whether appellees furnished sufficient, legal evidence to prove that this will resulted from undue influence.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W.2d 493, 305 Ky. 434, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faulkes-v-brummetts-admr-kyctapphigh-1947.