Field v. Camp

193 F. 160, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5414
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia
DecidedOctober 30, 1911
DocketNo. 1,334
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 193 F. 160 (Field v. Camp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Field v. Camp, 193 F. 160, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5414 (circtndga 1911).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge.

This is a bill brought by Richard H. Field and bis wife, Annie C. Field, against Sarah A. Camp, John T. Brantley, and his wife, Hattie H. C. Brantley, which, after stating the necessary diversity of citizenship, is, in substance, as follows:

That Walter A. Camp, of Springfield, Ohio, Annie C. Field, the plaintiff herein, and the defendants Sarah A. Camp and Hattie II. C. Brantley are the four children and only surviving heirs of George H. Camp, deceased, and Jane M. Camp, deceased.
That said George II. Camp died on August 26, 1907, within 4 months of 90 years of age, and that his widow, the said Jane M. Camp, at that time over 80 years of age, survived him nearly 4 years, and died on June 30, 1911. That both of said decedents died at their home in Marietta, Ga., where they had resided for moro than 35 years.
That Walter A. Camp, the only surviving son, and Annie C. Field, the first daughter and plaintiff herein, have resided in Missouri for more than 30 years, and were not, at any of the times hereinafter stated, inmates or members of their parental home except as visitors, but that on the dates of the wills of the said George H. Camp, as hereinafter alleged, the only inmates of the said parental home were George II. Camp himself, his wife, and two daughters, the defendants Sarah A. Camp, unmarried, and Hattie H. C. Brantley. then unmarried.
That before and after the acts of George H. Camp and Jane M. Camp hereinafter stated defendants Sarah A. Cain]) and Hattie H. C. Brantley watched the business affairs of their father and mother, and claimed and exercised
[162]*162the right to be advised and consulted as to any and all of their investments, and as to the disposition of funds or property among their children, and advised and influenced their said parents for or against such action as was kn'own to them to be contemplated or considered by them, and complained of, -opposed, and prevented the said George H. Gamp giving to plaintiff Annie C. Field his interest in the Hyde Park real estate in Kansas City, Mo., which he suggested and proposed giving to plaintiff without her suggestion or solicitation.
That before and since the dates hereinafter named the net income of the property of said George H. Camp exceeded $4,000 yearly, and the net income of the other property owned by the said Jane M. Camp exceeded $1,000 yearly. That said income of $3,000 was more than sufficient for the support and comfort of the said Jane M. Camp and Sarah A. Camp, the only inmates of said parental home after the death of the said George H. Camp.
That after his death two wills executed by the said George H. Camp were found, the first executed September 17, 1892, -with two codicils attached thereto, dated May 24, 1897, and July 7, 1906, and the second executed June 12, 1901. Each of said wills made the widow, Jane M. Camp, executrix and Richard H. Field executor, and by the first codicil to the first will and by the last will John T. Brantley was made eoexecutor; and said wills, respectively, bequeathed to his children in different amounts about 15 per cent, of his estate, then worth $200,000 or more, and the residue thereof, in both said wills, to his widow.
On account of the second codicil to the first will being of a later date than the second will, it was a question with the said executors and heirs as to which of said wills should be probated, or whether-either could be probated over the objection of any of said heirs, and, because of the difference of provision as to said children, those less favored were disappointed and dissatisfied with the manner in which one or both of said wills were said to have been procured;' and, on account of the advanced age of the widow, her lack of business experience, lack of acquaintance with the various properties bequeathed and devised to her, without restriction, and her known disposition to yield to and please those around and about her, it was a matter of grave concern and apprehension, and was so discussed and considered by three of her four children who were no longer inmates of her household as to how she. would manage and keep the same at the end of the three years of administration of the estate, and also how she would divide or provide for dividing the same at her death, and whether, if she were left exposed to the apparent danger of being led into indiscretion in respect thereto, there would be an equal division among the four children, and the said children suggested to her that she secure the said residuary bequest of their father and her other property to herself and equally to her children after her death by deeding the same to her children, or to trustees, reserving to herself for life the income of all her property. On the 2d day of September, 1907, she executed a deed to the defendant John T. Brantley and the plaintiff Richard II. Field as trustees of her own sepiarate estate other than the property bequeathed to her by. her husband, and, after making such deed and upon further consideration, she and the children agreed that she should and would make a deed vesting, at her death, the remainder of said residuary estate in her four children.
Following said agreement, two deeds were prepared, one on September 20, 1907, by the plaintiff Richard H. Field, and another on September 25, 1907, by John T. Brantley and D. W. Blair, an attorney of Marietta, Ga., neither of which was executed.
The question of differences between the children under the will of their father having been adjusted, a written agreement was entered into by them that neither of them would use any influence with their said mother to induce her to make a deed or will, or dispose of property in any way during three years, and any papers made by her within that time should not be recognized, but should be null and void.
Afterwards, and on October 8, 1907, in consideration of the foregoing, the said will of the said George I-I. Camp, executed September 17, 1892, and the two codicils thereto attached, were offered by the executors and were pro-[163]*163hated, and said heirs received from said estate the legacies in said will and codicils as agreed upon.
Notwithstanding and in disregard of the agreements and proceedings aforesaid, and without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff, Annie O. Field, and for their own use and benefit, defendants influenced and caused said Jane M. Camp to execute a pretended deed to Sarah A. Camp, dated December 19, 1908, conveying to her the home and adjacent lands, in all 87 acres, the very heart and" most valuable part of the home place, and also to sign a pretended will devising said lands to said Sarah A. Camp, and providing that, if the said four children could not agree as to a division in kind of the remainder of her property, the same should be reduced to money by sale in such manner as J. T. Brantley and Sarah A. Camp, the executors named therein, may, in their discretion, determine, and excusing said executors from giving bond and from making any return to the ordinary or court of ordinary, and expressly conferring upon said executors power to sell any part of said estate at private or public sale, without notice, and to make good and sufficient deeds therefor.
And in further disregard and breach of said contract, and without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff Annie C.

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Related

Field v. Camp
201 F. 682 (Fifth Circuit, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
193 F. 160, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/field-v-camp-circtndga-1911.