First Nat'l Bank of Waldron v. Ary

24 S.W.2d 336, 180 Ark. 1084, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 336 (First Nat'l Bank of Waldron v. Ary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat'l Bank of Waldron v. Ary, 24 S.W.2d 336, 180 Ark. 1084, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 51 (Ark. 1930).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This case involves a contest of the will of W. B. Turman, who died at the age of eighty-seven without having married. He had for a number of years been the president of the First National Bank of Waldron, and was serving in that capacity at the time of his death, and, while he owned only a small amount of the stock, he carried a large deposit in the bank. Upon his death his will was probated in common form, without notice to his heirs. By the terms of his will, Turman gave $1 to all persons related to him within the fourth degree, and the remainder of Ms estate was devised to the bank of which he had been president.

Five separate appeals were prosecuted from the order of the probate court admitting the will to probate, all of which were perfected in the manner provided by the statute. Section 2258, C. & M. Digest. One of the appellants was Dona Ary, who alleged that she was the illegitimate — but adopted — daughter of the decedent. The others were second cousins, or the descendants of second cousins, who were shown to be the next of kin: These claimants are divided into two groups, one tracing their kinship throug’h the decedent’s paternal line, the other through the maternal line, and these latter claim that they are the sole heirs at law, for the reason that the estate in question is an ancestral one which came to the decedent, through his mother. Dona Ary claims the entire estate, to the exclusion of both sets of heirs, upon the theory that, having been adopted as a daughter, she is the sole heir at law. 'She claims that she was adopted pursuant to the act of January 12,1853, which appears as §§ 3493 and 3494, C. & M. Dig’est, and that the declaration of that fact, for which the statute referred to provides, was duly recorded, but that all the records of the county were destroyed by a fire. A prima facie showing to this effect was made before the court.

Numerous motions were filed in the case, which we find it unnecessary to discuss in detail, as the purpose of all of them was to require the contestants to settle their conflicting claims before being allowed to contest the will. These motions were overruled, and the'will was contested in the circuit court, upon the appeal from the probate court, upon the grounds that the testator lacked testamentary capacity to make a will, and had been unduly influenced in its execution.

There was a preliminary hearing before the court, upon which much testimony was taken, touching the rights of the contestants to oppose the probate of the will, and the court, without passing upon the respective merits of the conflicting claims, held that all of them had made a prima facie showing of an interest in the estate, which gave them the right to resist the probate of the will. The court consolidated all the appeals into a.single case, and a jury was impaneled to determine the validity of the will. The jury found against the will, and, as the testimony upon which this finding was made has not been abstracted on this appeal from that judgment, it will be conclusively presumed that the testimony supported the verdict of the jury, and the judgment thereon to the effect that Mr. Turman had died intestate.

For the reversal of this judgment, it is very earnestly insisted that it was prejudicial error for the court to have permitted these conflicting interests to make common cause in an attack upon the will, and that the court should have required these claimants to contest separately or to have first litigated among themselves the merits of their respective claims.

We do not agree with learned counsel in this contention. Certainly it is not the policy of the law to permit five separate contests of a will. There was either a will or there was none, and this was the only question involved on the appeal from the probate court, and as each contestant raised this question and no other, it was entirely proper to consolidate these separate appeals, and to try them as a single case. Section 1081, C. & M. Digest. There was an order and judgment of the probate court admitting the will to probate, which bound all persons until that judgment was set aside. It would, therefore, have been an anomalous practice to have required these claimants, whose interests under the will were merely nominal, to first litigate the merits of their respective claims, while a valid order probating the will was outstanding, which will practically exclude all of them from any participation in the distribution of the estate. Dona Ary took nothing under the will, and the other claimants only $1 each, and until it had first been determined that there was no will, there was no occasion for them to litigate with each other. The time within which any of them conld appeal might have expired before the question oí their relative rights could be adjudicated.

The trial in the court below was had under § 10,525, C. & M. Digest, which provides that “When the proceeding is taken to the circuit court, all necessary parties shall be brought before the court; and, upon the demand of any one of them, a jury shall be impaneled to try which or how much of any testamentary paper produced is or is not the last will of the testator.”

The question for trial, therefore, was, how much, if any, of the testamentary paper produced was or was not the last will of the testator? and the question was not how the estate should be distributed if the will was not valid. That question did not then arise, and has not yet arisen. All of the appellants from the probate court were necessary parties, and should have been brought before the court if they had not voluntarily come through their appeals from the probate court, as a proceeding- was about to be had which would be conclusive of their rights to an interest in the estate.

“An heir at law may contest without any other showing of interest than heirship, so may the widow, legatees, devisees, beneficiaries under a trust, assignees of legatees, claimants under prior or subsequent wills. Borland on Wills and Administration (enlarged ed.), pp. 210-211.

All the contestants made a prima fade showing of heirship, and of an interest adverse to the will, and upon this showing they were entitled to contest the will. None of them has asked that the estate be distributed, nor could they do so in this proceeding, as the sole question to be tried on the appeals from the probate court was, How much of the testamentary paper produced is or is not the last will of the testator ?

By § 216, C. & M. Digest, it is provided that “No executor or administrator shall be compelled to pay legacies or distributive shares, 'unless the same are of a perishable nature or subject to injury, until two years after the date of his letters, unless ordered by the court so to do; and not then until bond, with good and sufficient security, be given by the legatee, or distributee, to refund his proportion of any debt which may afterward be established against the estate, and the costs attending the record thereof.”

When the time thus provided by law for the distribution of the estate arrives, these conflicting claims will then be heard upon that question; but, before that question could be properly determined,, it was necessary, first, to determine whether there was a will, and this is the only question which § 10525, -C. & M.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 336, 180 Ark. 1084, 1930 Ark. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-natl-bank-of-waldron-v-ary-ark-1930.