Fortenberry v. Herrington

196 So. 232, 188 Miss. 735, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 70
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1940
DocketNo. 34117.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 196 So. 232 (Fortenberry v. Herrington) 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
Fortenberry v. Herrington, 196 So. 232, 188 Miss. 735, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 70 (Mich. 1940).

Opinion

*740 McG-owen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

S. A. Wilkes died testate on November 20,1937, and his will was promptly probated in the common form. Later the appellee, Mrs. Cordia Wilkes Herrington, a daughter of decedent, filed her petition to contest the will, alleging that it was the product of (1) undue influence, and (2) of the mental incapacity of the decedent to execute a will. Mrs. Pearlie Wilkes Fortenberry, proponent of the will, a half-sister of the decedent, filed her answer, denying the material allegations of the petition. The issue devisavit vel non was made up, and the two issues were submitted on the evidence.

The court gave a peremptory instruction in favor of the proponent on the issue of undue influence; and submitted to the jury the question of mental capacity. The jury found a verdict against the will, and the court entered a decree accordingly.

The main contentions of the appellant, the proponent of the will, are (1) that the court erred in not granting her a peremptory instruction on the issue of mental capacity; and (2) that the court erred in overruling the appellant’s motion for a new trial, particularly in that the verdict of the jury was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence.

*741 Considering these assignments of error together, a statement of the material facts adduced on the trial is necessary.

The proponent did not rest upon a prima facie case made by offering all the record of the probate of the will in common; but as a part of her evidence in chief offered twenty-two witnesses to establish the mental capacity of the decedent on the day of the execution of the will.

On the day that he executed the will he conveyed by deed his real property to the proponent, Mrs. Fortenberry, and acknowledged it before a notary public.

By the terms of his will he provided for the payment of his debts and a monument at his grave. He bequeathed to his daughter, the contestant, $25, stating that he had made advancements to her, and incurred expenses in her behalf. And he then bequeathed the rest of his estate to the proponent, Mrs. Fortenberry.

On the date of the execution of the will there were present in the room his physician, Dr. Conner; Mr. Rawls, the lawyer who prepared the will; Mr. Aultman and Reverend Edward Yawn, the attesting witnesses; Tom Hartage, a notary public; and Mrs. Fortenberry, her husband, Ed Fortenberry, and their daughter, Eddie Rue.

Dr. Conner was not offered as a witness; the decedent’s attorney, Rawls, offered, but the court sustained an objection to him as a witness.

The decedent was about eighty years of age when, on October 2, 1937, Mrs. Fortenberry brought him to her home, where he remained until his death; during which time Mrs. Fortenberry and her husband nursed and cared for him.

Aultman testified that he had known the decedent since 1915; that they were good friends; that he visited decedent upon his sending for him, and talked with him two or three hours, decedent telling him that he intended to make Ms home with the Fortenberrys, and wanted them to have his property — wanted a will drawn to that effect; *742 wanted to make a deed to them of his real property. Upon Aultman’s suggestion that he would require the services of a lawyer — that the witness could not prepare a will — he suggested that Hollis Rawls be called in. After this visit Mr. Aultman, in the course of several days, was again sent for by the decedent, who wanted the will and deed attended to; and Aultman saw the lawyer and advised him of the decedent’s wishes. Rawls prepared the will, and in the presence of the persons named above the decedent arose from his bed and listened to the reading of the will by Rawls. The lawyer had stated in the will that decedent’s daughter was to receive $500; when he read that provision he was stopped by decedent, who said he did not want his daughter to have that much. The lawyer and Mrs. Fortenberry tried to persuade him to leave this provision unchanged, and upon his refusing to do so, substituted the sum of $25 for the $500. The will was again read to him, and he was satisfied with it. Hartage, the notary public, then held his hand and he made his X mark; whereupon the decedent called upon Aultman and Reverend Edward Yawn to act as subscribing witnesses, which they did. Aultman testified that he neither saw nor heard anything which would indicate that the decedent was not mentally capable of executing the will or transacting ordinary business. The deed was executed at the same time. The decedent told Aultman that the Fortenberrys had been good to him. There was nothing on that occasion to indicate that the decedent was under the influence of morphine, or was being unduly influenced by anyone.

The witness Reverend Edward Yawn, knew the decedent and frequently visited him in the Fortenberry home; in the course of their conversations the decedent quoted the Bible correctly, and was able to give book and verse. When the lawyer and proponent tried to persuade him to leave his daughter $500, he said, “I am making this will — you all are not making it.” The witness stated that decedent was aware of what he was doing, and that never *743 at any time, before or after the execution of the will, did he perceive that his mind was affected in any way.

The testimony of Aultman and Yawn in regard to the sanity and mental capacity of decedent to execute the will was fully corroborated by other witnesses, who asserted that there was nothing wrong with his mind. Fula Fortenberry, daughter of his half-sister, testified to intimate association with him, and stated that his mind was all right, that she and her mother had visited his home, and he in theirs; that she and her mother had cleaned his house for him before he came to live with them.

Reverend Zeb Polk testified that he had often visited decedent during his last illness, that he had known him for eight years, had talked with him about the Bible, and that he had a good and rational mind.

Reverend J. P. Holcomb, a Baptist minister, testified that he had known decedent about a year, had often seen him, and had visited him twice during his last illness, and talked with him at length, especially about spirtual matters, the Bible, his past life, and stated that, “While talking with him I took him to be as rational considering his physical condition as any other man that is sick. He was a sane man — I took his mind to be allright — I don’t think anything except he knew what he was talking.”

The testimony of the above witnesses was corroborated by ten or twelve others, whose acquaintance with the decedent ran back about forty-six years in some instances.

There was evidence to show that he declared his daughter cared nothing for him and had left him alone; that she ran away and married when she was thirteen or fourteen years of age; that she had forced him to settle with her for some cows which she claimed had belonged to her mother; and that she and her husband caused him trouble and expense about some of his bank deposit slips.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 So. 232, 188 Miss. 735, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fortenberry-v-herrington-miss-1940.