Fransioli v. Podesta

113 S.W.2d 769, 21 Tenn. App. 577, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 59
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 30, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 113 S.W.2d 769 (Fransioli v. Podesta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fransioli v. Podesta, 113 S.W.2d 769, 21 Tenn. App. 577, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 59 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

KETCHUM, J.

The case is an issue of devisavit vel non in a paper writing propounded as the holographic will of Charles Podesta, deceased, which reads as follows:

“March 26, 1933. I will all to my wife. Chas. Podesta.”

The ease was tried to a jury where the issue was determined in favor of the will, and the contestants’ motion for a new tidal having been overruled, they have appealed in error to this court.

Charles Podesta, a resident of the city of Memphis, died on the 14th day of May, 1933, at the age of 73. He left his widow, Mrs. Elizabeth Stagner Podesta, but no children, surviving. The contestants, Mrs. Emma Fransioli and Miss Elizabeth Podesta, sisters, *579 were bis next of bin and beirs at law. Prior to tbe adoption of tbe prohibition amendment, be bad been engaged in tbe wholesale liquor business in Memphis, but upon tbe adoption of this amendment to tbe Constitution, this business was closed out and be never after-wards engag’ed in any active business.

On July 21, 1915, be executed a will, duly witnessed, in which be bequeathed to each of bis sisters above named tbe sum- of $6,000, payable in a lump sum, or in monthly installments of $100 per month at tbe option of bis executrix. Tbe balance of bis estate, real and personal, be left to bis widow, tbe proponent of the will now in controversy. Tbe 1915 will was placed in an envelope and was banded to bis wife, with instructions to place it in her lock box, which she did, and it remained there until after his death, nearly eighteen years later. This will was admitted to probate in September, 1933. - The widow and the Union & Planters Bank & Trust Company were named as executors and qualified as such, but shortly thereafter tbe bank resigned, and tbe widow continued to serve as tbe sole executrix.

At tbe time of the testator’s death, tbe income from tbe estate bad been greatly reduced as tbe result of tbe depression; and, by agreement, tbe executrix paid to the sisters of tbe testator tbe sum of $50 each, per month, instead of $100, as provided by tbe will. These payments were made for twelve months, uqtil tbe discovery of tbe instrument now in controversy, under circumstances now about to be related, after which tbe payments were discontinued.

This alleged holograph was found in the pocket of a coat which bad been worn by the deceased on tbe day that be suffered a stroke of paralysis. It was found by tbe widow in November or December, 1935, which was about two and a half years after bis death. There is no dispute as to tbe facts.

Tbe circumstances under which the writing was found are interesting and unusual. Mrs. Podesta testified that she was talking to tbe “Fuller Brush man,” who had come to sell her some brushes, and, as she was conversing with him on tbe threshold of her apartment, another man came up and inquired of her as to tbe location of apartment No. 14. She gave him the directions to that apartment and, as he walked away, she recognized him as a dealer in old clothes, and it then occurred to her that she might as well sell him her husband ’s old clothes, and she accordingly sent her servant to apartment No. 14 to ask him to come back by her apartment. When he came back to her apartment, he was taken to the room in which the clothes had been packed away in a trunk. The old clothes dealer went through the pockets of the suit which the deceased had worn just before his last illness and found therein a pair of spectacles in a case, a box of Luden’s cough drops, a paper packet of matches, and the paper writing now in controversy. The writing was on a leaf torn from a *580 smaE note book, written and signed by tbe deceased, and dated March 26, 1933.

It appears from the testimony of Mrs. Podesta that on that date, which was Sunday, her husband was about in his usual health, though not feeling very well. They spent the day about as usual, reading the Sunday papers in the forenoon, and in the afternoon they took a long drive. They were together practically the entire day, and he appeared to be in about his normal condition. They occupied an apartment in an eighteen-apartment building owned by the deceased, at 1306 Madison avenue. They occupied adjoining bedrooms, and the door between the two rooms was left partly open at aE times. On this particular evening the deceased went to his room and sat in a chair by his bed, and read for a while before retiring. When he retired, he removed his watch from his pocket and placed it on the dresser, as usual, and hung his coat either in the closet, or oñ a hook on the inside of the closet door, as he always did.

Around midnight he cried out or made a noise which attracted his wife’s attention. She went to him at once and found that he had had a stroke from which he never recovered; his whole right side was completely paralyzed, and he was never thereafter able to utter a word which could be understood, nor was he ever able to write. He died about seven weeks later.

During his entire illness the clothes which he had worn on the day before he suffered this stroke hung in this closet, which opened on his bedroom. After his death, the suit was packed in the trunk by Mrs. Podesta, and removed to the storage room, where it remained until it was taken out of the trunk to sell to the old clothes man two and a half years later. The suit contained no other papers of any kind; and there is, of course, no contention that the paper offered for probate as holograph was lodged in the hands of any one for safe-keeping.

The deceased had a lock box in the Manhattan Bank in which he kept his valuable papers, and in which his bank stock and other papers were found after his death. His wife also had a lock box in the same bank, to which he had access, and the 1915 will and other papers were found in that box after his death. He also had some shelves in the closet which opened on his bedroom, and on these shelves there were some boxes in which he kept other papers such as receipts, tax receipts, expired insurance policies, and copies of his income tax returns. He seems to have been a rather methodical man, and kept all such papers as these in these boxes.

During his illness he was constantly attended by his wife and by two nurses, a day nursé and a night nurse; he was also often visited by his real estate agent, Elmer Harris, who looked after his real estate and collected his rents for him. While he was unable to speak *581 or to use bis right band, be did have some little use of bis left band; be sometimes pointed to the closet and made unintelligible noises, and once or twice when be was wheeled past the closet door be caught at it. The nurse thought be wanted to put on bis clothes, and paid no further attention to him. Harris thought nothing' of it at the time. His wife thought he might want some of the papers in the boxes, so she brought the boxes out, one at a time, and -showed the papers to him, one by one, but he would only shake his head. The contention of the widow now is that he was trying to point the will out to her and lodge it with her for safe-keeping. ■ No one knows what he wanted. He may have wanted his spectacles which were in his coat pocket.

His handwriting was proved by a number of credible witnesses, and it was shown that his handwriting was generally known by his business associates and acquaintances.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W.2d 769, 21 Tenn. App. 577, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fransioli-v-podesta-tennctapp-1937.