Fye v. Hamilton

129 N.E. 237, 75 Ind. App. 99, 1920 Ind. App. LEXIS 315
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1920
DocketNo. 10,851
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 129 N.E. 237 (Fye v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fye v. Hamilton, 129 N.E. 237, 75 Ind. App. 99, 1920 Ind. App. LEXIS 315 (Ind. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Nichols, J.

This was an action to establish the lost will of Margaret Jane Hamilton, deceased.

1. The motion to dismiss the appeal is overruled. The appeal was perfected by filing the transcript with a proper assignment of error thereon within 180 days. Notice thereafter as given was not ground for dismissal. Take v. Hamlin (1895), 149 Ind. 94, 41 N. E. 856, 1035.

It appears by the special findings of fact that on March 21, 1910, Margaret Jane Hamilton, decedent, in company with Martha Fye and Samuel Fye, went to the law office of Judge Ed. H. Jones, at Hamilton, Ohio, and that the decedent then went into the private consultation office with Judge Jones and stated to him the manner in which she desired by will to dispose of her property; that thereupon said Judge Jones dictated to his stenographer, in the presence of the decedent, and directed such stenographer to transcribe her said notes, which purported to be the last will of the decedent; that the stenographer did so transcribe the notes and added thereto an adopted form of attestation showing the manner in which the will was written and executed by the decedent; that thereupon it was read by the decedent and thereafter to her by Judge Jones and, in the presence of witnesses, it was signed by the decedent and, at her request, witnessed by Judge Jones and one Bartlow. The will was then placed in an envelope of customary legal form and size, sealed arid put into the [101]*101hands of the decedent, who left the office with such will in her possession. Across the face of said envelope was written, “The last will and testament of Margaret Jane Hamilton,” or words of similar import. In the spring of 1911, the decedent placed such sealed envelope in the possession of John Craig, stating to him at such time that it contained her will, and requesting him to hold it until called for by her or until her death. Said Craig took possession of the envelope and retained it until November, 1912, when the decedent requested him to return it to her, which he did, at which time she stated to him that he had been made executor in such will. She thereafter held such envelope in her possession unopened until Craig left the premises of T. O. Appleton, where decedent was then living, and had been living up to the time of her death on January 24, 1914. In the early part of September, 1913, decedent stated to Nettie Hillman that she had made a will, and had made disposition of the' property by giving the girls the estate because the boys had already received their share, and that Judge Jones had prepared the will. About the middle of September, 1913, decedent suffered an injury which caused her to become bedfast and helpless, and from that time until the time of her death she was unable to assist herself about the room where she was living or to clothe herself and had to be assisted in whatever she did. In the latter part of December, 1913, decedent stated to Mary Castillo that she had made her will and had made a satisfactory disposition of her estate and had given her entire estate to the girls, appellants herein, for the reason that the boys, appellees herein, had already received their portion of the estate. On January 10, 1914, decedent stated to Clara Merrill that she had made provision in her will to give-the entire estate to her daughters for the reason that her sons had already received their portion of the estate. On [102]*102January 1, 1914, decedent, when in a helpless condition at the home of Etta Appleton, stated to Myrtle Bickley that she was probably never going to see her again as she did not expect to live very much longer, and that she had made her will by which the daughters received the entire estate, and that she had made no provision for her sons because they had received from her and their father their full share of the estate. Prior to these conversations she had stated to other witnesses that she had such will giving the entire estate to the daughters to the exclusion of the sons. Immediately after her death on January 24,1914, at the home of Etta Appleton and Orville Appleton, in the room which had been occupied by her since she had been living with Mr. and Mrs. Appleton and in which room was contained All of her papers and personal effects, appellee Jethro Hamilton, now the administrator of the estate, together with Orville Appleton, entered the room where decedent had lived and died and searched the bureau drawers for such will, taking out all the papers in the drawers but finding no will. They found certain notes given by Samuel Fye to decedent of $3,000, and certificates of deposit in the Brookville bank in favor of decedent in the sum of $2,500. All of the valuable papers of decedent which they found at such time were contained in such bureau drawer. Thereafter appellee William Hamilton, and the appellant Etta Appleton and her husband, Orville Appleton, made further search for such will, examining all the contents of such bureau, searching through all her clothes, and making a search of all of the furniture, including the wardrobe in such room occupied by decedent during her life and in which she died. During such search appellee William Hamilton stated to said Orville Appleton that he was confident that there was a will and that it should be found. Thereafter he telephoned to Orville Appleton that he [103]*103had a dream • that said will was behind the mirror between the glass and board constituting the back of the mirror, but after search no will was found in' such place or elsewhere and had not and cannot be found up to this date. The stenographer’s original stenographic notes were preserved by her and are now in her possession, and she has made in her deposition a correct and true copy of such original notes of such will so taken at such time in the office of Judge Jones, and the same is made a part of the findings. Item 2 of such copy of said will provided as follows:

“After the payment of my debts I will and direct that the balance of my estate be divided equally among my three daughters, Laura C. Black, Martha J. Fye and Etta Appleton. In case my daughter, Etta Appleton, die before my death without issue, then my estate is to be divided equally among the two daughters first named above or their heirs. I have bequeathed by estate to my three daughters through a sense of justice because the sons, Jethro M. Hamilton, Harvey Hamilton and William L. Hamilton, have already received through their father, more than will come to the daughters by the provisions of this will, whereas the three daughters have received very little heretofore.”

Two competent witnesses, Mary Turner and Judge Jones, testified as to the contents of such last will and testament of decedent. One competent witness and a correct copy of said will were testified to by said Judge Jones and Mary Turner, the stenographer, that the decedent executed said will by signing the same in the presence of said witnesses, who in her presence and at her request and in the presence of each other witnessed her signature thereto; that said last will and testament so executed by said decedent was not in existence at the time of her death; that said will and testament of decedent was not fraudulently disposed of either during her lifetime or after her death by persons whose names [104]

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Bluebook (online)
129 N.E. 237, 75 Ind. App. 99, 1920 Ind. App. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fye-v-hamilton-indctapp-1920.