Gailor v. Chisholm

166 S.W.2d 281, 292 Ky. 400, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 27, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 166 S.W.2d 281 (Gailor v. Chisholm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gailor v. Chisholm, 166 S.W.2d 281, 292 Ky. 400, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 64 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

James Grailor died testate, while a citizen of and residing in Taylor county, in the latter part of September or the first part of October, 1940. In due time following his death a will executed by him on May 20, 1938, together with a later codicil executed on September 3 of the same year, were each offered and probated by the county court of Taylor county. The testator was a bachelor and, at the time of his death, was between 62 and 65 years of age, no precise date being shown in the record. *401 The appellants, as collateral heirs of testator, appealed from the judgment of probate to the Taylor circuit court, where the jury under directions of the. court returned a verdict finding the testamentary papers to be the last will and testament of the testator, and from that judgment appellants and contestants below prosecute this appeal.

The statement filed by appellants in the Taylor circuit court, upon taking the appeal from the county court, relied on no specific grounds of contest, but only stated that the judgment of that court ‘ ‘ should be set aside and held for nought,” because both the alleged will and the codicil “were not the last will and testament of the decedent James Gailor,” which general allegation entitled contestants to rely upon any ground justifying a court to set them aside. However, upon the trial appellants introduced no evidence to sustain any ground of contest other than mental incapacity of the testator and undue influence exercised on him by his only two devisees. The contestants as collateral heirs of testator are more or less numerous and consist of some brothers and sisters, with children of others who died before the testator executed his testamentary paper and codicil.

Many years before testator’s death and after his mother had died, Ruben Gailor, his father, married the second time, but it does not appear that there were any children by that marriage, and the widow lived for 30 or more years with the testator in this case, who continued to reside on the farm of some 135 or more acres once owned by his father, and where the latter resided until his death in about 1902. In 1892, the father, Ruben Gailor, was threatened with some sort of legal proceedings against him for having wronged another woman, and in an effort to fence against a personal judgment against him (as argued by appellants) he deeded his comparatively small and cheap farm to testator, James Gailor, and his brother, John Gailor. In that deed he stipulated that the vendees were to assume a small incumbrance upon the land, and to provide Ruben Gailor’s widow a home and support throughout her life if she survived the grantor. Later the testator herein purchased the half interest so conveyed to his brother, John Gailor, and thereby became the sole owner of his father’s homestead. The father’s deed was not in the nature of a gift, but was supported by both a monetary consider *402 ation, as well as the other required obligations assumed by the vendees. There is no testimony in the case showing that the consideration was inadequate, even if such fact should have any bearing on the issues in this case, but which it does not. The testator, James Gailor, after his father’s death became the head of a family consisting of himself and his stepmother. The latter’s health was not robust and the testator (perhaps with the consent of his stepmother) procured a woman in the neighborhood by the name of Cox to take up her residence with them and assist in the housekeeping and in performing duties connected therewith, which arrangement was made a considerable period before testator’s death. Mrs. Cox, at the time she entered the Gailor home under such arrangement, was the mother of a girl child who at the time of testator’s death was between the age of 14 and 16 years, and consequently she was, at the time of the execution of the will, between 12 and 14 years of age. Some few years after Mrs. Cox entered the Gailor home she gave birth to a boy child whom she named Ruben Cox and it is indisputably shown by the testimony, as well as by testator’s will, that he was the father of that child. Indeed, the fact of fatherhood of the unfortunate illegitimate is expressly admitted by testator in his will in its first clause stating: “I give, devise and bequeath to my illegitimate son, Ruben (Cox) Gailor, his heirs and assigns forever, all my property, real, personal and mixed of what nature and kind soever and wheresoever the same shall be at the time of my death. ’ ’ He then provided for the payment of his debts, funeral expenses and a grave marker and bequeathed to Mrs. Cox’s daughter $10; and his illegitimate son should share the remainder of his estate, consisting of an 800 acre tract1 of real estate, representing the amount of land conveyed to him and his brother by his father — referred to supra — with additional tracts purchased by the testator at later periods. Such was the situation at the time of testator’s death. We will now proceed to discuss the testimony relating to the only two grounds of contest discussed in appellants’ brief.

Ground (1) that of insufficient mental capacity, the proof shows that for quite awhile following testator’s arrival at manhood he used to a moderate extent only intoxicating liquors so as to characterize him, as generally expressed, a “moderate dram drinker,” but it *403 appears that some 5 or 6 years before his death his imbibing of intoxicants increased. During that period his consumption would be confined to “spells” as described by the witnesses, after which he would desist and become sober, followed by a return of his normal mental condition. During his later years, and following his increased indulgence as described, he became afflicted with disorders, both of his kidneys and bowels, and when in the most extreme intoxicated condition during such drinking spells he would sometimes allow both functional organs to discharge in his clothing and would sometimes dry the effects of his kidney action while clothed by standing before the fire. Even during such extreme situations it is quite conclusively shown that he continued mentally able to transact business and did do so throughout the period of the beginning of his alleged increased indulgence. Following his father’s death he began to lend money in small sums to applicants therefor, which he followed until his death. Besides lending money, he also engaged in what is commonly known as “shaving notes” by buying notes from parties to whom they had been executed. In both his lending and his shaving transactions he exacted, demanded, and obtained a high rate of interest on his loans, and perhaps a larger deduction from notes that he would purchase against others, and it was almost entirely from such engagements that he began rapidly to increase the amount of his holdings, which at the time of his death amounted to some $30,000 in notes, $20,000 of which was indisputedly solvent, as testified to by the appraisers of his estate, which they stated might be augmented by a considerable number of other notes, appraised by them as insolvent because the makers thereof were unknown to the appraisers and they possessed no information about them and listed such obligations as being insolvent, although some of the notes so listed were shown at the time to be well secured by mortgages on real estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 S.W.2d 281, 292 Ky. 400, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gailor-v-chisholm-kyctapphigh-1942.