Hackworth v. Hackworth

6 Tenn. App. 452, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 25, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 Tenn. App. 452 (Hackworth v. Hackworth) 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
Hackworth v. Hackworth, 6 Tenn. App. 452, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 169 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

This is a contest over an alleged holographic will of Will C. Hackworth, deceased. The will gives the entire estate to the oldest daughter and the youngest son, out of a family of what had been six children. At least all the others who-had not died had left the family circle many years before, and had established' families of their own. The mother died when this youngest son was about six years old, or some thirty years before the bringing of this suit. The daughter, Annie, had remained at home, and was practically a mother to the rest on up until they left, and to the boy, until he got married in October, 1922. The father died' in September, 1924.

The will was probated in common form in the county cou^t.. The petition was filed to transfer the case to the circuit court for contest by Ed. Hackworth, (a son) Bertha Gallaher, (one of the married daughters) Blair Hackworth, (a minor son of a dead son, Elmer Hackworth, through next friend), S. C. Calloway, husband of Beulah Calloway, a deceased daughter, and as next friend of her minor children, William, Ellison and Carrie Blanche Calloway. Issues were made up in the circuit court, the said two beneficiaries offering the paper purporting to be such and averring the same to be the last will of the said deceased, and the petitioners, contestants, denying that the paper was such last will and testament.

The case was tried before the court and jury,.-resulting in a verdict and judgment sustaining the will. Motion for a new trial being had and overruled contestants have appealed to this court, and in addition to assigning errors with reference to the court’s charge, in their first and sixth assignments they say:

*454 “1. Tbe court erred in overruling tbe motion of contestants at tbe end of all tbe proof for a verdict in favor of contestants and against tbe will;
“(1) Because there was no' evidence to support the probate of the will;
“ (2) Because the proof failed to show that the handwriting of the deceased was generally known among his acquaintances and business associates, but to the contrary. ’ ’

The 6th, assignment is, that

“There is no evidence to support the verdict.”

Our statute, after providing that no last will or testament shall be good or sufficient to convey or give an estate in lands unless written in the testator’s lifetime and signed by him, or by some other person in his presence, and by his direction, and subscribed in his presence by two witnesses at least, neither of whom is interested in the devise of said lands, nevertheless created' an exception, as follows:

“But a paper writing appearing to be the will of a deceased person, -written by him, having his name subscribed to it, or inserted in some part of it, and found after his death, among his valuable papers, or lodged in the hands of another for safekeeping, shall be good and sufficient to give and'convey lands, if the handwriting is generally known by his acquaintances, and it is proved by at least three credible witnesses that they verily believe the writing, and every part of it, to be in his hand.” Shannon’s Code, Section 3896.

The verdict of the jury has, we think, settled every issue of fact in favor of the validity of the will, and if there is any evidence to support it it may not be disturbed on that ground, as there is no difference in cases of will contests from other cases in which this rule is applicable. Crutcher v. Crutcher, 30 Tenn., 377.

There can be no doubt but what there is abundant evidence to support the finding of the jury upon every question establishing the validity of the will, unless it be with reference to the question as to whether or not the handwriting of the deceased was generally known by his acquaintances, one of the' essential requisites of a holographic will. It makes no difference whether all the other essentials are established, if there is no proof to establish one of the essentials, it is just the same as if none were established, and the will would fail for that reason. Appellant in his brief states that the errors relied upon before the court below, were, that there was no evidence to support the probate of the will; that the proof fails to show the handwriting of the deceased was generally known among his acquaintances, and, aside from the questions of law, we think that is the only question in the lawsuit.

The background of this litigation is, that the testator, who died in 1924, being some seventy-nine years of age, though a farmer, would *455 seem to have been a man of unusual activity for a man of his class and vicinity. He seems to have run a sawmill some twenty-five or thirty years ago, and apparently from his notes, books and ledgers, and the other testimony, had dealt with and employed a large number of men, principally, it would seem, in the ownership and operation of a thresher. There are accounts running through these ledgers from 1889 to 1906, and notes also to the same effect showing dealings with numerous persons for whom he had' evidently threshed seed and grain, and persons with whom accounts were conducted, and it can readily and naturally be inferred from these that he dealt much also with merchants. Esquire Byington, who was and had been a Justice of the Peace for more than twenty years, a merchant in the community for more than forty years, a postmaster for eight years, and who had known the testator for thirty-six years prior to his, death, and who says that the deceased attended to his own business up until a year or two before he died, knew the handwriting of the deceased and had been acquainted with it since 1877. The deceased he said had written orders for groceries to his store, was a pensioner and had signed pension checks for years; that deceased had worked on his own pension ease, got up evidence for himself, and procured pay for helpless soldiers a year or two. He testifies' that the entire will was in the handwriting of the deceased.

The next witness, Mr. Thompson, a school teacher, was familiar with his handwriting. It is true when he was asked the direct question “did you become acquainted with his handwriting,” his reply was, “Well, to some extent, yes.” He said he had carried the mail on Byington Route 1 for three years and eight months, and during this time saw the testator nearly every day through the week, and had tallied with him about like a mail carrier talks in passing to those whom he served. He had taken him letters and received letters from him to take away from his home. He stated, as another reason for his familiarity with his handwriting, that “three times a year there was a colored woman in the community that drew a pension, and she could not write her name, and she had a minor child', and she drew, and also the child drew, a pension of two dollars per month from the government, and in getting this pension the check was all put together to the old lady, old Aunt Beckey Hardin and her minor child, and because of the fact that she could not write her name, and the pensions coming’ together, and she handled the money for the child, she had t& sign a voucher each three months, each quarter, and she always met me at the Haokworth’s with the paper, and mail carrier filled out the paper, what was to be filled out, and it was signed with her mark, and Mr.

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Related

In Re Estate of Rhodes
436 S.W.2d 429 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1968)
Parker v. West
199 S.W.2d 928 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1946)
Flanary v. Lannom
12 Tenn. App. 236 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Tenn. App. 452, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hackworth-v-hackworth-tennctapp-1927.