Haley v. Ogilvie

2 Tenn. App. 607, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 61
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 6, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 607 (Haley v. Ogilvie) 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
Haley v. Ogilvie, 2 Tenn. App. 607, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 61 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

This cause involves the validity of the will of Robt. H. Plaley, dated October 20, 1922. The testator died on September 27, 1923, lacking seven days of the completion of his 94th year. The contest arose between his daughter, Mrs. Alice Ogilvie, the contestant, and her elder half brother, Jas. A. Haley, who died pending this suit. The contestant was dissatisfied with the provisions of item one of the will purporting to devise the realty, which item is as follows:

“I will to my son, Jas. Haley, and to my daughter, Alice Ogilvie, the farm on which I now reside, and after my death the farm is to be appraised by three disinterested men, and my daughter, Alice Ogilvie, is to pay to my son, Jas. A. Haley, half of the valuation set by the appraisement committee on said farm, and it is to be hers during the term of her natural life for her sole use and benefit, and at her death, should she die without bodily heirs, it is to go to Jas. A. Haley or his body heirs.”

The will provided that after the payment of debts and burial expenses out of the personal property, the balance should be divided equally between the said two children.

The issue of devisavit vel non was tried in the circuit court before a jury and the jury returned a verdict against the validity of the will. Motion for a new trial was duly entered and was overruled, whereupon an appeal in the nature of a writ of error was granted and the proponents of the will perfected said appeal and have assigned errors, which will be disposed of in this opinion.

Upon the first day of thé term of the circuit court, following the filing in said court of a transcript of the record of the proceedings in the county court, Jas. A. Haley, administrator ad litem and proponent of the will, moved the court to dismiss the petition filed in *610 the county court to set aside the will and to remand the cause to the county court, because said petition was insufficient in law in that it appeared from the allegations therein that the paper writing purporting to be the last will and testament of Robt. H. Haley, and which was admitted to probate in common form in the county court, was not revoked by the testator1 — the mere direction of the testator to the custodian to destroy the will unaccompanied by any overt act of the testator to have said instructions carried out and unaccompanied by any force, fraud, accident or mistake or imposition on the part of the custodian or any other person preventing the carrying out of said instructions, being insufficient to revoke said last will and testament. In-her 'petition to the county court, the contestant averred as follows:'

“Petitioner charges that said instrument is not the will and testament of said Robt. II. Haley, deceased, because as your petitioner is informed, believes and charges, said decedent, Robt. II. Haley, revoked said paper writing by directing the custodian of the paper to destroy it. Petitioner, therefore, charges that the paper writing admitted to probate is not the' will and testament of said Robt. H. Haley, deceased. ’ ’

This was the only ground set forth in the petition for setting aside the will.

The circuit judge overruled the motion to dismiss the petition and to remand the- cause and to this action the proponent excepted. Thereupon, the proponent filed a declaration producing the paper writing as the last will and testament, duly attested, and averred that it was the last will and testament of Robt. H. Haley, deceased. The defendant, the contestant, filed a plea averring that said paper writing was not the last will and testament of Robt. H. Haley. The proponent joined issue by filing a replication. At a later term the case was tried. Just before the taking of testimony was begun counsel for the contestant announced orally:

“May it please the court: in addition to the grounds in the petition, filed in the county court, we will rely upon, the ground of lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence also in the defenses that we have against this paper. I just simply make that announcement of the defenses that we will rely upon.”

It is insisted that a direction given by the testator to the custodian of the paper to destroy it did not amount to a revocation, that therefore, the petition filed in the county court failed to set forth a cause of action; that the county court was without power or jurisdiction to certify the proceedings to the circuit court; that for want of such power the circuit court acquired no jurisdiction. Section 3903 of Shannon’s Ann. Code, provides:

*611 ‘ ‘ Where the validity of any last will or testament, written or nuncupative, is contested, the county court shall cause the fact to be certified to the circuit court and send to said court the original will, and shall require contestant to enter into bond, with surety, in the penal sum of five hundred dollars, payable to the executor mentioned in the will, conditioned for ;the faithful prosecution of the suit, and in case of failure therein, to pay all costs that may accrue thereon. ’ ’

The jurisdiction of the circuit court to try the issue of devisavit vel non upon the contestation of a will, is original and not appellate. Wisener v. Maupin, 2 Bax. 353; Patton v. Allison, 7 Humph., 328. The county court had before it a petition in which it was averred that the decedent revoked his will by directing the custodian to destroy it. It has long been held in this State that the convenient method of instituting a contest of a will is by a petition to the county court setting forth among other things, facts tending to show that the alleged will is not the will of the decedent. The question whether or not a failure to make out such prima facie case in the petition would defeat the jurisdiction of the circuit court, we need not decide for the reason that in our opinion the averment made in the petition was sufficiently broad to cover a ease of revocation. The circuit judge thought so, although he afterward held that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the charge of revocation. Looking wholly to the language of the petition, we can see that it was sufficiently broad to cover a case of clearly intended revocation, giving positive direction to the custodian to destroy the. will, and subsequent belief that it had been destroyed.

In Ford v. Ford, 7 Humph., 104, it was held:

“If a testator being of sound mind told the witness to bum the will, and it was not done, although he supposed it to have-been burned, it is a revocation.”

In Smiley v. Gambill, 2 Head, 164, it was held that the burning by the testatrix of a paper which she thought was her will, although it was not, with the intention of revoking by its destruction, and then the honest belief that she had done it, amounted to a revocation.

- ¥e are, therefore, of the opinion that the circuit court properly acquired jurisdiction of the cause, although the evidence was afterward held to be insufficient to support the averments of the original petition. Having acquired jurisdiction, which was original and not appellate, the court had power, and it was its duty, under the code, section 3909, to cause the issues to be made upi to try the validity of the will. A declaration in proper form was filed and this was met by plea of the general issue.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. App. 607, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haley-v-ogilvie-tennctapp-1926.