Harper v. Watkins

670 S.W.2d 611, 1983 Tenn. App. LEXIS 683
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 9, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 670 S.W.2d 611 (Harper v. Watkins) 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
Harper v. Watkins, 670 S.W.2d 611, 1983 Tenn. App. LEXIS 683 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

CONNER, Judge.

This is a will contest involving the five children of the decedent.

The will of Eligie C. Watkins, Sr. (Mr. Watkins, Sr.) was executed on February 12, 1979. It made his two daughters, Dovie Lee Watkins Harper and Bertha Watkins Belcher, the sole beneficiaries of his estate. Mr. Watkins, Sr., died on April 1, 1981. After the will was offered for probate by the executor thereof, his son-in-law and legally appointed conservator, James Harper, the three sons of the decedent, James Watkins, Eligie Carriel Watkins, Jr., and Ferris Watkins, 1 contested the will based *613 upon lack of testamentary capacity at the time of execution and undue influence by the aforementioned Mr. Harper.

The issue of divisavit vel non was certified to the circuit court and a jury trial was conducted. Over the objection of the executor, both the questions of capacity to execute the will and undue influence were submitted to the jury. A general verdict was returned finding against the validity of the will without specification by the jury whether the basis therefor was lack of testamentary capacity or undue influence or both. Motions to set aside the verdict and seeking a new trial were overruled and this appeal by the proponent timely followed. Before us are the questions of whether there was any basis in the proof for the jury to determine that the decedent either lacked capacity at the time of the execution of the will, or if he was under undue influence.

The proponent of the will also questioned two of the instructions. However, the matter is before us on a statement of the evidence pursuant to T.R.A.P. 27(f) and no instructions of the trial court to the jury are included therein. Accordingly, we must limit our review to whether there was an evidentiary basis for the finding of lack of capacity and/or undue influence. Accordingly, we must review the relevant evidence, though lengthy, adduced at trial.

THE BACKGROUND OF THE DISPUTE

Several unquestioned events precipitated this dispute. Some years before the events here in issue Mr. Watkins, Sr., suffered a broken back in a fall. He was crippled in the accident and was thereafter confined to a wheel chair. At his own suggestion and based upon the statements of two physicians that he was physically unable to manage his own affairs, Mr. Watkins, Sr., secured the appointment of Mr. Harper as his guardian on November 28, 1978. The pain from this injury was so intense at times that when present it was necessary for Mr. Watkins, Sr., to receive strong medications such as dilaudid, lioresal, valium and mandelamine. After the death of his wife, Jennie Thomas Watkins, in early 1978, a dispute developed between Mr. Watkins, Sr., and his three sons as to what disposition should be made of certain property holdings of Mrs. Watkins. The sons wanted Mr. Watkins, Sr., to waive any interest in the property in favor of all his children. He vehemently opposed such action, and the daughters sided with their father on this question. With this general family relationship the will was prepared by Calvin P. Turner, an attorney, and executed in his office by the decedent at his request on February 12, 1979, more than two years before his death.

THE PROOF OF THE CONTESTANTS

Louise Williams was an employee of Johnson’s Retirement Center, a nursing home for the elderly, generally referred to in the record as “the boarding home.” Mr. Watkins, Sr., resided there during the last years of his life. Mrs. Williams regularly worked the daytime shift. Among her duties at the time was to administer medication to patients. She often gave Mr. Watkins, Sr., oral medication, but no shots, which were administered only by his daughters. Mrs. Williams testified that Mr. Watkins, Sr., would have episodes of intense pain when it was mandatory that he be given strong medication, sometimes as often as every two hours. The pain did not continue all the time, but was intermittent. Mr. Watkins, Sr., was often under the influence of medication, and in her judgment it affected his mind. Mrs. Williams stated that his mind would come and go, in keeping with the administration of the medication which she enumerated as dimarol, dilaudid, valium, codeine and Tylenol, III. She testified that when he was not suffering his daughters often came and took him for rides or to various places where he wanted to go. She said that when he was in pain and under the influence of medication, he was not able to take these trips.

She testified that on a day she could not recall, Dovie Lee Harper visited Mr. Watkins, Sr., and he left with her in her car. *614 Mrs. Williams said that he returned sometime before she went off duty at 5:00 p.m.; that he remarked to her that he had made his will giving everything to the girls; and that he would just let the government take care of him in the future. She testified that he appeared alert at the time he made these statements to her.

Mrs. Williams testified that she was often with Mr. Watkins, Sr., during his waking hours in the daytime; that he was taking a “lot of drugs at times — pretty often — sometimes three or four every day when having pain; that on such occasions he would sometimes hallucinate and see objects on his wall.” She testified that she considered him of unsound mind; however, on cross-examination she qualified this judgment by saying that “he was not like that all the time, but his mind would come and go when taking medication.” (Emphasis supplied.) It should be noted that the testimony of Mrs. Williams was the strongest evidence presented regarding the mental incapacity of Mr. Watkins, Sr.

Sue Fite was on night duty at the boarding home three nights a week and often gave Mr. Watkins, Sr., medication. She described occasions when he would be in such severe pain that he would scream and call out for medication. Mrs. Fite testified that many times it was necessary to call his daughters to give him a shot when oral medication would not give him the necessary relief. She described how these episodes of pain would appear for hours or for two or three days at a time and then would disappear, sometimes for several days before returning, necessitating strong medication. She couldn’t offer an opinion as to whether Mr. Watkins, Sr., was sane or insane.

Jean Watkins, the wife of contestant James Alford Watkins, testified that her family lived for about a year in a mobile home that was parked beside the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eligie C. Watkins, Sr., and she helped both of them in various ways, as needed, and Mr. Watkins, Sr., paid her for her services. She stated that during that period they all got along well. Mr. Watkins, Sr., had previously been badly injured and often required help and care. She testified that Mrs. Watkins was in poor health at that time also, but Mr. Watkins, Sr., usually hired another person to look after Mrs. Watkins.

Jean Watkins stated that throughout the time Mr. Watkins, Sr., was in the boarding home she had seen him when she did not consider him competent. On cross-examination she acknowledged that she was “not saying something was wrong with him all the time.” (Emphasis supplied.)

James Alford Watkins, one of the contestants,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
670 S.W.2d 611, 1983 Tenn. App. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-watkins-tennctapp-1983.