Harrison v. Henderson.

416 So. 2d 711, 1982 Ala. LEXIS 3251
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 25, 1982
Docket81-260
StatusPublished

This text of 416 So. 2d 711 (Harrison v. Henderson.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Henderson., 416 So. 2d 711, 1982 Ala. LEXIS 3251 (Ala. 1982).

Opinion

JONES, Justice.

Appellant Paul L. Harrison, Jr., as executor of the last will and testament of Denzil W. Jones, deceased, filed this action on June 18, 1981, in the Circuit Court for Barbour County, Alabama, removing the estate from the probate court, and seeking construction of item eight of the last will and testament of Denzil W. Jones, deceased:

“ITEM EIGHT. Because of her integrity, faithful service, and loyalty through the years, I give, devise, and bequeath unto Jewel J. Henderson the business owned by me and known as Dean’s Insurance Agency, including all assets and liabilities of every kind, character, and description.
“Mrs. Henderson is familiar with the method in which the J. R. Barr Estate was handled; and I request that she work with my Executor, hereinafter appointed, in closing my estate in a similar manner.”

Because of one of the executor’s contentions, as hereinafter discussed, we also set forth item ten of Jones’s will:

“ITEM TEN. I hereby nominate, constitute, and appoint my nephew, Paul L. Harrison, Jr., to be the Executor of this, my Last Will and Testament; and I do hereby expressly direct that he shall not be required to give any bond for the performance of his duties as such, nor to make any accounting or settlement, partial or final, of my estate in any court of any state, nor to file any inventory of the same.
“In the event my said nephew, Paul L. Harrison, Jr., shall not survive me or for any reason fail to qualify as such Executor, then I nominate, constitute and appoint my nephew, Robert F. Mobley, Jr., as such Executor, in his place and stead; and I do hereby expressly direct that he shall not be required to give a bond for the performance of his duties as such, nor to make any accounting or settlement, partial or final, of my estate in any court of any state, nor to file any inventory of the same.”

Appellee Jewel J. Henderson, through her answer, joined in the request for a construction of item eight of Jones’s will.

The trial court interpreted item eight to encompass surplus monies in a checking and a savings account, as well as a 1977 Chevrolet automobile. From the ensuing final judgment, the executor appeals. We affirm.

In order to understand and appreciate the issues presented in the context of the executor’s alleged error, we set forth the following facts:

J. R. Barr, who is referred to in the second paragraph of item eight of Denzil W. Jones’s will, was the former owner of the sole proprietorship known as Dean’s Insurance Agency. Louise M. Jones, wife of testator Jones, deceased, had worked in the agency for Barr, as Henderson later worked for Jones.

Upon his death, Barr willed to Louise M. Jones a 40% interest in and to Dean’s Insurance Agency. That specific bequest was item III in Barr’s will and, in pertinent part, reads:

“I will and bequeath to Louise M. Jones, in consideration for her assistance after my death to my wife, Nell E. Barr, a forty percent (40%) interest in and to Dean’s Insurance Agency, an insurance business now owned by me and now operating under that name in the City of Eufaula, Alabama, after all legal claims against and all debts of said Agency are paid and after all monies due and owing by said Agency shall have been paid in full, and also after all surplus and certificates of deposit, if any, shall have been paid into my Estate....” (Emphasis supplied.)

[713]*713The executors of Barr’s estate sold the remaining 60% interest in Dean’s Insurance Agency to Louise M. Jones within four or five weeks after Barr’s death. The bill of sale contained the following description of the assets:

“That certain business or insurance agency in Eufaula, known and doing business as Dean’s Insurance Agency, who are located at 118 North Randolph Avenue, together with the name, Dean’s Insurance Agency, all furniture and fixtures remaining in said agency, and the good will of said agency.”

Louise M. Jones willed her entire estate to her surviving husband, Denzil W. Jones. At the time of Mr. Jones’s death, there was $5,845.00 surplus in the checking account of Dean’s Insurance Agency, as well as $10,-000.00 surplus, plus accrued interest, in a savings account. Additionally, the business was using and maintaining a 1977 Chevrolet automobile, titled in Jones’s individual name. The evidence further reflects that upon Barr’s death, Mrs. Jones assisted the executors and accountant of that estate in working toward its final closing.1

Against this factual backdrop, the executor’s counsel’s primary argument may be summarized as follows: The definition of “Dean’s Insurance Agency” in item III of J. R. Barr’s will, and in the bill of sale from Barr’s executors’ to Louise M. Jones was incorporated by reference in item eight of the will of Denzil W. Jones. Counsel then proceeds to develop his rationale in the argument section of his brief:

“To fathom out Jones’s true intention, it is necessary to know what he meant by:
“ ‘Mrs. Henderson is familiar with the method in which the J. R. Barr estate was handled; and I request that she work with my Executor, hereinafter appointed, in closing my estate in a similar manner.’
“and by Jones’s own words [in a memorandum preparatory to the formal drafting of his will]:
“ T leave the business of Dean’s Insurance Agency (to operate as her own). She will work with Paul L. Harrison, Jr., in closing my estate in the similar manner Louise M. Jones did when the J. R. Barr Estate was closed out.’
“What do J. R. Barr, Louise M. Jones, Dean’s Insurance Agency, and Henderson have to do with each other? Why is the ‘closing of my estate’ in the paragraph of Jones’s note and the Item of Jones’s will concerning the bequest of ‘Dean’s Insurance Agency’ and not in the paragraph or Item concerning the appointment, rights, duties, etc. of the executor?
“It is obvious from the evidence that ‘Dean’s Insurance Agency,’ J. R. Barr, and Louise M. Jones were all related in Jones’s mind.
“J. R. Barr owned Dean’s Insurance Agency. Louise M. Jones, who was Jones’s wife, worked at Dean’s Insurance Agency for J. R. Barr. When Barr died, he left her 40% of ‘Dean’s Insurance Agency.’ Within five weeks after Barr’s death, Barr’s executors sold Louise M. Jones the remaining 60% of Dean’s Insurance Agency.
“The pertinent part of Barr’s will is as follows:
“ T will and bequeath to Louise M. Jones a forty (40%) percent interest in and to Dean’s Insurance Agency, .. ., after all legal claims against and all debts of said agency are paid and after all monies due and owing to all insurance companies represented by said Agency shall have been paid in full, and also after all surplus and certificates of deposit, if any, shall have been paid to my estate... ’
“Within five weeks after Barr’s death, the other sixty (60%) percent of Dean’s Insurance Agency was sold by Barr’s executors to Louise M. Jones for sixty (60%) percent of the value of the furniture and [714]*714fixtures and good will (insurance renewals).
“Therefore, in the J. R.

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416 So. 2d 711, 1982 Ala. LEXIS 3251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-henderson-ala-1982.