Helm v. Sheeks

77 So. 820, 116 Miss. 726
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 77 So. 820 (Helm v. Sheeks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helm v. Sheeks, 77 So. 820, 116 Miss. 726 (Mich. 1917).

Opinions

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, 'Mrs. M. T. Helm, presented for prohate a paper purporting to be the last will and testament of Miss Sarah Alice Brooks. The alleged will reads as follows:

“The State of Mississippi.
“I, Sarah Alice Brooks, do make & publish this to be my last will and testament—
“Item 1st. I give and bequeath to my sister Mary T. Helm my entire estate — real and personal which I may own at the time of my death.
“Item 2. I appoint her my sister Mary my executrix and relieve her from giving security on her bond as executrix. If I leave any debts unpaid they will be small & my sister is charged to pay them out of my estate & it will be unnecessary to file any inventory of my estate or to make any reports to the court.
“In testimony hereof I sign my name hereto on this the 23d day of February, 1897.
“S. A. Brooks.
“In our presence as witnesses:
“T. O. Burris:
“C. R. Smith.”

When the will was presented for probate there was an affidavit made by T. O. Burris, one of the subscribing witnesses, in which he interlined the usual affidavit with the following expression:

“To the best information and belief of this deponent of sound and disposing mind, memory and understanding and above the age of twenty-one years,’’ etc.

A caveat was filed by the appellees against the probate of the will, and the clerk thereupon declined to probate the alleged will. The appellees then filed a bill in the chancery court, alleging that the instrument was not the last will and testament of Miss Brooks, and that she was insane or mentally incompetent to make a will; and also [728]*728that she was under the control and influence of Mrs'. Helm, and that the alleged instrument in writing was obtained by undue influence. A' motion was made to strike the' bill from the files, which was overruled, and thereupon the appellant answered the bill, denying the material allegations of the bill.

On the trial of the cause T. O. Burris was produced as a witness for the proponent of the will but his recollection of the transaction had completely vanished, and he was unable to testify as to any of the material facts, except to say that he recognized his signature to the will as being genuine, and that he must have seen the party sign the instrument or he would not have signed it; that he never signed anything without knowing what he was signing. • He was unable to recall any of the circumstances or any of the parties, and could not say from recollection whether the party S. A. Brooks who signed the will was a man or woman, or any other fact pertaining thereto.

C. R. Smith, the other subscribing witness, was not produced at the trial, the proponents claiming that he was a hostile witness, and that the contestants had made an affidavit for a continuance at a former term of court, and had secured a continuance 'because of the absence of C. R. Smith, who, it was alleged in the affidavit, was a material witness for the contestants, and in which it was stated that the contestants expected to prove by the said Smith that S, A. Brooks never executed said will, never signed the same in his presence, never published or declared the said, instrument to be her last will, and did no act to indicate- that the said will was the will of the said S. A. Brooks, and, further, that she was absolutely under the influence of Mrs. Helm, the proponent, at the time the instrument purported to be witnessed. Between the time the mQtion for a continuance was made and the same secured and the trial of the cause, the contestants propounded interrogatories to C. R. Smith, to be sent to the state of California, where Smith then was, or was [729]*729supposed to Tbe. The interrogatories, however, were returned unanswered; Smith not being at the place to which they were sent. There was no effort on the part of the proponent of the will to secure the deposition of Smith, other than to cross the deposition above mentioned proposed to be taken by the contestants, nor was there any summons or effort to secure Smith’s attendance at court, until the day preceding the trial, when a subpoena was issued to Noxubee county for Smith-and returned “not found.” The attorneys for the proponent say, however, that they had a conversation with one of the attorneys for the contestants two or three days- before the ' trial, in which they asked if Smith would be present, and claim that the said attorney informed them to be ready for trial; that Smith would be at the trial. They further testify that they received a report that Smith was in the county on Sunday preceding the trial, in company with one of the contestants, and that on Monday following they issued the subpoena and fully expected Smith to be present, and that they were expecting him to be produced or appear at the trial when they answered ready for trial. It appears that Smith had been confined at the insane asylum at Meridian, and that after he was released from said insane asylum, or some thirty days thereafter, he went to California in search of health. It appears that his permanent residence was in Lowndes county, but it does not appear that he had been at his residence since going to the state of California, and it does <not appear that he had returned to the state of Mississippi after going to the state of California.

In the absence of Mr. Smith, and without a formal summons having been issued for him other than as above stated, the complainants produced Hon. J. A. Orr, an attorney of Columbus, Miss., who drafted the instrument purporting to be the will, who testified that he had known Sarah A. Brooks for a long time, and was intimately acquainted with her family; that he pre[730]*730pared the will at her request, out of the presence of Mrs. Helm, who came with Miss Brooks to his office, and that he procured Burris and Smith to sign the will as witnesses after it had been prepared; and that the will was signed by them in the presence of Miss Brooks and himself. He further testifies that he saw nothing to indicate nnsoundness of mind on the part of Miss Brooks; that he regarded her as competent to make a will at the time; and that there was nothing to indicate to his mind that any undue influence was exerted by Mrs. Helm.

The proponents also introduced Z. T. Dorroh, who had formerly been sheriff and chancery clerk of Noxubee county, and lived in Macon, Miss., for a long number of years as a near neighbor of Mrs. Helm, with whom Miss Brooks lived during the latter part of her life until she was sent to the insane asylum in 1911. He testifies that Miss Brooks came to him shortly before the alleged will was written, and requested him to write her will, but that he declined to do so, and suggested that she get a lawyer to prepare the will; that she asked him if Mr. Orr would” do, and that he stated to her that Mr. Orr was a suitable person to write her will; that shortly after the will was prepared she brought same to him, and stated that Mr. Orr had written her will, and requested him to keep the will in his safe or possession, which he had done. He testifies that at that time Miss Brooks was of sufficient mental capacity to make a will.

W. B.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matter of Will of Jefferson
349 So. 2d 1032 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1977)
Chapman v. Chapman
264 So. 2d 395 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1972)
Lewis v. Lewis
129 So. 2d 353 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1961)
Wallace v. Harrison
65 So. 2d 456 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1953)
Bearden v. Gibson
60 So. 2d 655 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1952)
First Trust Co. v. Lanyon
54 N.W.2d 262 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1952)
Cowart v. Cowart
51 So. 2d 775 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1951)
Fortenberry v. Herrington
196 So. 232 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1940)
Warren v. Sidney's Estate
184 So. 806 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1938)
Fields v. Luck.
74 S.W.2d 35 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1934)
Tyson v. Utterback
122 So. 496 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1929)
Smith v. Young
99 So. 370 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1924)
Isom v. Canedy
88 So. 485 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1921)
Maxwell v. Lake
88 So. 326 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1921)
Ward v. Ward
87 So. 153 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1920)
Gathings v. Howard
84 So. 240 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 So. 820, 116 Miss. 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helm-v-sheeks-miss-1917.