Hendricks v. Johnson

180 S.W.2d 868, 297 Ky. 643, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 785
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 26, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 S.W.2d 868 (Hendricks v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hendricks v. Johnson, 180 S.W.2d 868, 297 Ky. 643, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 785 (Ky. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Tilford

Affirming.

At the outset it is necessary to note the fact that in the statement of appeal which we have followed in captioning this opinion, the actual appellees are designated as appellants, and the actual appellants, as appellees. While this error would justify us in dismissing the appeal, we have concluded, since counsel have not raised the point, to ignore the error, although, in the interest of clarity, it is necessary in expressing our views to refer to the named'appellees as appellants and to the named appellants as appellees.

With this explanation, we shall outline the facts as we have been able to gather them from the incomplete and confused record on which the parties have elected to prosecute this appeal.

On September 2, 1941, the County Court of Warren County admitted to probate the will of C. B. Johnson which was executed in the forenoon of February 5, 1935. Some time prior to February 1, 1942, we are informed by the briefs of counsel, one or more of the present appellants, filed in the Circuit Court a petition in equity attacking the will on the grounds that the testator did not possess sufficient mental capacity to make a will, and that its execution was procured by undue influence. Two amendments to this petition appear in the record, although the original does not, the first of which merely *645 corrected the caption, and the second of which alleges that the first will was revoked by a second will. Following the amendment appear several defensive motions, special and general demurrers to the petition, and a motion to dissolve a temporary injunction, the disposition of which motions and demurrers is not shown, although it is stated in the brief of appellants’ counsel that “this suit in equity was abortive and the Circuit Judge properly held that the procedure was improper.”

Subsequently, the exact date not being shown, the appellants, filed in the County Court a petition as authorized by Section 518, Subsection 9, Civil Code of Practice, seeking to vacate the order of September 2, 1941, and to probate an allegedly lost will executed by the testator during the afternoon of February 5, 1935, and attested by the same witnesses who had attested the morning will. The material difference between the allegedly lost will executed in the afternoon and the probated morning will is that in the latter, the testator’s two pieces of real estate were devised to his widow outright, and in the former, they were devised to her for life with remainder to her grandsons, Kimble and Walter Johnson, who are the sons of the appellant, Carson Johnson, a child born to the testator of a former marriage.

In their petition filed in the County Court appellants alleged that on February 16, 1942, they discovered that the testator had executed the later will, although, after diligent search, they had been unable to locate it. On April 27, 1942, the County Court, after a trial at which the appellees introduced no evidence, entered a judgment vacating the order probating the morning will, and directing that the afternoon will be probated. On June 12, 1942, the appellees appealed to the Circuit Court from the County Court’s judgment of April 27th.

Notwithstanding the statement of appellants’ counsel that the Circuit Judge regarded the equity suit as abortive, it would appear that he proceeded to try it. The suit in equity was numbered 16,683 and captioned, “Carson Johnson et al. vs. Clara Hendricks, et al. and the common law action (the appeal from the County Court) was numbered 71596L, and the subsequent proceedings appearing in the record, with the exception of the trial order which shows both captions, bear only the caption of the equity suit, and appear to relate to that action alone. While the bill of exceptions bears *646 the caption of the equity action, it, nevertheless, carried "the number of the common law suits. The only conclusion which we are able to draw from the incomplete record, is that the court treated the equity action’ as an appeal by the present appellants from the order of the County Court of September 2, 1941, admitting the morning will to probate, and, with the consent of the parties, tried it in conjunction with the appellees ’ appeal from the judg- ■ ment of the County Court setting aside the order of .September 2, 1941, and probating the afternoon will. Neither party offered written instructions, although the ■court prepared for the jury’s use two forms of verdict, the first of which read: “We, the jury, find the lost paper testified to be the last will and testament of Charlie .Johnson.” The second read: “We, the jury, find the purported lost paper not to be the last will and testament of Charlie Johnson.” The only instruction which the court gave the jury was that nine of them might find a verdict, but that if less than twelve agreed, those .agreeing would have to sign it. The jury unanimously found the purported lost paper not to be the last will of Charlie Johnson, whereupon, the court entered a judgment setting aside and holding for naught the judgment of the County Court entered on April 27, 1942, which necessarily had the effect of establishing the morning will probated on September 2, 1941, as the last will and testament of C. B. Johnson.

Summarized, the two principal grounds urged for reversal are that (1) the court erred in not sustaining .appellants’ motion for a directed verdict and in leaving to the decision of the jury both the law and the facts of the case; and (2) that even “if the evening will failed '.because of proof as to its continued existence until the death of the testator” the proof of its execution necessarily operated to revoke the morning will,, and the jury should have been so instructed, and that in* any event "the court erred in entering a judgment which, in effect, re-established the morning will, since a will revoked by the due execution of a later will can only be revived "by reexecution.

The major fallacy underlying these contentions of .appellants is the assumption that the court was bound to accept the testimony of the two subscribing witnesses to the morning and afternoon wills that both wills had been duly executed. It is true that these witnesses were *647 not contradicted and that they were in a sense testifying against their interest, since they were the son and daughter of a sister of the testator’s widow who died in July, 1941, some five weeks after the death of her husband, the testator. But there were circumstances shown by the record sufficient to cast doubt upon their veracity, among which was that it was upon the niece’s testimony that the morning will was probated. It is true that she says that she was not asked on that occasion if there was a later will, but she was an adult and somewhat active in legal matters, and her silence as to a later will is not without significance. Moreover, there was evidence of testator’s financial situation, and his obligations to and relations with his wife, which might easily be construed as indicating that the provisions of the morning will were more consistent with his expressed intentions than the provisions of the alleged lost will. In addition, the testimony of Lt. Col.

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W.2d 868, 297 Ky. 643, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendricks-v-johnson-kyctapphigh-1944.