Holden v. Bennett

49 S.W.2d 588, 243 Ky. 667, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 175
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 3, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 S.W.2d 588 (Holden v. Bennett) 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
Holden v. Bennett, 49 S.W.2d 588, 243 Ky. 667, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 175 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Richardson

Affirming.

This appeal requires a review of a trial before a jury which returned a verdict, finding that the paper involved was the last will and testament of T. B. Starks. The contestants appeal.

*669 The question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury is the determinative one.

The contestants introduced 33 witnesses and the eontestees 24. It is apparent that to give a succinct statement of the testimony of each witness would require too much space. T. B. Sharks and Pernie Starks were husband and wife.. They resided in Graves county during their married life, which was a happy, quiet, and peaceful one. No children were born to them. D. D. Nall and T. B. Sparks married sisters. Marilla Nall, a niece of Pernie Starks, and a daughter of D. D. Nall and wife, began in her early infancy to visit frequently the home of T. B. Starks and wife. They became very fond of her. They endeavored to induce her parents to permit them to adopt her. They refused. As the child grew older, Starks and wife began to treat her as their own. Finally they took her into their home, and clothed, provided for, and schooled her, as if she were their daughter.

Some time about 1922, T. B. Starks executed and published a will, devising his estate to his wife. For many years next prior to his death 'Starks owned a planing mill and water plant which he operated in his home town, and at times engaged in the lumber business. He was a.devout man, active, energetic, persistent, and successful in business, public-spirited, and took an active interest in, and devoted a great deal of his time to, the civic affairs and welfare of his community. He was a devoted member and officer of the Baptist church, with tendencies toward fanaticism. His mother and other relatives had manifested insanity. His mother at one period in her life was an inmate of a hospital for the insane. In the year 1927 Pernie Starks was ill, when she was taken to, and confined in, a hospital, where she died on the 9th day of March, 1927. After her death the body was embalmed and returned to her home at Wingo, Ky. On the night of March 11, while she lay a corpse in the home, T. B. Starks called J. D. Covington and Lester McWhorter into a room adjoining that in which was the body of his wife, where he wrote, signed, and had Covington and McWhorter to attest, his will, the paper now in contest. He directed by it that his burial expense and debts be paid, and devised the remainder of his estate to Marilla Nall. He delivered the will to J. D. Covington, who retained it until after the death of T. B. Starks. After the death of his wife, Marilla Nall continued to *670 live -with him until Ms death, during which time they regarded and treated each other as parent and daughter; she doing the cooking and general housekeeping. After his death, his will was probated in the county of his residence, and from the order of probate his next of kin, who are his sisters, nieces, and nephews, appealed to the circuit court, a trial of which resulted in the jury sustaining the will.

A will wholly_ written and signed by a testator, or written by some other person in Ms presence and by his direction, and subscribed or acknowledged by him in the presence of two credible witnesses, who also subscribed their names as witnesses in the presence of the testator and each other, specifically complies with our statutes governing the execution of wills. Section 4828 Ky. Statutes; Rutledge v. Wigginton, 166 Ky. 421, 179 S. W. 389; Porter v. Ford, 82 Ky. 191; Reynolds v. Sevier, 165 Ky. 158, 176 S. W. 961, L. R. A. 1915E, 953.

The contestees to establish the execution of the will introduced only Covington, one of the attesting -witnesses, and closed their evidence without introducing McWhorter, the other attesting witness. The contestants here contend that on this ground they were entitled to a peremptory instruction directing the jury to find the paper not to be the last will and testament of Starks. The rule is, if the will is rational and consistent on its face in its structure and language, the contestees after they show the statutory execution, then the burden shifts to the contestants to establish the unsoundness of mind of the testator, bnt, if the will is so irrational or inconsistent as to be incompatible with soundness of mind, then the introduction of evidence of mental soundness is necessary on the preliminary proof for the propounders. There is no showing bringing this case within the latter. Gernert v. Straeffers’ Exr., 162 Ky. 605, 172 S. W. 1044. It was therefore not necessary for the contésteos, after introducing- evidence to establish the execution of the will, to go further and show that the testator was at the time of sound mind. The will is consistent on its face in language and structure, which authorized a presumption of soundness of mind which continued until the contestants overcame it. Leary v. Leary, 203 Ky. 344, 262 S W. 293. The execution of a will may be proven by one of the attesting witnesses, if he can testify that all of the requirements of the statute in its execution *671 were complied with. Tackett v. Tackett, 204 Ky. 831, 265 S. W. 336. Though even if this were not the rule the contestants are in no position to present such an objection, for, if any error was committed in failing to introduce McWhorter, and in the court not giving a peremptory instruction at the dose of the preliminary evidence in behalf of the contestees, this error was cured by the contestants themselves introducing McWhorter. Instead of standing by their rights on the court overruling the motion for a peremptory instruction on the ground of which they now complain, they introduced McWhorter, and thereby waived the error complained of, if any.

The evidence offered as tending to show undue influence and want of testamentary capacity of the testator at the time he executed the will is so meager it requires an effort to assemble it for consideration. The testator on many occasions and in the presence of divers persons, both before and after the execution of his will, announced his fixed purpose to devise his property to Marilla Nall. No evidence was introduced to show, or as tending to show, that either Marilla Nall or D. D. Nall, or any other person, exerted, or attempted to exercise, any influence on the mind of the testator to induce the execution of the will or the giving of his property to Marilla Nall. It is shown without contradiction that Pernie Starks, the wife of T. B. Starks, did not want to be buried at a time when the ground was filled with water from rainfall, and that she had made this fact known to her husband, accompanied with the request that she be not buried under circumstances of that kind. After her death the body remained at their home for several days, during which time there was almost continuous heavy rainfall. The undertaker in charg’e advised T. B. Starks that the body, having been embalmed, could remain unburied for several days, as many as thirty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 S.W.2d 588, 243 Ky. 667, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holden-v-bennett-kyctapphigh-1932.