Hollon's v. Graham

280 S.W.2d 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 24, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 280 S.W.2d 544 (Hollon's v. Graham) 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
Hollon's v. Graham, 280 S.W.2d 544 (Ky. 1955).

Opinion

STEWART, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Menifee Circuit Court wherein it was adjudged that an alleged lost joint will of Isaac Hollon and Belle Hollon, his wife, both deceased, dated “-day of November, 1925,” herein referred to as "the 1925 will,” was the last will and testament of these two decedents, and that an individual will of Belle Hollon purported to have been executed August 7, 1951, herein referred to as "the 1951 will,” was not the last will and testament of this decedent, because the jury found she did not have testamentary capacity when it was executed and, in addition, she was subjected to undue influence at the time. We shall hereinafter refer to the Hollons as “Isaac” and “Belle.”

Isaac died on February 1, 1942, predeceasing 'Belle. On February 15, 1947, an individual will of Isaac’s was recorded in the Wolfe County court clerk’s office which by its terms left Belle all his property for her life, but no provision was made in this instrument for a disposition of the remainder of his estate after her death. This will was dated February 3, 1901, and is herein referred to as “the 1901 will.”

Belle died May 22, 1952, and the 1951 will was offered for probate in the Wolfe County Court. Appellees appeared in' protest and asked probation of the 1925 will as the true will of these decedents. The county court, after rejecting the 1951 willj held that the 1925 will was the true last will and testament of Isaac and Belle and admitted it to probate. That court also adjudged the 1901 will null and void, declaring it was recorded in the'county court clerk’s office by either fraud or mistake, that no application was ever made to probate it, and that there was never any probation had in connection with the instrument. This proceeding was appealed to the Wolfe' Circuit Court and then moved to and determined by the Menifee Circuit Court when a motion for a change of venue was sustained. The appeal is from the latter court.

Appellants raise and argue the following points in their brief: (1) There was no evidence of probative value introduced to show that Belle was mentally incapable of making a will on August 7, 1951, or that she was subjected to undue influence in connection therewith; and (2) the 1925 will should be rejected because the essential elements to establish it were not proven. The admissibility of certain evidence is questioned, and we shall discuss this at the proper place. Any contention as to the validity of the 1901 will of Isaac’s had been, abandoned.

Isaac and Belle died childless, leaving a joint estate of approximately $100,000, which they had acquired through industry, shrewd trading, and thrift. They had raised a number of children; some of these were related to them by blood and others were unrelated orphans they had taken' in' and givgn a home. On the first of August, 1951, Belle, then about 84 years of age, suffered a stroke which temporarily paralyzed one side of her body, and she was thereby rendered physically helpless. Her mouth and tongue were swollen, so much so that she had great difficulty in talking. . .The evidence also shows that her eyesight was impaired but it is not too clear whether the impairment was the result of the stroke or of infirmity arising from her advanced age.

Appellant, Herbert Holbrook, named as executor' of the 1951 will and whose wife was a beneficiary thereunder, assumed direc *546 tion of Belle’s financial affairs after the death of Isaac. Certain witnesses of appel-lees’ testified he also had access to the private papers of Isaac which were deposited in a safe in Belle’s home; the 1925 will had always been kept in the safe. Another person who assisted him with Belle’s business transactions was appellant, Corbett Hollon, a foster son of Belle’s and also a beneficiary under the 1951 will. Holbrook testified that one night, two or three days after Belle had suffered the stroke, Corbett Hollon came to him and informed him Belle wanted to make her will, Hollon saying: “She wants us to go and have it done tonight.” Holbrook said he replied: “Cor-bett, you can’t get any business done tonight. Let me talk to Aunt .Belle and see if that is what she wants.” Holbrook declared he went to see Belle at once and asked her if she desired, a will made. She answered in the affirmative, he said, and requested that one be prepared immediately. He then told- her they could not get a will drafted that night but that .they would attend to it the next morning, and, after some argument, she finally agreed to wait until then. She instructed Holbrook that night, according to him, how she wanted her propérty disposed of.

'■ The next day Hdlbrook went to Marcus Mann, an attorney in Salyersville and an ex-brother-in-law of his, and had Mann draft the 1951. will of Belle’s. ■ When he presented the instrument to her, he claimed she forthwith sent him out to procure E. • D. Tyra, Robert Sewell, William T. Hatton and A/'B. Kash as attesting wit-' nesses. These four men came to Belle’s home where the document was executed while she reclined on the bed. Holbrook testified the house was full of people, the door of Belle’s bedroom was open, and all the legal formalities pertaining • to the execution 'of a will were performed in a conspicuous manner. It should be noted here that the beneficiaries under both the instruments involved in this litigation are either some blood relation of Isaac’s or Belle’s.-or, are,numbered among the various persons. Isaac, and Belle had raised or are. children <?f those blood kin or of those other persons.

It would lengthen this opinion unduly and serve no beneficial purpose to detail at length 'the evidence introduced by appellants to sustain the 1951 will and that adduced by appellees to support their contention that Belle was mentally incapable of comprehending her acts and was also subj ected to undue influence at the time the 1951 will was executed. We shall therefore summarize the proof relied upon by each side.

Appellants produced in their behalf eleven witnesses, two of whom were doctors. All of these persons testified in substance that Belle on the occasion she signed the 1951 will was rational, mentally alert, fully capable of knotting the natural objects of her bounty and well able to dispose of her property according to a fixed purpose of her own. The medical testimony was to the,effect that the stroke did,not diminish her mentality. Doctor H. I. Blood, who had waited on Belle during the last years of her life and had treated her for the effects of her stroke, testified he thought her mind was as good as the average person of her age. Doctor Robert B. Simons saw her over a period of twenty days at the Good Samaritan Hospital in Lexington in the spring of 1952, some eight months after the stroke, where she had been taken to be treated for pneumonia and heart failure. It was his view that the stroke had not rendered her mentally incompetent to make a will. . However, the • doctors, as did the lay witnesses, based their opinions upon observations made by them of her behavior and upon casual ccmversations had by them previously with her.

Appellees introduced six lay witnesses who testified Belle was mentally lacking at the time the 1951 will was executed. It was brought out by them that the stroke, for some time afterwards, affected her brain to the extent that she talked, in: an irrational and incoherent manner; :that she did not know..or recognize hep close .friends and relatives, including, certain foster children *547

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W.2d 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollons-v-graham-kyctapphigh-1955.