Holt v. . Ziglar

74 S.E. 813, 159 N.C. 272, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 268
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 1, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 74 S.E. 813 (Holt v. . Ziglar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holt v. . Ziglar, 74 S.E. 813, 159 N.C. 272, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 268 (N.C. 1912).

Opinion

Brown, J.

A paper-writing purporting to be tbe last will and testament of Yalentine Allen was duly admitted to pro *274 bate in common form by tbe clerk of the Superior Court of the county of Rockingham in 1885. A paper-writing, undated, purporting to be a caveat to said will was filed in the office of the said clerk during said year, and on 20 October, 1885, notices were issued by the clerk direct to Elizabeth A. Allen et <d., devisees .under the said will, and an issue of devismit vel non was made up and certified for trial to the regular term of the Superior Court of said county on 9 November, 1885. At said term it appears that the issue was submitted to the jury in the following form:

Is the paper-writing propounded for probate the last will and testament of Yalentine Allen? Answer: No.

Whereupon the usual decree was entered, denying probate to the said paper-writing, and declaring it not to be the last will of Yalentine Allen.

This action is brought by the plaintiffs, a granddaughter and a great-grandson of Yalentine Allen, against a son, a married daughter, and certain grandchildren of Yalentine Allen, for the purpose of setting aside the aforesaid decree upon the ground of fraud and collusion between the adversary parties to the record of the suit in which said decree was rendered.

In the consideration of this appeal we deem it necessary to consider only one assignment of error.

In apt time the plaintiff’s edunsel offered the following special instructions:

(The trial of the Allen suit was had on 11 November, 1885, being Wednesday of the first week.)

1. If the jury find from the evidence that prior to November Term, 1885, of the Superior Court of Rockingham County, that the last will and testament of Yalentine Allen was probated and proved in common form before the Clerk of the Superior Court of Rockingham County, and was duly admitted to record by the examination on oath of the subscribing witnesses thereto, and .that under the provisions of said will the lands belonging to the estate of the said Yalentine Allen were devised to the minor children of Margaret J. Ziglar and S. B. Ziglaiy and to the minor children of Ellen Cardwell and J. Ham Cardwell, and that Samuel A. Allen, the son of Yalentine Allen, was only *275 willed a grandchild’s share; and the .jury further find from the evidence that at said term of court a proceeding was instituted in the name of Samuel A. Allen, as plaintiff, v. Margaret J. Ziglar and her husband, S. B. Ziglar, and Ellen Cardwell and her husband, J. Ham Cardwell, and the minor children of Margaret J. Ziglar and Ellen Cardwell, defendants, for the purpose of setting aside the:will of Yalentine Allen; and that a citation issued which was served upon the minor children of Margaret Ziglar by John Boyer, Sheriff of Forsyth County, by reading the summons to them on 11 November, 1885, two days after the beginning of said November term of court of Rocking-ham County, and which was also served upon the minor children of Ellen Cardwell by reading the same to them on 9 November, 1885, the first day of said November term of court; and they further find that the bond for cost in the said proceeding purporting to have been given by Samuel A. Allen was signed by, S. B. Ziglar, one of the defendants, as surety for the maintenance of said action; and if the jury further find from the evidence that the written motion in the handwriting of counsel of record for 'the defendants S. B. Ziglar and J. Ham Cardwell in said proceedings was made to appoint S. B. Ziglar and J. Ham Cardwell guardians ad litem for their minor children, and that said Ziglar and Cardwell were appointed by the court, such guardian ad litem of their respective children in the said proceedings, and that a joint answer was filed in the handwriting of counsel for defendants J. Ham Cardwell and his wife Ellen, S. B. Ziglar and his wife Margaret, and that S. B. Ziglar,- J. Ham Cardwell, guardian ad litem for their respective minor children, in which said answer it was admitted that the said paper-writing probated as the last will and testament of Yalentine Allen was not the last will and testament of Yalentine Allen, and upon the ' back of said answer there appears in the handwriting of counsel for the plaintiff Samuel A. Allen the following: “12 November, 1885. We authorize the within answer to be filed both for ourselves and in our capacity as guardians ad litem,. J. Ham Cardwell, S. B. Ziglar”; and if the jury find that a judgment was rendered at said November term of court to which the summons purporting to have been served upon the minor defendants *276 upon said action was returnable, and in which said judgment it was declared that the said paper-writing purporting to be the last will and testament of Yalentine Allen was not his last will and testament, and,adjudging that Samuel A. Allen, the plaintiff, should pay- the cost of said proceeding: that if the jury find these to be the facts, the court holds that the said proceedings so far as the minor children of Margaret Ziglar and Ellen Card-well are concerned, were collusive and a fraud in law upon the rights of the said minor children under the provisions of their grandfather’s will, and if they find such to be the facts, the plaintiffs in this said action are entitled to have the judgment depriving them of their interest in said land granted at November term in 1885 of the Superior Court of Rockingham, in the ease of Samuel A. Allen v. Margaret Ziglar and others, set aside, and the jury will answer the first issue “Yes.”

The court declined to give the instruction, except as modified as follows: That if the jury find these to be the facts, the court charges you that you may consider these facts in passing upon the question of fraud and collusion between 8. A. Allen and J. Sam Cardwell and 8. B. Ziglar in obtaining the judgment at Fall Term, 1885, setting aside the will of Valentine Allen.

We think the court erred in adding the modification. The plaintiffs were entitled to the prayer as asked. The record disclosed that there is -abundant evidence to substantiate every fact set out in the prayer for instruction. In fact, there is practically no evidence to the contrary; and if these facts are taken to be true, they constitute legal fraud, fraud in law, which would entirely vitiate and destroy the force and effect of the decree setting aside the will of Yalentine Allen.

Under that will the testator devised two-thirds of his landed estate to be equally divided between the children of his two daughters, Margaret Ziglar and Ellen Cardwell, and his son Samuel, and at the death of his wife, Elizabeth, the third which had been devised to her for life was to be divided share and share alike “between my son Samuel and my grandchildren, the heirs of the bodies of my two daughters, Margaret Ziglar and *277 Ellen Cardwell, and that portion given to his son Samuel was to be placed in the hands of a guardian.”

It is 'patent that it was the manifest interest of Margaret Ziglar and Ellen Cardwell and of Samuel Allen to have this will set aside.

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223 N.C. 421 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1943)
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1 S.E.2d 372 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1939)
Graham v. Floyd
214 N.C. 77 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1938)
Johnson v. . Whilden
88 S.E. 225 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1916)
Holt v. . Ziglar
79 S.E. 805 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1913)
Molyneux v. . Huey
81 N.C. 107 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.E. 813, 159 N.C. 272, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-v-ziglar-nc-1912.