Howland v. Baptiste

110 Okla. 267
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 16, 1925
DocketNo. 15487
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 110 Okla. 267 (Howland v. Baptiste) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howland v. Baptiste, 110 Okla. 267 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

THOMPSON, O.

This is a proceeding brought by C. G. Howland, plaintiff in error, to reverse the action of the district court of Carter county, denying probate of the last will and testament of Sammy Baptiste, C. G. Howland being the proponent of the will and Felice Baptiste being the contestant.

The parties will be referred to as proponent and contestant as they appeared in the lower court.

Petition was filed-in the county court by the proponent for the probate of the will of Sammy Baptiste, by which will he devised to the proponent the east half of the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter, less 2.86 acres for the G., C. & S. F. Railway, in section 13, township 5, south, range 1, east, and the south half of the- southeast quarter of section 12, township 5,' south, range 1, east, being a part of his surplus allotment as a Mississippi Choctaw Indian, whose name appeared upon the final rolls, approved by the Secretary of the Interior, opposite No. 266, and he devised the re-mainer of his estate to his mother, Felice Baptiste, and his brothers, Joe and Johnnie Baptiste, and his sister, Louisa Gardner, nee Baptiste, and Madalene Farve, nee; Baptiste, who were to share in said remainder, as provided by the laws of the state of Oklahoma, the same as if no will were made. The portion of the will, showing subscription and acknowledgment, is as follows:

“Subscribed by me this 15th day of September, 1917, in the presence of_ and -, who affixed their names hereto as witnesses, in my presence and in the presence of each other.
“Sammy Baptiste. .
“Witnesses:
“E. E. Chiver, Ardmore, Okla. ■
“E. J. Chancellor, Ardmore, Okla. “United States of America,
“Eastern District of Oklahoma. :
“I certify that Sammy Baptiste, who executed the above and foregoing instrument, signed same in . my presence .and in the preseiice of -the witnesses above stated, and acknowledged to me that he executed same for the reasons and purposes therein stated of his own free will and accord; and further that he had neither wife or children, nor any relatives entitled to any part of his estáte except those above named.
“Wm. Hutchinson.
“U. S. Commissioner.”

The probate of the will before the county court was contested by- the mother and Johnnie Baptiste and W. J. Farve, guardian of four minors, Akers, Jane, Lee, and Dolph Baptiste, upon the grounds that the will was not executed and attested as required by law; that Sammy Baptiste was incompetent to make a will; that Sammy Baptiste was under undue influence and his signature obtained by fraud and misrepresentation ; that he was a full-blood Mississippi Choctaw Indian, uneducated, inexperienced, wholly addicted to drink and was over-persuaded and overreached in procuring his signáture to said will; that Felice Baptiste is the mother of Sammy Baptiste and that both are full-blood Indians and are enrolled under No. 203 and No. 206, respectively; that said alleged will attempts to disinherit Felice Baptiste, the sole heir [268]*268oí Sammy Baptiste, deecased; that said alleged will of Sammy Baptiste, deceased, was not acknowledged and approved by a United States Commissioner, county judge, or district judge, as required by the Act of April 26, 1906, and amended by Act of May 27, 1908, U. S. Statutes, and that the said will was wholly void.

Reply was filed bv proponent by way of general denial, who for further reply alleged that the same was acknowledged and approved as required’ by the congressional acts •above referred to.

The county court admitted said will to probate and appointed Jess Kirby as executor. Prom the judgment of the county court the contestant, Felice Baptiste, appealed to the district court. After a full hearing by the district court, the district court reversed the judgment of the county court and rendered his judgment denying the probate of the will upon the specific grounds that said will offered for probate is one of a full-blood Indian and attempted to disinherit his mother. Felice Baptiste, a full-blood Mississippi Choctaw Indian, and that said will was not acknowledged and approved by a United States Commissioner, county judge, or United States District Judge, as required by Act of April 26, 1906, and by Act of May 27, 1908, Acts of Congress of the United States pertaining to such matters, and that such will is vdid and of no effect. That said will was not published, as required by the third paragraph of section 11231, Comp. St. 1921; that the signature of Sammy Baptiste was obtained to said will under the undue influence of C. G. Howland, the beneficiary thereunder, and was not, in fact, the will of Sammy Baptiste, and entered an order denying the probate of the will, and ordered said judgment be certified to the county court of Carter county with instructions to deny the probate of said will in the county court.

Motion for new trial was filed by the proponent, heard and overruled, and exceptions reserved, and the cause comes regularly upon appeal by the proponent to this court for review of said judgment.

The attorneys for proponent present and argue three assignments of error, which are as follows:

‘•'The court erred in holding, first, that said will was not executed, attested! and published according to the laws of the state of Oklahoma; second, that said will was not acknowledged before and approved by a United States Commissioner, as required by Acts of Congress; third, that the county court erred in admitting said will to probate for the reason that the execution of said will was procured by fraud and undue influence.”

Iti has been held repeatedly that will contest cases are of purely equitable cognizance. Upon appeal of such cases from the district court to the Supreme Court it is the duty ofi the Supreme Court to examine the whole record and weigh the evidence; but, the findings and judgment of the district court should not be disturbed because of the insufficiency of the evidence unless it is made to appear that such findings and judgment are against the clear weight of the evidence. In re Wah-kon-tah-he-um-pah’s Estate; He-to-op-pe et al. v. Hanna et al., 109 Okla. 126, 234 Pac. 210.

Applying this rule to the evidence here we find that the admitted facts are that Sammy Baptiste was a full-'blood Mississippi Choctaw Indian, duly enrolled as such; that he left surviving him as his sole and only heir at law, Felice Baptiste, his full-blood Mississippi Choctaw Indian mother, who is the • contestant here; that he was under draft and about to enter the United States service in the World War; that he was an habitual drunkard and some of the witnesses say that he was drunk continuously for months before he entered into'service, which was immediately after the execution of the will in contest here; that C. G. Howland, the proponent of the will, was advancing him money from time to time; that he was leasing the lands, described in the will, from the testator; that said proponent procured the services of Wm. Hutchinson, who was his lawyer and at the time happened to be United States Commissioner, and paid him < ut of his own funds the usual fee for drawing the will, after first having consulted him and after having taken the testator.

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Related

Brown v. Rochester
1974 OK CIV APP 49 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
110 Okla. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howland-v-baptiste-okla-1925.