In Re: Estate of H. Lee Sharp

183 So. 470, 133 Fla. 802, 1938 Fla. LEXIS 1046
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedAugust 2, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 So. 470 (In Re: Estate of H. Lee Sharp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Estate of H. Lee Sharp, 183 So. 470, 133 Fla. 802, 1938 Fla. LEXIS 1046 (Fla. 1938).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

—It appears that this cause was tried both before the County Judge and the Circuit Court upon a wrong theory.

No question as to the testamentary capacity of H. Lee Sharp was involved. Indeed it may be said that his capacity in that regard was not only presumed but admitted. The point involved in the controversy was not one of undue influence nor of testamentary capacity but whether the document filed with the Probate Judge for probate was in the circumstances in which it was made a will in fact.

The caveator, Clarence Sharp, contends that the document was not a will, first, because in the circumstances in which it was signed by his father a testamentary purpose did not exist; that the signing of the paper was a mere ceremonial observance necessary to obtain the degree in Masonry which Mr. Sharp at that time along with twenty or more persons sought to have conferred upon him; that the dominating purpose which actuated the signing of the document was not the calm,-solemn and momentous purpose of disposing of his estate, but it was a mere form prescribed *804 by the society to be observed by the candidates for initiation who desired the degree; secondly, that there was absent from the document as it was signed the ambulatory character which is essential to the existence of a will. 68 C. J. 602; Schaefer v. Voyle, 88 Fla. 170, 102 South. Rep. 7; McDaniel v. Johns, 45 Miss. 632, text 541, Schouler on Wills, Executors and Administrators, 6 Ed., Vol. 1, Sec. 326.

Under the statute pertaining to wills in this State a will may be annulled in two ways: first, by drawing a new one, and secondly, by taking possession of the one drawn and destroying it by tearing or burning. Comp. Gen. Laws 1927, Sec. 5461. Therefore when one makes a will it must necessarily possess the ambulatory character which would enable the maker to get possession of it whenever he desired and annul it by tearing, burning or destroying it. If he has not the right to take possession of it then it is perfectly obvious that the document, whatever it may be, is no will.

Now if the maker of such a document as was made in this case did not have the right to go to the Secretary of the Lodge after the initiation and demand the possession of the document in order that he might destroy it, but possession of the paper could be held by the Secretary as Lodge evidence, then the maker of the paper had conformed to the Lodge ceremonial requirement and it was a Lodge document over the possession of which it had complete control, and it therefore follows that the document did not have the ambulatory character necessary to the existence of a valid will which would enable the maker of the document at any time to obtain possession of the paper upon a simple demand for its possession or by legal process to obtain it.

*805 In the cause which was presented to the County Judge there was ample evidence to show that the making of the documents by the twenty or more novitiates assembled in the lodge room on the 12th day of December, 1922, to have conferred upon them the Fourteenth Degree in Masonry according to the Scottish Rite, was a mere ceremonial performance in which it was necessary for these novitiates to engage to the end that they might obtain the degree which they sought and which was the dominating and controlling purpose of the evening and the motivating control of all of their acts.

“Will.—In some of the continental Rites, and in certain high degrees, it is a custom to require the recipiendary to make, before his initiation, a will and testament, exhibiting what are his desires as to the distribution of his property at his deecase. The object seems to be to add solemnity to the ceremony, and to impress the candidate with the thought of death. But it would seem to be a custom which would be ‘more honored in tbe breach than the observance.5 Tt is not practiced in the York and American Rites.5 Ency. on Free Masonry, Vol. 2, p. 849.

In order therefore for the Court to ascertain the real purpose of the making of that document it was essential that all the evidence which could have any bearing whatsoever upon the true nature of the transaction should have been received by the Court. This record discloses that that was not done. Much proffered evidence was excluded and many questions were disallowed which would have disclosed, according to the contention of the caveator, that the purpose in making the document was not a testamentary one.

Particularly was the attitude of the witness Groethe inimical to a judicial effort to extract the truth of the matter from the transactions as they were carried on in the *806 lodge room. His attitude was not only one of hostility to the caveator but it was one of ridiculously assumed superiority of the secrets of masonry over the rules of court and that all that was necessary for him to do to avoid legitimate questions which were propounded to him was to assert that the particular matter was a secret rule or regulation or rite which’ he could not divulge.

In the trial of this cause there was marked evidence of deference to that attitude which undoubtedly hampered, if it did not definitely cripple the power of the court to arrive at the true nature of the transaction. Every fact and circumstance and opinion of the persons engaged in the conferring of that degree in Masonry, whether they were lodge officers or novitiates, should have been laid before the court in perfect and clear frankness in order that the court might determine what the real purpose of the making of the document was.

Every fact and circumstance which was offered by the caveator in evidence to show that the document was when signed and delivered to the Secretary a lodge paper over which it had exclusive conti-ol should have been considered in order that the court might determine whether the paper possessed the ambulatory character which is essential to the existence of a valid will.

It was contended by the caveator that these important considerations were submerged and obliterated, if not totally ignored, by considering whether the signer of the document possessed testamentary capacity.

The making of a will by a testator, that is to say the writing of one and directing how his property shall be distributed after his death, was not a common law right and it exists only by virtue of the statute of wills. 68 C. J. 413. The very nature of the statutory right requires that all of the considerations which enter into such a document *807 should be solemnly, carefully, intelligently and purposefully observed. There should for instance be evidence that the maker had in his mind at the time the details of his business and the items of his property and the claims of others upon him for his favorable consideration and that’ in the contemplation of all these things, with a sound and disposing mind and memory, he directed how his property should be disposed of after his death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 So. 470, 133 Fla. 802, 1938 Fla. LEXIS 1046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-h-lee-sharp-fla-1938.