In Re Mimey's Estate

1931 OK 264, 299 P. 199, 149 Okla. 85, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 19, 1931
DocketNo. 20004
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1931 OK 264 (In Re Mimey's Estate) 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
In Re Mimey's Estate, 1931 OK 264, 299 P. 199, 149 Okla. 85, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 181 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

Herein is presented an appeal from a decree and order affirming the county county of Seminole county in admitting to probate the last will of one Mimey, a half-blood Seminole Indian allottee, wherein one J. Coody Johnson, a negro lawyer and non-citizen of the Seminole Indian Tribe, was made the principal beneficiary.

The will is dated January 12, 1921, and Mimey died about January 30, 1921. The only property involved is a homestead allotment of the testatrix consisting of 40 acres of land *Page 86 in Seminole county. It is suggested that probably the will was admitted to probate about March or April, 1921, and that this proceeding is merely one to correct some defect or error in the former proceeding, but no part of those proceedings, if any there be, are shown in the record. James Brazell, who purchased an interest in the land from J. Coody Johnson, commenced these proceedings in the comity court of Seminole county, October 17, 1927, by petition for probate of the will, in which it was alleged that J. Coody Johnson, the person named in the will as executor, departed this life on or about February 27, 1927.

George Fish, as guardian of persons and estates of Lindy Fish, Johnson Fish, and Lena Fish, minors, and grandchildren of Mimey, protested and objected to the admission of the will to probate. These minor children are alleged to be the sole heirs at law of Mimey, and but for the will would inherit the land involved. The formal protest is quite lengthy, and in substance alleges: That Mimey at the date of the will was an old woman, sick in body and feeble in mind; that she was ignorant, without business experience, and was unable to read or write any language, and could speak only the Creek or Muskogee language, her native tongue; that J. Coody Johnson, the sole devisee, was a man of great wealth, possessing great and unusual influence among the primitive people of that community, and was in the habit of taking wills to his benefit from members of the Seminole and Creek Indian Nations; that the will was obtained by duress, fraud, extortion, and undue influence; that the will was not executed in any respect as provided by law; that said Mimey did not have sufficient understanding to know and understand the extent of her estate and the relation she bore to the natural objects of her charity and their relation to her; that J. Coody Johnson was the attorney and trusted legal adviser of Mimey, and as such advised her to her detriment and to the detriment of the natural objects of her bounty and to his own advantage; that he was of a different race and blood from the testatrix and was not related to her in any way.

The will, after directing the payment of debts and funeral expenses, gave and bequeathed to J. Coody Johnson the 40-acre homestead allotment; directed that he pay to each of the grandchildren, if living, the sum of $25, and the fourth and fifth clauses of the will provided:

"It is further agreed that my devisee J. Coody Johnson shall pay me during my lifetime the sum of $12.50, per week or its equivalent in groceries. That he shall furnish a doctor for me when necessary and shall pay his expense and all the expense of the necessary medicine.

"I further direct that the said J. Coody Johnson shall bury me decently and shall pay the expenses thereof."

The will was signed by Mimey as follows:

"Mimey (her X mark)

"I certify that I wrote the name of Mimey to this instrument at her request and in her presence.

"Houston Miller,

"Lincoln Burton."

The attesting clause was in regular form and signed by Houston Miller and Lincoln Burton of Wewoka, Okla., as witnesses.

At the hearing in the county court, the will was admitted to probate and the protestants appealed to the district court, where a hearing was had de novo. After the appeal was perfected in the district court, an order was entered appointing Warren R. Phillips as guardian ad litem of said minors to defend and represent their interests in said litigation. He filed in the district court a response or protest denying at length the execution of the will and adopting and reiterating the allegations of the original and amended protest filed by George Fish as guardian. Trial was had in the district court without a jury, resulting in the decree and order. Protestants appeal.

Three questions are presented. It is first contended:

"That where, as here, the testatrix is an old Indian woman who does not understand the English language, and the will made an unnatural disposition of her estate to a stranger in blood and in race, that more than proof of the formal execution of the will is required, and that the plaintiff failed to satisfactorily establish that the testatrix knew the contents or effect of the will. There is a presumption against such a will which must be overcome by proof on the part of those who seek its probate."

Under this contention it is asserted that nothing but formal proof of the execution of the will was made and that this is not sufficient to show that the testatrix knew the contents and effect of the will. Protestants did not offer any evidence in support of their protest, but apparently relied upon the evidence, or want thereof, offered by the proponent. The only witnesses who testified were Houston Miller and Lincoln Burton, the two subscribing witnesses to the will. Houston Miller, after identifying his own signature as a witness to the will, testified he wrote the name of Mimey to the will *Page 87 at her request and in her presence; that he signed his name as a witness in her presence and at her request, and in the presence of Lincoln Burton, the other subscribing witness; that Lincoln Burton signed his name to the will as a witness at the request and in the presence of Mimey and in the presence of Miller; that at the time the will was so signed and in the presence of both subscribing witnesses, Mimey declared the instrument to be her last will and testament. He also testified that at the time the will was executed, H.F. Davis, the then county judge of Seminole county, Miss Florence Etheridge, the then federal probate attorney, J. Coody Johnson, his stenographer, and Lincoln Burton's wife and the two subscribing witnesses were all present in the home of Mimey where the will was prepared and executed. Lincoln Burton's testimony was substantially the same as Miller's and in addition he testified that he spoke the Seminole language and also spoke English some; that he was present when the will was prepared and that Mimey did not speak the English language; that Houston Miller interpreted when the will was made; that the will was read over to Mimey by Houston Miller after it was prepared. That the witness had since read the will and he thought Houston Miller correctly interpreted its contents to Mimey after it was prepared; that Mimey was sick at the time and had been for several weeks and that she had been a cripple a long time; that she stated that the reason she made the will to J. Coody Johnson was that she needed certain help, "grocery bills and doctor bills, etc."; that the will was made just as she requested it and was written in her presence and at her request; that Mimey asked him to come to her house; that after he got there she sent him to get Coody, and as to how the will was actually prepared and put in writing, he testified:

"Q. And who wrote this will there at the time? A. The stenographer. Q. That is the girl, Jennie Davidson, that you are talking about? A. Yes. sir. Q. Who dictated the will? Who told the stenographer what to write down? A. Why, Mimey told Houston and Houston told the stenographer. Q. Mimey told Houston and Houston told the stenographer? A. Yes, sir."

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1939 OK 315 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 264, 299 P. 199, 149 Okla. 85, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mimeys-estate-okla-1931.