In Re the Will of Pridgen

107 S.E.2d 160, 249 N.C. 509, 75 A.L.R. 2d 312, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 404
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 25, 1959
Docket599
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 107 S.E.2d 160 (In Re the Will of Pridgen) 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
In Re the Will of Pridgen, 107 S.E.2d 160, 249 N.C. 509, 75 A.L.R. 2d 312, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 404 (N.C. 1959).

Opinion

Rodman, J.

The assignments of error raise these questions: (1) Did the court correctly instruct the jury with respect to the formalities necessary to the execution of an attested will; (2) was there error in the charge with respect to mental capacity necessary for a testamentary disposition of property; and (3) was there error in the exclusion of evidence bearing on the first two questions?

Mr. Pridgen was in a hospital in Lumberton from 25 September to 30 September 1957. Pie had earlier that month spent several days in the Columbus County. Hospital. The doctors who examined him in Lumberton testified he had a prostatic condition which was proba *511 bly malignant, arteriosclerosis, and an irregular heart. He was bedridden in his home from 30 September when he left the Lumberton hospital until his death.

The paper offered for probate was prepared by an attorney in conformity with a message delivered to him by D. R. Nance. Nance, a neighbor, acted at the request of Pridgen. When the will was written, Nance carried it to Pridgen and at his request went for Loren Tart to witness its execution. The other witness was testator’s nurse, A. E. Freeman. The instrument was signed on the day it was written.

The evidence touching the execution and subscription of the instrument comes from Tart and Freeman, the subscribing witnesses. Tart testified: “Mr. Pridgen was there in bed. That was his signature on this paper writing, M. W. Pridgen’s signature. I have seen the paper writing purporting to be the last will and testament of M. W. Pridgen before. I read that paper to Mr. M. W. Pridgen. After I read that paper to him I asked him if he wanted to sign it, and he said ‘yes.’ He signed it; he had to be helped to sign it but he had hold of the pen. He signed it in my presence. Mr. Freeman was in the room, Mr. A. S. Freeman. That’s my signature, that Loren Tart is my signature. He signed it in the presence of Mr. Freeman. I signed as a witness in the presence of Mr. Freeman. . . . There was a room adjoining the one he was in, and Mr. Freeman and I went to a table there in the .adjoining room to witness the paper, to write our names to it. . . . We went to the table to have something to lay it down on to write, that’s the table in the 'adjoining room. . . . Mr. Pridgen was in one room and the table was in the next room adjoining it. . . . Neither Mr. Freeman nor I signed the paper which I have here in the room in which Mr. Pridgen and his bed were ... I read this paper that was propounded to Mr. Pridgen. When I asked him did he want to sign it, he said ‘yes.’ Then Mr. Freeman and I went in the adjoining room and signed it on the table, but it was so he could see it in the other room ...”

Freeman testified: “I was living there in his house .at the time he died ... I was employed by some of them to nurse him. I. attended to him while he was sick. I have seen the paper writing purporting to be the last will and testament of Mr. M. W. Pridgen before. The first signature there at the top is Mr. Pridgen’s. I saw Mr. Pridgen sign his name to it. That is my name there at the bottom .and that’s M. W. Pridgen’s ... I signed this paper in the presence of Mr. Pridgen right where Mr. Pridgen could see it . . . Mr. Pridgen was sitting up on the bed when Mr. Tart presented this paper . . . There was a big table just inside the adjoining room that had a television on it *512 . . . The table I was speaking about signing it on was in another room just inside the door in the corner. That table I was speaking about signing it was just inside the door, it had a television on it. It was in the next room just inside the door and he was right back where he could see it . . . The television was on top of the table where I sat to write my name. It was on a big table right in the corner. That was the table I put the paper on to sign. Mr. Tart wrote his name first, and then I wrote mine.”

Estelle Fletcher, one of Pridgen’s nieces, prepared a diagram showing the location of the 'bed which he occupied and various objects in his room and in the adjoining sitting room. She testified: “This indicates his bed. That is the bed in which Mr. Pridgen was sick. This is the opening door there between the bedroom and the living room. The distance from the bed to the door is 3 feet. The distance from the door to the television table is 2 feet and 6 inches. The table had been pulled out away from the corner so he could watch television. The table bad been pulled out so he could watch T.V. When the table was pulled out, he could watch it from the bed there and see it all right.”

There was testimony on behalf of the caveators from which the jury could find that Pridgen could not have seen the subscribing witnesses at the television table when they signed the paper. There was also evidence on behalf of the caveators from which the jury could find one of the subscribing witnesses had stated they did not write their names at the television -table but at another table in the -sitting room and that it was impossible for one on the bed to see a person at that table.

G.S. 31-3.3 provides: “(a) An attested written will is a written will signed by the testator and attested by at least two competent witnesses as provided by this section . . . (d) The attesting witnesses must sign the will in the presence of the testator but need not sign in the presence of each other.”

The competency of Tart -and Freeman to serve as attesting witnesses is not challenged. Caveators contend the evidence is insufficient to support a finding that the paper was signed by the attesting witnesses “in the presence of the testator” and the court erred in defining that phrase.

The court charged: “Our Supreme Court has said in case In re Will of Willie Bolden, 150 N.C. 507, and following pages -in discussing what is meant by in the presence of, our Court has said that 'actual view is never necessary, but it is sufficient if the party/ in this case Pridgen, the purported testator, 'might see the witnesses *513 attest though if in a different as well as in the same room. The strictest interpretation of the law has gone no further than to require that the testator should be in a position and have power without removal of his person to see what was done. It is not necessary in fact for him to see. If the testator, the one making the will, is able to see that attestation by the witnesses, it is not material to prove that in fact he did see it, but he must be alble to see the witness subscribe the will. Their relative position to him at the time they are subscribing their names as witnesses whether they are in the same room with him or not must be such that he may see them if he thinks proper to do so, for the purpose of the law is not so much to secure signing of the name of witnesses in the actual view of the testator as to afford him an opportunity to detect and .prevent the substitution of another will in the place of that which he has signed.’ ” Caveators make the quoted portion their 64th exception.

The court further charged: “I charge you if you find from the evidence and by its greater weight that Tart and Freeman, the purported subscribing witnesses to the will of M. W. Pridgen, signed their names as subscribing witnesses to the paper writing, that M. W.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.E.2d 160, 249 N.C. 509, 75 A.L.R. 2d 312, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-will-of-pridgen-nc-1959.