In Re the Will of Sessoms

119 S.E.2d 193, 254 N.C. 369, 1961 N.C. LEXIS 470
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 12, 1961
Docket172
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 119 S.E.2d 193 (In Re the Will of Sessoms) 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 Sessoms, 119 S.E.2d 193, 254 N.C. 369, 1961 N.C. LEXIS 470 (N.C. 1961).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

Caveators have no assignments of error as to the evidence. They have three assignments of error, other than two formal ones, and all three are to the charge of the court to the jury.

Propounder’s evidence tends to show the following facts: A. (Alfred) T. Sessoms was a business man engaged in various activities, farming, sale of gasoline, operation of a cafe and a store, and had a franchise for Linen White bleach covering three states. He did business and made deposits in the The Scottish Bank in Salemburg. A. T. Sessoms was twice married. Caveators are children of his first marriage. A. T. Sessoms married his second wife, Inez, about 1943: no children were bom of this marriage. Inez Sessoms took an active part in the operation of her husband’s business affairs, working also in the fields, at times seven days a week, and helped him accumulate a lot of property. A. T. Sessoms was not a strong man, and could not do too much labor. He carried a number of different accounts in The Scottish Bank in Salemburg. Mrs. Inez Sessoms had the right to sign his name to cheques on these accounts, did so, and her writing was very similar to his. These cheques were signed A. T. Sessoms.

One J. V. Baggett, who attended the Law School at the University of North Carolina and is director of admissions and public relations at Edwards Military School in or near Salemburg, helped A. T. Sessoms on Saturdays in Sessoms’ office with his books, correspondence, and tax work. About 1954 A. T. Sessoms told Baggett that he wanted him to write a will for him and his wife, Inez Sessoms; that “he wanted *372 to will everything to his wife, and a will for her willing everything to him.” Thereafter Baggett wrote with a typewriter a will of two pages for A. T. Sessoms as requested, leaving everything to his wife. It seems from the record, and a photostatic picture of the instrument probated in common form filed with the record, that all the dispositive parts of the will consisting of Items 2, 3 and 4 (Item 1 provided for the payment of his debts), were written on the first page, and on the second page Inex Sessoms, A. T. Sessoms’ wife, was appointed as executrix. About a year and a half or two years later A. T. Sessoms told Baggett his wife, Inez Sessoms, was not experienced in business matters of that kind, and he wanted to change his will, and appoint Mr. O. B. Tew, Jr., as executor. Tew was then and is now cashier of The Scottish Bank in Salemburg. Baggett called Tew asking if he would accept as executor, and Tew replied “Yes.” Whereupon, Baggett unstapled the two pages, took the second page out, rewrote the second page of the instrument on 4 March 1955 constituting and appointing O. B. Tew, Jr., as executor, restapled the first page and the rewritten second page, and seeing that the second rewritten page was about an inch longer than the first page, he cut off that amount so the two sheets would be the same length, and gave the two page stapled instrument back to A. T. Sessoms. Baggett did not see the instrument again until after A. T. Sessoms’ death.

In about October or November 1958 A. T. Sessoms came into The Scottish Bank in Salemburg bringing his will, and asked 0. B. Tew, Jr., to read it, and see if he thought it was all right. Tew read it, and in his opinion it looked all right. Sessoms talked about his son and his wife’s brother, and said he wanted to add something to his will. Tew testified: “He (Sessoms) told me Mrs. Sessoms’ brother John had bothered him a lot. He was a bad drinker and would run through with anything he got. He said, ‘I’ve worked mighty hard to get what I have, my wife and I together. I don’t want it thown away. Whatever John gets will just go to the wind. My boy is the same way.’ ” After making those statements, Sessoms asked Tew if he would put an addition in his will. Tew told him he would get Geraldine Hudson, who worked in the bank, to typewrite the addition he wanted in his will. Whereupon, she wrote with a typewriter Item 5 on the first page of the instrument, which reads as follows: “It is my will and order that at my death R. S. Sessoms and John A. Sessoms shall not receive any part of my estate whatsoever unless the same shall first be approved by my Executor.” After it was typed, Sessoms and Tew read Item 5. After Sessoms read it, Sessoms asked Tew whom he could get to witness his will. Tew told him he could get Miss Hudson *373 and L. A. Bethune, who were younger than Sessoms and would live longer than he did. Sessoms said “that is fine.” Then in Sessoms’ presence Tew asked them to witness Sessoms’ will. Whereupon, A. T. Sessoms in the presence of Miss Hudson, L. A. Bethune and O. B. Tew, Jr., signed the paper writing, and Bethune and Miss Hudson then in Sessoms’ presence and in the presence of each other signed the instrument as witnesses. Miss Hudson made no corrections in the instrument, and merely typewrote Item 5 on the first page. She signed the instrument as Jerlene Hudson. She was married in June 1959.

At A. T. Sessoms’ death this instrument was found in his lockbox at the bank.

Rev. G. N. Ashley, president of Pineland College and Edwards Military School for a while, preached in the Salemburg community for 23 years. He knew A. T. Sessoms intimately, and knows his signature. In his opinion, the signature on the instrument on the right side on the second page probated in common form is that of A. T. Sessoms.

This is a copy of the written instrument:

PAGE 1

“NORTH CAROLINA SAMPSON COUNTY

LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT

“I, ALFRED T. SESSOMS, of Sampson County, North Carolina, being of sound mind and memory, but considering the uncertainty of my earthly existence, do make and declare this my Last Will and Testament, to wit:

“1st. My executrix, hereinafter named, shall give my body a decent burial, suitable to the wishes of my friends and relatives, and pay all funeral expenses, together with all my just debts, out of the first moneys that shall come into her hands, belonging to my estate.

“2nd. I will and bequeath to my beloved wife Inez Sessoms all my real estate, consisting of the two stores at -the northwest corner of the North Carolina Highway No. 24 intersection with the Autry-ville-Clement Highway, my home on the east side of the street leading from the said intersection to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Depot, and my farm land in Beaverdam Township, Cumberland County, North Carolina; said real estate to be held by my said wife in fee simple estate.

“3rd. I will and bequeath to my beloved wife Inez Sessoms all my personal property of every description, including all my household and kitchen furniture, automobiles, trucks, book accounts, goods and stock in my stores wherever found, cash in hand and in bank, *374 stocks and bonds, and any and all other personal property of any kind wherever found; said personal property to be hers absolutely in fee simple.

“4th. All the residue of my estate, real, personal, and mixed, not hereinbefore devised or bequeathed, I will and devise to my said beloved wife Inez Sessoms in fee simple forever.

“5th. It is my will and order that at my death R. S. Sessoms and John A. Sessoms shall not receive any part of my estate whatsoever unless the same shall first be approved by my Executor.

PAGE 2

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Related

Matter of Will of Leonard
323 S.E.2d 377 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1984)
In re the Will of Weston
248 S.E.2d 359 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1978)
Johnson v. Aetna Finance, Inc.
228 S.E.2d 299 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1976)
General Gas Corporation v. Carn
120 S.E.2d 156 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 S.E.2d 193, 254 N.C. 369, 1961 N.C. LEXIS 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-will-of-sessoms-nc-1961.