In Re Will of Hurdle

129 S.E. 589, 190 N.C. 221, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 7, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 589 (In Re Will of Hurdle) 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 Will of Hurdle, 129 S.E. 589, 190 N.C. 221, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 49 (N.C. 1925).

Opinion

Stact, C. J.

There is but one serious exception appearing on the record: Did the court err in submitting the question of undue influence to the.jury? A careful perusal of the evidence .leads us to believe that this question should be answered in the affirmative and that a new trial must be awarded.

The evidence is plenary and conflicting on the question of alleged mental incapacity, and we would have no difficulty in sustaining the *222 validity of tbe trial, if tbe two issues of alleged mental incapacity and undue influence bad been submitted separately, but tbe whole case was tried on tbe single issue of devisavit vel non, as above set out.

It may be conceded, for tbe purposes of tbe present appeal, that tbe question of undue influence was submitted to tbe jury under proper instructions from tbe court, if the evidence warranted tbe instructions, but we are unable to find any evidence on tbe record sufficient to require tbe submission of this question to tbe jury.

In tbe paper-writing propounded, and which was executed 5 January, 1922, tbe testatrix, after making certain bequests to her husband and other relatives, left tbe bulk of her property to tbe North Carolina Baptist Foundation in trust for Home and Foreign Missions and tbe Baptist Orphanage. She died 7 November, 1923, without leaving any child or children her surviving. She was greatly devoted to her church and Sunday school. Her will was witnessed by her pastor, Rev. W. 0. Rosser, and Annie E. Combs, daughter of C. H. Spivey, one of tbe caveators.

A prior will, with xDractically tbe same provisions as the last one, except as to tbe amount to be used for missions, was executed by tbe testatrix in 1913. This will was witnessed by C. W. Austin and W. P. McDowell.

Seven witnesses were offered by caveators to support their allegation of undue influence. As bearing on this particular question, they testified as follows:

C. H. Spivey: “Q. State whether or not she was a woman whose mental condition was such that she could be influenced by others?

A. Those she thought a heap of she could very easily.

Q. State whether or not from tbe conversation you bad with her you thought she was under tbe influence of her pastor, Mr. Rosser ?

A. I think she was.

Q. Did you ever see him going to and from there?
A. Yes, sir; he went there right often.

I never have seen a lawyer going down to her house; I saw Mr. Rosser and other people going down there; Mr. Rosser was her pastor; I was there when she died; Mr. Rosser came after she died, he was not there when she died; I found out a few days after her death that she had made a will.

She told me that after her sister died (1904) she was aiming to give one-half of her. sister’s part to the Methodist, and the other to the Baptist; that was right after her sister died.”

Dr. Richard Speight: “She would speak to me about the Kennedy Home and- Thomasville Orphanage, but I don’t recall any particular time; at the time she made that will I think she knew what she was doing. I think she could be influenced.”

*223 Mrs. G-. N. Taylor: “I have seen Mr. Eosser in and out there; I know Mr. Eosser; be was ber pastor at tbe time, but at tbe time of ber death he was not.”

E. J. Hurdle (husband of testatrix): “She made a will about three weeks after ber sister’s death (7 August, 1904);. from tbe first will she made I thought I would be provided for in the will; I did not know that she ever made but one will; after she made the first will she told me she wanted to change her will, and said, T want to give it all to the Baptist Orphanage.’ I said: Tt is yours; you can make disposal of it as you see fit.’ I did not know she ever changed that will until after she was dead.

“Mr. Eosser told me that the will was drafted at Ealeigh or Winston-Salem at the Wachovia Bank and Trust Company.

“I refused to speak to Mr. Eosser for a while; I have not spoken to him up until now; he has ceased to be our pastor three or four years, a year or two before my wife died; she had strong leanings toward the church; I don’t think my wife could be influenced by an official of the church; I was under the impression Mr. Eosser did use his influence along that line, but since I saw that will this morning, the 1913 will, that will was written before he wás on the field, and I am sorry and willing to apologize to him and speak to him and I am sorry that I ever accused him of that fact; he came in the field around 1915 or 1916, and left three or four years ago. The Baptist Foundation offered to give me a life estate in that land because the heirs at law who brought this suit offered the same thing.

“One winter she didn’t go out for 60 days; had diphtheria.”

Eev. T. L. Yernon: “I think she had great confidence in her preachers and believed what they told her.”

Mrs. Jennie Weeks: “She was an educated woman and conversed well on the Bible; she knew her kin folks but did not care anything about them; they didn’t care much about her; she had sense enough to know what she was doing; she knew who she was giving it to and she gave it through prejudice; she didn’t want her people' to have it and she didn’t want Mr. Hurdle to have it.”

Mrs. Ellen Lane: “Q. State whether or not you saw him (Mr. Eos-ser) in and out of the home of Mrs. Hurdle right often ?

“A. Yes, sir, when I was in the community I would see him frequently. This was during his pastorate; I talked with Mrs. Hurdle a great deal; the topic of her conversation was Mr. Eosser, because you know she talked religion more than anything else; that was her general conversation; she did talk of Mr. Eosser.”

Viewing this evidence in its most favorable light for the caveators, we think the court erred in submitting the. question of undue influence to the jury.

*224 To constitute “undue influence,” within the meaning of tbe law, there must be something operating upon the mind of the person whose act is called in judgment, of sufficient controlling effect to destroy free agency and to render the instrument, brought in question, not properly an expression of the wishes of the maker, but rather the expression of the will of another. “It is the substitution of the mind of the person exercising the influence for the mind of the testator, causing him to make a will which he otherwise would not have made.”

In short, undue influence, which justifies the setting aside of a will, is a fraudulent influence, or such an overpowering influence as amounts to a legal wrong. In re Mueller's Will, 170 N. C., 28; Plemmons v. Murphey, 176 N. C., p. 677; In re Craven’s Will, 169 N. C., 561. It is close akin to coercion produced by importunity, or by a silent, resistless power, exercised by the strong over the weak, and which could not be resisted, so that the end reached is tantamount to the effect produced by the use of fear or force.

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Related

In Re the Will of Kemp
67 S.E.2d 672 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1951)
In Re the Last Will & Testament of Lomax
39 S.E.2d 388 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1946)
In Re Will of Neal
181 S.E. 555 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1935)
In Re Will of Turnage
179 S.E. 332 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 589, 190 N.C. 221, 1925 N.C. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-will-of-hurdle-nc-1925.