In Re Will of Margaret Deyton

99 S.E. 424, 177 N.C. 495, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 154
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 21, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 99 S.E. 424 (In Re Will of Margaret Deyton) 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 Margaret Deyton, 99 S.E. 424, 177 N.C. 495, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 154 (N.C. 1919).

Opinion

This is a proceeding begun before the clerk of the Superior Court of Buncombe County to probate a paper-writing purporting to be the last will and testament of Margaret Deyton, deceased, in solemn form. A caveat having been filed, the issue devisavit vel non was raised and the cause was transferred to the civil issue docket for trial upon that issue. At the February Term, 1919, it was heard by the court and a jury. At the close of the evidence the trial judge directed a verdict as appears hereafter in the record. The usual issue was submitted to the jury and answered in the negative, viz:

1. Are the paper-writings, or any part thereof, and if so, (496) what part, the last will and testament of Margaret Deyton, deceased? Answer: "No."

The following is a statement of the material evidence introduced at the trial:

R. C. Pickens, a witness for the propounders, testified: "My name is R. C. Pickens, called Chris Pickens. Margaret Deyton called me `Uncle Cris.' I was her uncle, and was her guardian, after the death of her father. She lived with me for ten or fifteen years. She died at my home, March, 1917. She was a little more than Twenty-one years of age when she died. She had been in New Mexico for her health before she died. She was afflicted with tuberculosis, and had been sick a year or two before she went to New Mexico. She had to quit school before she graduated on account of her illness. She stayed at my home and attended school at Weaverville College. After her return from New Mexico she stayed at my house, and I saw her every day a great many times during the day, and up to the time of her death her mental condition seemed to me to be perfectly good, as good as ever I knew. I *Page 523 talked to her at different times. A good many people visited her during her last illness, among them Mrs. Guy Edwards, Mrs. Georgia Burgin, Dr. Gill and others. Mrs. Gale was her nurse. Margaret Deyton called my daughter, Mrs. Bates, `Myrtle.' She called my wife `Aunt Mollie.' My son-in-law, Mr. Bates, `Burt.' She called her sister `Mollie.' That was her only sister. She did not have any brothers living. Her father and mother were both dead, and she had one brothers and one sister who died before her death. Margaret was about one year old when her mother died. She was younger than her sister Mollie. Her mother was half-sister to my wife. Margaret owned one-half interest in a place at Black Mountain that was estimated to be worth $5,000. Her sister owned the other half. She also had property in Yancey County. I have been on the property a great many times. I guess it is worth four or five thousand dollars. There is a mine on the place that I, as her guardian, leased to a mining company. They mined feldspar and mica. Under the lease I gave them, they were to pay fifty dollars per month as a minimum, and for whatever above the minimum they produced they were to pay a royalty of seventeen cents per ton on. This mine belonged to these two girls, as well as the Black Mountain place. Also a little mountain piece, worth four hundred to five hundred dollars, near Black Mountain."

Mrs. Georgia Burgin, witness for the propounders, testified: "I knew Miss Margaret Deyton, and had known her from the time she was a baby. From the time when Mr. Pickens took her, when she was a year and a half old, I guess. Mr. and Mrs. Pickens took her and raised her from the time she was something like one and one-half years old. I live about one-fourth mile from them, something less than a (497) quarter of a mile. I am sure I saw her after she came back from New Mexico. Physically, she was very weak when she came back. I talked to her a number of times. I saw her several times a day when she was sick and was there three whole nights and a half in one week. I heard Margaret say that she intended to educate Mary Margaret. She was a cousin to the mother, Mrs. Myrtle Bates, Mr. Pickens' daughter. Mary Margaret was the oldest child of Mrs. Bates and the only child that she had at that time. The Margaret in the child's name was for Margaret Deyton. Margaret Deyton was away in New Mexico for a year before the death, and it was a year before that she had been afflicted with the disease. She had to leave school a year before she went away. I heard her say that she intended to educate her namesake, Mary Margaret. That was in the early part of the summer or early fall before she went to New Mexico. Margaret and her cousin, Mrs. Bates, were like sisters. It seemed to me they were almost like sisters. Miss Myrtle Pickens, now Mrs. Bates, was at home during the greater part *Page 524 of the time when her father, Mr. Pickens, reared Margaret Deyton. They attended Weaverville College together. Miss Deyton's mental condition was good after she came back from New Mexico until she died. I did not see the will or hear her mention it. I have no interest in this action. I suppose you might say that Miss Margaret Deyton and Mrs. Bates were half first cousins."

Mrs. Mamie Garrison, witness for propounders, testified: "I am the daughter of Mr. George Pickens. Mr. R. C. Pickens is my uncle, I visited at his home often. Margaret Deyton lived with my uncle, Mr. Pickens, before she went to New Mexico for her health. I saw her often. She was a great friend of mine. When she returned from New Mexico she was weak physically, but mentally she was all right. After she came back she was tired and seemed to think she would get better, and what she talked about principally was to tell about her trip to New Mexico. I never heard her say anything about the will. I went to see her on Tuesday after she came back home and left Wednesday evening."

Mrs. C. W. Bates, witness for propounders, testified: "My given name is Myrtle, and I am the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Pickens. I knew Margaret Deyton from her babyhood. I was about nine years older than she. I am the mother of this little girl, Mary Margaret Bates. She is my oldest child. The only child I had when the will was made. She was named Mary for her grandmother and Margaret for my cousin, Margaret Deyton. I am the wife of Rev. C. W. Bates, pastor of Grace Church at Greensboro, now. When the will was executed we lived in Asheville, where he was pastor of the Asheville Methodist Protestant Church. He was pastor of the church for five years. (498) We went from there to Grace Church at Greensboro. I remember when Miss Deyton came back from New Mexico. My husband, Mr. Bates, went out there for her and brought her back. The body of those papers (A and B) are in my handwriting. Margaret Deyton deposited the paper-writings marked Exhibit `A' and `B' with Mr. Bates, and he took them. He was gone just about a week. My husband had no other purpose in going to New Mexico except to go after her. I was with my cousin Margaret almost continually up to the time she died. She died at my mother's home. Her mental condition was excellent, even to small details."

C. H. Shope, witness for propounders, testified: "I live at Weaverville, about a couple of hundred yards from Mr. R. C. Pickens' residence. I knew Miss Margaret Deyton for about ten years. She lived with Mr. Pickens. I went to see her several times after she came back from New Mexico. I do not think she lived over a week after she came back; maybe eight days. So far as I had any conversation with her, I *Page 525 never detected anything wrong with her mind. She was always considered a bright girl in Weaverville. I did not talk very much with her. I would go up almost every day and see her and ask her if I could do anything for her. She would always answer me intelligently. I did not allow her to talk to me much, because she was weak and it would make her cough. I am not related to any of the parties and have no interest whatever in the suit."

Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 S.E. 424, 177 N.C. 495, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-will-of-margaret-deyton-nc-1919.