James A. Farmer's v. Charles Farmer's

280 S.W. 947, 213 Ky. 147, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 469
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 19, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 947 (James A. Farmer's v. Charles Farmer's) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James A. Farmer's v. Charles Farmer's, 280 S.W. 947, 213 Ky. 147, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 469 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

*148 Opinion of the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming.

This is a will contest begun by James A. Farmer against the Louisville Trust Company as executor, and Gertrude Nealy and David Farmer and Ruth Farmer, as beneficiaries of a paper purporting to be the will of Dr. Charles Farmer, deceased. Trial was had in the circuit court, which resulted in a verdict upholding the will. The contestant, James Farmer, had eleven children, seven of whom lived to maturity. Two of these, William and Charles, became doctors. In 1902, William Farmer, who was then rather advanced in years,- married Gertrude Kaiser. Previous to that .time, there had been a good family spirit; but after that marriage, the relations between the family of William Farmer and his father’s .family became strained.

In August, 1913, Dr. William Farmer lost his life in an automobile accident, and in that accident, his wife, Gertrude Farmer, now Gertrude Nealy, had her leg crushed, and sustained serious injuries, from which she. ultimately recovered, but which left her a -cripple for life. After the death of Dr. William Farmer, Dr. Charles Farmer continued to visit and look after the widow and orphans of his brother. In 1918, the widow married Mr. Nealy. In 1923, Dr. Charles Farmer noticed some trouble with his tongue and throat, which he and his associate physicians soon diagnosed as cancer. In September of that year, he submitted to a very serious operation, same being a removal en masse of the juglar vein and a large part of the glandular tissue and soft structure of the right side of his throat. He improved but little after this operation. He came back to his office and undertook to resume his practice, but in the spring of 1924, he returned to the hospital, and underwent an X-ray treatment. This treatment did not give him the hoped for relief. He continued to grow worse. Dr. Charles Farmer seems to have been very popular with his brother physicians, and in reading this record, we are struck by the fine feeling prevailing in that profession, -and the loyal devotion manifested by the physicians to their stricken brother. They were distressed by his condition, and endeavored to get him to go to a hospital, which he refused to do. It had long been his' custom to make frequent visits to the country home of Mrs. Nealy, and in response to the urging of his brother physicians, *149 'that he go to the hospital, he agreed to go to her home and stay there for a few days and that if he did not improve, he would then go to a hospital. His wish was made known to Mrs. Nealy, and she prepared a room to receive him. On April 12, 1924, he went to her home, and remained there until he died on June 8,1924. Suffering as he did from his affliction, and these serious operations, it was to be expected that opiates would be given him to relieve his pain, and that was done. As a result, it is insisted that Dr. Farmer became a morphine addict and that he used this opiate to such extent as to impair his mental vigor. His sister, Mrs. Clarke, testified that Dr. Farmer told her about May 20th, that he would never get well, and that he wanted his property to go to his father, his brothers and sisters, and he wanted Mrs. Nealy well paid for what she was doing for him. On May 22, 1924, Mrs. Nealy called her lawyer, Mr. Kendrick R. Lewis, to come to her home. Mrs. Nealy met Mr. Lewis and told him Mr. Farmer wanted to write a will. Mr. Lewis went into the room where Dr. Farmer was, and was made acquainted with him. Mrs. Nealy then left the room and Dr. Farmer told Mr. Lewis how he wanted his will written. Mr. Lewis made a pencil memorandum of what Dr. Farmer said, then the will was written by Mr. Crawford at Mr. Lewis’ dictation. While the will was being written, Dr. McLeish and Dr. Skinner had driven out to see Dr. Farmer. At the foot of the will, Mr. Lewis wrote this:

“We, Dr. George M. McLeish and Dr. Cornelius Skinner, hereby certify that the foregoing instrument was this twenty-second day of May, 1924, signed, acknowledged and delivered by Dr. Charles Farmer, in our presence to be his last will and testament and we as witnesses thereto,- have hereunto affixed our signatures thereto in his presence and in the presence of each other.”

In this will, after providing for the payment of his debts and funeral expenses, and the payment to his father and to each of his three brothers and two sisters, of $10.00 each, Dr. Farmer willed all the rest and residue of his estate to be equally divided among his sister-in-law, Gertrude Nealy, his nephew, David Farmer, and his niece, Ruth Farmer. These two were the children of Mrs. Nealy and the testator’s deceased brother, Dr. William Farmer. The docto'r in his will gave as his reason for *150 this a deep bond of love and affection he always had for his brother, Dr. William Parmer, his wife, Mrs. Nealy, and their children, then added:

“This feeling of love and affection has been greatly strengthened by the kindly and considerate manner in which I have been treated and cared for by Mrs.'Nealy and her children at her home during my present illness.”

When the will was written, Mr. Lewis went to Dr. Parmer’s bed, and told him that he had written the will and had named Dr. McLeish and Dr. Skinner as witnesses, and asked him if it was all right, and he said that it was. Mr. Lewis then gave the will to Dr. Parmer and he read it himself, and said it was all right and what he wanted. Dr. McLeish, Dr. Skinner and Mr. Crawford were then called in. The door was closed and Mr. Lewis told them he had written a will for Dr. Parmer and had made them witnesses and that he wanted to acknowledge it and sign it, and wanted them to witness it. Mr. Lewis then read the will to Dr. Parmer in their presence, and Dr. Parmer signed it in their presence and acknowledged it. They then signed as witnesses in his presence and in the presence of each other. No one else was in the room except these five men. After the execution of the will had been proven by Dr. McLeish and Dr. Skinner, Mr. Boswell, the vice president of the Louisville Trust Company, was introduced, and he identified the paper as the will of Dr. Parmer, and it was admitted that the Louisville Trust Company had qualified under that paper as executor. Mr. Boswell then testified about the assets of the estate, but we are not interested in the detail of that. It will be sufficient to say that the estate amounted to about $12,000.00 net.

At this point the propounders rested and the contestants moved the court to instruct the jury peremptorily to find the paper not to be the will of Dr. Charles Parmer, which motion the court overruled, and this is one of the grounds for a new trial, and one of the alleged errors.

Section 4828, Kentucky Statutes, fixes the requisites of a valid will, and this paper meets the requirements of that section. It is true that the testator did not orally request these two doctors to witness this will; that was not necessary. Owing to his affliction, the testator talked *151 with great difficulty. All of these men say the testator 'knew what he was doing and understood what they were doing. He had read this paper himself; he had heard it read to him.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 947, 213 Ky. 147, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-a-farmers-v-charles-farmers-kyctapphigh-1926.