Jones v. Myers

154 S.W.2d 245, 178 Tenn. 24, 14 Beeler 24, 1941 Tenn. LEXIS 24
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 S.W.2d 245 (Jones v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Myers, 154 S.W.2d 245, 178 Tenn. 24, 14 Beeler 24, 1941 Tenn. LEXIS 24 (Tenn. 1941).

Opinion

*25 Me. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The following paper writing' was offered for probate as the holographic will of W. M. Jones:

“Oct. 2-, 1927
“After our death we want Louise Jones to have what we’ve got.
‘ ‘ Sallie C. Jones
“W. M. Jones.”

This instrument is wholly in the handwriting of W. M. Jones except the signature of his wife, Sallie C. Jones, which is in her handwriting. Because of this signing by the wife the judge of the county court held that the will was not entirely in the handwriting of W. M. Jones and declined to order it probated as his will. Upon appeal, the circuit court and the Court of Appeals concurred in finding that this was a valid holographic will as to W. M. Jones, it having been found after his death among his valuable papers, and in this finding we concur.

The following facts, as set forth in the opinion of the Court of Appeals, are uncontroverted.

“W. M. Jones and wife, Sallie C. Jones, were childless; twenty odd years ago they took into their home as their child a grandniece, Louise Jones, age two years, and they raised this child to womanhood, as a member of their family and as if she were their child. Mrs. Jones died in 1934, and the foster daughter, Louise Jones, thereafter married Bobert Myers, and she and her husband continued to live in the home and care for her foster father, W. M. Jones, until his death in 1938. Mrs. Jones left no personal estate of value, but at the time of her death she owned an interest in real estate. The title to the real *26 property of Mr. and Mrs. Jones is as follows: He owned a portion in fee, and slie owned a portion in fee, and another portion, the most valuable, was owned by the two as tenants by the entirety. The values of these respective portions are not shown, and it is assumed that they constituted one boundary. The farm as a whole is not of great value.”

Counsel for plaintiff in their brief state_ that the entire estate of Mr. and Mrs. Jones consists of a 32-acre farm and some household goods, and this statement is not questioned.

In Epperson v. White, 156 Tenn., 155, 166, 299 S. W., 812, 815, 57 A. L. R., 601, it is said: “The power to dispose of property by the will, or real estate at least, depends entirely upon statute. It is not a natural or constitutional right, and may be limited and regulated by legislation. ’ ’

Our statute upon the subject, section 8090 of the Code, is as follows: “But a paper writing, appearing to be the will of a deceased person, written by him, having his name subscribed to it, or inserted in some part of it, and found, after his death, among his valuable papers, or lodged in the hands of another for safe-keeping, shall be good and sufficient to give and convey lands, if the handwriting is generally known by his acquaintances, and it is proved by at least three credible witnesses that they verily believe the writing, and every part of it, to be in his hand. ’ ’

This section is a codification of a North Carolina statute enacted in 1784, and its preamble indicates that it was intended as in the nature of an exception to the preceding section, enacted six months previous. The statute *27 seems to be peculiar to Tennessee and North Carolina. Howell v. Moore, 14 Tenn. App., 594.

In Popejoy v. Peters, 173 Tenn., 484, 121 S. W. (2d), 538, the right to execute such a joint will was sustained.

Even under a strict construction of our statute it seems that the will in question meets every requirement thereof. A case directly in point is that of In re Cole’s Will, 171 N. C., 74, 87 S. E., 962, 963, the will involved being offered for probate as that of the husband, who was survived by his wife, and is in this language:

“We give and bequeath to the Methodist Orphanage, situated at Baleigh, North Carolina, all our real and personal property after paying all our just debts and giving a decent burial and headstones to our graves.
“This Jan’y 30, 1912. Duncan Cole.
“Sanford, Lee Co., N. C. Georgia Cole.”

The court, speaking through Chief Justice; Clark, said:

“The will in every respect was entitled to probate as the ‘holographic will’ of Duncan-Cole. The signature of his wife thereto was mere surplusage, and could in no wise invalidate the instrument as the will of her husband.
“This was in no wise a ‘mutual will,’ and the authorities applicable to such wills do not apply. This was a ‘joint will,’ which has been defined as: ‘A testamentary instrument, executed by two or more persons in pursuance of a common intention, for the purpose of disposing of their several interests in property owned by them in common or of their separate property treated as a common fund to a third person, or persons.’ ” (Citing authorities.)

The opinion contains this further statement: “The fact that his wife signed this will cannot affect its validity *28 as the will of Duncan Cole. It purports to be the intention of each maker. As the will of Duncan Cole, it fulfills all the statutory requirements. The signature of the wife does not purport to he a part of the will of Duncan Cole, and her signature only purports to be an expression of her testamentary intention, and could be considered only if it were offered to be proved as her will.”

Upon this question the Supreme Court of Louisiana, in McMichael’s Heirs v. Bankston, 24 La. Ann., 451, said:

“The plaintiffs, who are heirs of G-. P. McMichael, deceased, sue to annul the olographic will of their father on the ground that it was not wholly written by him.
“The four plaintiffs as witnesses state that the will was entirely written, dated and signed by the hand of the testator, except the word ‘to’ in the sixth line from the top, and the word ‘ acres ’ in the eighth line, which are in a different hand. Another witness and two experts express the same opinion. The original will is before us, and it is evident that there is some difference in the appearance of those two words from the balance of the writing. But it is very manifest that the presence or absence of the two words can have no material effect upon the meaning or contents of the will. Without them the sense is the same as with them — the whole will showing that the testator bequeathed to his a wife a certain number of acres of land. In another place there is a connected and rational repetition of this bequest in which the same two words are written by the testator. . . .
“We cannot say that the law requires a will to be annulled for so unimportant and trivial cause.”

In Baker v. Brown, 83 Miss., 793, 36 So., 539, 1 Ann.

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Related

In Re Estate of Jones
314 S.W.2d 39 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1957)
McDaniel v. Owens
281 S.W.2d 259 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 S.W.2d 245, 178 Tenn. 24, 14 Beeler 24, 1941 Tenn. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-myers-tenn-1941.