Marshall v. Russell

150 S.E.2d 667, 222 Ga. 490, 1966 Ga. LEXIS 526
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 9, 1966
Docket23576
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 150 S.E.2d 667 (Marshall v. Russell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. Russell, 150 S.E.2d 667, 222 Ga. 490, 1966 Ga. LEXIS 526 (Ga. 1966).

Opinion

*491 Almand, Justice.

This appeal is from an order sustaining the general demurrers to a five-count petition. The general allegations of all the counts are the same. They are: Q. Y. Russell, the father of the plaintiff and appellant, procured the preparation of a mutual will for himself and his wife Elvie Russell, one of the defendants, on August 20, 1946; said mutual will was the result of an agreement between the husband and wife that “it should constitute a contract creating a remainder estate for the children named therein which said agreement and contract could not be changed by either one of them after the death of the first of them and under which the survivor of them would equally divide the estate among their said children, share and share alike”; Q. V. Russell died on June 26, 1969; Elvie Russell presented the purported will for probate in common form on July 6, 1969, and subsequently presented the will for probate in solemn form. Attached to the petition as exhibits were copies of, (1) the proceeding for probate in common form, (2) the purported will, and (3) the proceeding for probate in solemn form.

The mutual will provided that the survivor should receive all the properties of the party dying first and named the survivor as sole executor. The will shows that it was executed by both parties in the presence of three named witnesses on August 20, 1946, and duly attested by three witnesses. The petition for probate in solemn form named the four children and the surviving wife, all of whom waived all service, citation and process and agreed “that said proceeding to probate in solemn form may be instanter or at any time.”

The record contains an affidavit sworn and subscribed to before the Ordinary of Burke County by E. L. Smith and W. M. Phillippe, dated August 15, 1959, in which they swore that the will of the testator was signed by him in their presence and they subscribed their names as witnesses in his presence. Also dated the same day is the affidavit of Elvie Russell, sworn to before the ordinary in which she swore the will was signed by her and by the testator in the presence of each other and the three witnesses, and that the third witness, Delia Holley, is now a resident of the State of Tennessee. On August 15, 1959, the ordinary in *492 an order reciting that “it appearing to the satisfaction of this court by the testimony of the witnesses to this will, E. L. Smith and W. M. Phillippe, Jr., that this paper is the last will and testament of Quiller V. Russell and that he was competent to make a will at the time he signed and executed the same,” the. will was admitted to record. Letters testamentary reciting that the will was legally proved in solemn form on August 15, 1959, were issued to Elvie Russell.

On March 5, 1966, Geneva R. Marshall filed her petition naming as defendants Elvie Russell, individually and in her representative capacity as executrix of the estate of Q. V. Russell, and the three surviving children of the testator. It was prayed, among other things, that the judgment of the court of ordinary dated August 15, 1959, probating the last will and testament of Q. V. Russell in solemn form be declared null and void. It was alleged that Delia Holley signed her name as a witness before either the testator or his wife signed and not in the presence of the other witnesses; that witness Phillippe did not subscribe his name in the presence of the other witnesses; and that the testator did not sign his name in the presence of witness Smith.

The petition also alleged that at the time the appellant’s signature was procured by her mother for probate in solemn form she “represented to plaintiff [appellant] that the said purported mutual will, a copy of which is hereto attached as Exhibit ‘C’, was the result of the prior agreement and contract hereinbefore alleged made prior to the execution of the said purported will and under which the said Q. V. Russell and the defendant Mrs. Elvie Russell agreed to distribute the estate to each of their four (4) children hereinabove alleged on an equal basis, share and share alike. That in reliance upon such statement, which statement was made by defendant Mrs. Elvie Russell to plaintiff and in the presence of the attorney for Mrs. Elvie Russell, individually and as executrix, the said Carlton G. Mathews, Jr., the said plaintiff affixed her signature to the waiver of service to the application for the probate in solemn form. That from the time of the probate of said purported will in solemn form on the 15th day of August 1959, the said defendant Mrs. Elvie *493 Russell did attempt to and did carry out the agreement made between her and the said Q. V. Russell in that the said defendant Mrs.' Elvie Russell divided the estate equally among the four (4) children up until on or about the 27th day of July, 1964, at which time the said defendant Mrs. Elvie Russell filed action in Burke County Superior Court, being Case Number 570, in which she sought to have the said purported last will and testament of the said Q. V. Russell construed.” Plaintiff alleged that she did not discover until January 3, 1966, from one of the witnesses to the will that the will was not properly executed.

The several counts alleged that the judgment of probate in solemn form was void because, (a) it was not witnessed legally, (b) there was no showing that the mutual will had not been revoked by Elvie Russell, (c) the said probate was procured by the fraud of Elvie Russell on the court of ordinary in that she knew the will had not been properly executed and she concealed this fact from the court, and (d) the affidavits of the witnesses Smith and Phillippe did not constitute legal testimony in the proof of the execution of the will.

Among the grounds of the general demurrer which the court sustained were, (a) the action was barred by the statute of limitation (Code § 3-702), (b) the plaintiff had failed to exercise diligence required by law for the discovery of facts upon which she bases her claim for relief, and (c) “because said petition in its entirety and said counts separately do not set forth any cause of action against this defendant because the judgment of the court of ordinary ordering to probate in solemn form the will of Q. Y. Russell on August 15, 1959, could not have been entered up without the evidence of E. L. Smith, W. M. Phillippe, Jr., and Mrs. Elvie Russell, and it does not appear that these persons, charged with perjury by the allegations of the petition, have been thereof duly convicted.” We are of the opinion that all of these grounds were well taken.

The judgment of the court of ordinary probating the will of Q. Y. Russell in solemn form shows on its face that the court had jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter. The authority to act being shown, the law presumes that the court of ordinary in admitting the -will to record did all that the law requires to be *494 done, and the superior court in a collateral proceeding will not go behind that judgment. Clements v. Henderson, 4 Ga. 148, 154 (48 AD 210); McDade v. Burch, 7 Ga. 559, 562 (50 AD 407); Davie v. McDaniel, 47 Ga. 195 (1, 2).

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.E.2d 667, 222 Ga. 490, 1966 Ga. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-russell-ga-1966.