McClain v. Adams

146 S.W.2d 373, 135 Tex. 627, 1941 Tex. LEXIS 209
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1941
DocketNo. 7579.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 373 (McClain v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClain v. Adams, 146 S.W.2d 373, 135 Tex. 627, 1941 Tex. LEXIS 209 (Tex. 1941).

Opinion

*629 Mr. Judge Hickman

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

The subject matter of this litigation is an alleged nuncupative will. Annie Douglas, deceased, was the alleged testator; Willie Adams, defendant in error, was the proponent in the probate court and Eliza McClain and others, plaintiffs in error, the next of kin of the deceased, were the contestants. The county court of Jefferson County sustained the contest and denied the probate. On appeal the district court of that county entered judgment admitting the alleged will to probate, which judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. 126 S. W. (2d) 61.

One of the requisites of a nuncupative will, as prescribed by Article 3346, R. C. S., is that, “it be made in the time of the last sickness of the deceased.” As we understand the position of plaintiffs in error, they concede that the trial court was warranted in finding that all other statutory requisites of a nuncupative will were met and complied with. Their sole contention here is that, as a matter of law, the words uttered by the deceased which are claimed to constitute her will were not uttered during her “last sickness” within the meaning of those words as used in the article above referred to. The case turns upon our decision of that single question and our statement will therefore be limited to such facts as are thought, to be relevant thereto.

Annie Douglas, the alleged testator, died on September 8, 1934, at the age of more than - sixty years. During the four years next preceding her death she had “spells.” Dr. R. N. Miller, a witness for the proponent, began attending her professionally in June, 1934. In his opinion the original cause of her condition was malaria, but the immediate cause of her death was “aortic insufficiency,” which he explained to be a weakened condition of the heart and aorta. The “spells” about which the other witnesses testified were in the nature of fainting spells brought about, according to the evidence, as we understand it, by the general weakened condition of her heart. The words claimed to constitute a nuncupative will were spoken by the deceased at about 4:30 p. m. on Thursday, September 6, 1934. The proponent and four other witnesses were present in her bedroom at that time. One of the witnesses, Berttrue McDaniel, went to the home of the deceased to pay her some rent. He testified that he stayed there about two hours, and that while he was there she said to him:

*630 “Mr. McDaniels, I am feeling not very well at this time, and I know that I am going to die,” and says T want Willie Adams to have everything that I possess, and land and money.’ She says ‘She is the only one stood to me in my sick hour at my bedside.’ Says, T haven’t any relatives at all.’ ”
“She called your name and said that?
“Yes, sir, said ‘Mr. McDaniels.’ ”

Thereafter, on September 12; 1934, the witness committed the substance of the testimony to writing, his written memorandum being as follows:

“ ‘Beaumont, Texas, Sept. 12, 1934.
“On the 6 day of September, 1934, I was at Annie douglas home and she told me and others beside that at her death she wanted Willie Adams to have all that she had land and money and every thing else that she new she was going to die that she had no kin and she was the only one that sat at her bed side and waited on her and she wanted her to have all her estate at her death
Berttrue McDaniel.’ ”

He testified that when he went to the home of the deceased he found her in bed; that when he paid her the rent she handed him a receipt therefor which she had theretofore written. His testimony with regard to what occurred on the occasion is, in the main, corroborated by the other witnesses who were present at that time. There is practically no testimony concerning the condition of the deceased from Thursday afternoon until about noon on Saturday. The proponent testified that “she had taken the bed on a Thursday. Friday she was in and Thursday she taken the bed and stayed in bed from Thursday up to Friday.” That testimony probably means that deceased did not leave her home on Friday but was in bed at least a part of that day. Shortly before noon on Saturday morning the deceased went to the home of a neighbor, Julia Keegans, to get Julia to pay a water bill for her which amounted to $1.00. Deceased had only a $5.00 bill with her and Julia was unable to change it. Deceased next went to a grocery store near by and purchased some bacon and a small sack of flour. She then returned to Julia’s home and gave her $1.00 with which to pay the water bill. At that time she discovered that she had failed to bring the bill with her, whereupon Julia accompanied her home to get it. The deceased carried the bacon and Julia carried the flour. Shortly after reaching home the deceased became sick. Dr. Miller was later called and he came to see her about six *631 o’clock that evening. She died some two hours or more thereafter.

All text writers and opinions on the subject of what constitutes “last sickness” within the meaning of statutes relating to nuncupative wills seem to agree that the leading authority upon the question is Prince v. Hazelton, 20 Johns. 502, 11 Am. Dec. 304. Of that case the author of Redfield On The Law of Wills, 4th Ed. in Vol. 1, ch. VI, Sec. 17a, wrote:

“* * =:= 'j'hig gUbjeet came before the Court of Errors in New York, at an early day, * * * and is most exhaustively discussed by Chancellor Kent, and by Mr. Justice Woodworth. These opinions contain the substance of all the learning upon the subject of nuncupative wills, from the earliest days to that date and very little has occurred since, which could add much to the very full discussion which the subject there receives.”

Our investigation has led us to the conclusion that the foregoing is still an accurate statement of the situation. Nothing has been written to date, within our knowledge, which adds materially to the discussion contained in the majority and minority opinions in that case. In fact, there have been relatively few cases before the appellate courts in this generation in which a nuncupative will was offered for probate.

In the majority opinion Chancellor Kent announced this conclusion:

"Upon the strength of so much authority, I feel myself warranted in concluding that a nuncupative will is not good, unless it be made by a testator when he is in extremis, or overtaken by sudden and violent sickness, and has not time or opportunity to make a written will.”

That has become known generally as the in extremis rule. The minority opinion in that case announced a somewhat more liberal rule of construction. From that decision two lines of decisions have emerged, one based upon the doctrine that the testator must be in extremis, as announced by Chancellor Kent in the majority opinion, and the other based upon the more liberal rule announced by Justice Woodworth in the dissenting opinion, that the testator need not actually be in extremis. The majority of the courts have adopted the Chancellor Kent doctrine. Schmitz v. Summers (Miss.), 174 So. 569; O’Neill v. Smith, 33 Md. 569; Bellamy v.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W.2d 373, 135 Tex. 627, 1941 Tex. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclain-v-adams-tex-1941.