McCrocklin's Adm'r v. Lee

56 S.W.2d 564, 247 Ky. 31, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 343
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 20, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 56 S.W.2d 564 (McCrocklin's Adm'r v. Lee) 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
McCrocklin's Adm'r v. Lee, 56 S.W.2d 564, 247 Ky. 31, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 343 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Reversing.

Mary Lee McCrocklin died January 21, 1930; a paper dated November 18, 1921, was probated as her will; a contest was filed; the contestants were successful; and the administrator with the will annexed has *32 appealed. The paper in question contains some minor bequests, and then provides:

“I give and devise, as a perpetual trust unto the Episcopal Orphan Asylum for Girls, the official title of which is the Protestant Episcopal Orphan Asylum of Louisville, the residue of my estate of every character and wherever situated, the income arising therefrom to be used to educate, support and maintain the girls of said institution.”

Mrs. McCrocklin was about 72 years of age when this will was executed, she was a widow, was childless, her father and her mother were dead, and, if she were intestate, those who would take her property (about $24,000) are: Her brother George W. Lee would take one-sixth; the five children of her brother Joseph Lee would take one-sixth; the four children of her brother ¥m. K. Lee would take one-sixth; Olivia Lee Dean, the only child of her brother Charles E. Lee, would take one-sixth; Walter K. Lee, only child of her brother Harry Lee, would take one-sixth; and the two children of her sister Fannie Lee Sale would take one-sixth.

The attack on this paper is based upon alleged mental incapacity and undue influence. Upon the latter feature the evidence was so weak it was not submitted to the jury, and the only question submitted was mental capacity. For reversal, the contestees urge the reasons which we shall state in the course of this opinion.

Eulings Upon the Evidence.

There is little to complain of on this score; the court allowed a question to be asked Mrs. Florence L. Phillips concerning the relatives of Mrs. McCrocklin and their devotion to her that was too leading, and allowed the cross-examination of Yirtle McGinity to go to an unwarranted extent and to go into unnecessary personal matters.

The Sufficiency of the Evidence.

This is the principal question in the case and about the only one discussed in the briefs.

Mrs. McCrocklin married twice. She was divorced from her first husband, and later she married Isaac McCrocklin, with whom she lived upon her farm on Floyd’s fork in Jefferson county until his death in 1915. She continued to live on her farm until the end of the *33 year 1918, when she sold it and moved into her former home at No. 2708 Grand avenne, Louisville, Ky. The proceeds of the sale of her farm she invested and managed until her death. She lived in a quiet way upon the income from these investments. She lived about 11 years after her return, to Louisville, interesting herself in the children of the neighborhood, of whom she was very fond, and in raising chickens. During a part of this time a young woman named Mary Biggert (now dead) lived with her as a helper and companion for a few years, and later another young woman (Yirtle Mc-Ginity) took her place and remained with Mrs. Me-Crocldin until the old lady died, a period of about 4 years.

Mrs. McCrocklin was somewhat eccentric, and these eccentricities are the bases of the attack on her mental capacity. She was nervous, easily startled, and frequently would interrupt a conversation to ask, ‘ Who. was that who passed the window?” On going to the-window, they found no one had passed, and that the-old lady was mistaken. The old lady’s eyesight was not good, and perhaps she mistook some passing shadow for some one passing the window, and this view of the matter is suggested by the entire absence of evidence that she persisted in her opinion after being assured she was mistaken. All of us are mistaken attunes, but a sound mind will abandon its erroneous, convictions upon receipt of evidence of the mistake,, whereas an unsound mind will persist in its error in spite of evidence.

In her second widowhood she had a young man at work for her on the farm, and there is some evidence she was in love with him and expected to marry him, and she gave some manifestations of her interest in him by seating him in the place of honor at the table, and there is evidence that she sought to get other men (peddlers) interested in her by recounting what she.' had and asking if she would not make some man a good, wife. This was normal and natural rather than otherwise. There was evidence of similar conduct upon the-part of the testator in Gambill v. Gambill, 236 Ky. 491, 33 S. W. (2d) 325, and it was held that such was perfectly natural.

There was evidence that she would sometimes miscall the names of her relatives when they visited her.. *34 She called one witness Joe, the name of his father, and, when told his name was Bert, she responded, “Oh, yes Bertie.” A niece testified that sometimes Mrs. McCrocklin wonld know her and sometimes she wonld not. Another niece testified Mrs. McCrocklin visited her, and, while they were eating lnnch and were talking’, that all at once Mrs. McCrocklin did not know her, so the niece told her name and her father’s name; Mrs. McCrocklin looked at her for a while, and then went on talking. It is not shown when this occurred, and it appears to have been only momentary absentmindedness. She had one niece who was deaf and dumb, and sometimes Mrs. McCrocklin wonld forget she was deaf. A sister-in-law of Mrs. McCrocklin testified that often when she visited her she wonld call her “Miss Speed.” All of these witnesses who testify to Mrs. McCrocklin’s misnaming them belong to Joe Lee’s family. Other witnesses do not mention this, and possibly this may be due to some lack of cordiality with that family or that her visits with or from them were infrequent.

She bought a pony and cart, and one of her nieces says she gave it to her and afterwards made, her bring it back, another witness says she gave it to everyone of the family, but perhaps what the old lady considered loans of the pony and cart they mistook for gifts. They so treated it any way, and sent or took the pony and cart back.

There was some evidence Mrs. McCrocklin was afraid of her stepson Hoke McCrocklin; there is some indication in the record this man was insane, but that was not proven. Any way, it was not shown that these fears were not well founded.

It was Mrs. McCrocklin’s practice to show to her visitors the family pictures, although they had often seen them, but in the day and generation to which Mrs. McCrocklin belonged that was a rather usual custom.

The old lady asked a witness to see that her husband’s cane, which she herself had used for years, was buried with her. That was a matter of sentiment, just .like a Mason wants his apron buried with him, a Catholic wants a crucifix in his coffin, or a woman wants her wedding ring left on her finger.

Mrs. McCrocklin kept a pistol in her house; she frequently showed that weapon, and explained her *35 ability and readiness to nse it. Living alone as sbe did, sbe perhaps felt tbe need of snob a weapon, and thought it wise to do what sbe could to spread abroad notice that sbe bad it.

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56 S.W.2d 564, 247 Ky. 31, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccrocklins-admr-v-lee-kyctapphigh-1933.