Middleton v. Middleton's

302 S.W.2d 588, 1956 Ky. LEXIS 9
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 23, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 302 S.W.2d 588 (Middleton v. Middleton's) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Middleton v. Middleton's, 302 S.W.2d 588, 1956 Ky. LEXIS 9 (Ky. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

MILLIKEN, Chief Justice.

The appellant, Verda Middleton, seeks to set aside the probate of the will of her ex-husband, James Middleton, and seeks to have a later will, which left his entire estate to her, probated in lieu thereof. Probate of the later will was refused on the ground that the eighty-six year old testator did not have sufficient mental capacity to make a will at the time he executed it, and the refusal was affirmed by the Circuit Court sitting without a jury. The appellees are the children or grandchildren of the testator and are the sole beneficiaries of the earlier, or probated, will.

The testator married his second wife, Verda Middleton, in 1930, when he was ap[589]*589proximately fifty-six and she was twenty-four years of age. He divorced her in 1946 after sixteen years of married life. She was awarded a $1,600 property settlement in the divorce action, and shortly after the divorce was granted she moved to Rock-castle County, Kentucky, to live. Subsequent to the divorce the testator, on January 22, 1946, executed a will by which he devised all of his real estate to his children and grandchildren. After the divorce the elderly testator made his home from time to time with his children, but also lived at times on his home place on which there were a two-room house, a five-room house, and a dance hall known as the Mountain View Club, fronting on Highway 119.

On or about December 1, 1949, the aged testator went to the home of his former wife, Verda, in Rockcastle County ostensibly for the purpose of persuading her to come back to Harlan County to take care ■of him. She testified that she told him she didn’t want to come back because she was “treated rotten” while she was there, but agreed to return with him when he offered to sell her the two-room house, referred to as the “white house,” for $1,000. She apparently had told him she had been intending to buy a house in Harlan County and move back so her son-in-law (the husband of her daughter born of a marriage previous to her marriage with testator) could work in the mines.

The testator stayed in Rockcastle County with Verda three days and she drove him back to Harlan County in her car to close the real estate transaction. The “white house” was deeded to Verda on December 7, 1949, and she testified she paid him $500 in cash and “let the car stand for the rest.” She returned to Rockcastle County on the bus that evening and remained there until she moved into the “white house” on January 1, 1950. Testator lived in the other house on the property, and Verda apparently waited upon him and tended to his needs. On February 24, 1950, about seven weeks after her return to Harlan County, testator made a will leaving her his property and revoking his former will. The County Court refused to probate this will on the. ground that the testator was lacking in mental capacity at the time it was executed.

Verda testified that the testator came to her house on the morning of February 24 and asked her to take him to town, saying he had some papers he wanted to get fixed up while he was able. She took him to town “and turned him up” the stairs leading to the office of Mr. George R. Pope, an attorney, and when she returned to the office to get him, the will had been drawn up. Ruth Alexander, Mr. Pope’s secretary, testified that the testator came to Mr. Pope’s office alone; that he stated how he wanted to dispose of his property; and that Mr. Pope dictated the will to her. She had heard the testator tell Mr. Pope that his children wouldn’t take care of him. When Verda returned to the office the will had been typed, and she remembered Mr. Pope saying to appellant, “Young lady, you came in time to get the witnesses.” Verda went down on the street and returned with Denver Sergent and Bill Osborne, who, along with Miss Alexander, signed as attesting witnesses. The will was read to the testator by Mr. Pope in the presence of the witnesses ; he (testator) then touched the pen or made an “X” after his name had been signed, and the witnesses affixed their signatures. Mr. Pope was not sure whether Ver-da accompanied the testator to his office, but he was certain she was not in the room when Mr. Middleton stated how he wanted to dispose of his property.

The evidence bearing upon the testator’s mental incapacity at the time of the execution of the second will is not at all convincing. The testimony of Ben Middleton, Jim Henry Middleton and Mrs. M. M. Samuels, sons and daughter, respectively, of the testator and interested parties, who saw their father frequently, testified to the effect that prior to the date of the will on February 24, 1950, testator had been very feeble, had difficulty remembering when he tried to tell them something, and on occasions did not recognize them or Mrs. Ben Middleton, whom he had known for several years. Mrs. Samuels further testified that testa[590]*590tor had lived with her from August, 1949, until December, 1949, when he was treated for bronchial pneumonia; that during that period he was very depressed; and that she found him alone crying on different occasions. Fred Middleton, a nephew of testator, who lived about twenty-five yards from his uncle’s home, testified that testator acted strangely for several months before his death. He recited that on occasions testator would come to his home in the nighttime, with a gun, after he and his family had gone to bed, stating on such trips that some one was trying to break into his (Fred’s) home. The witness stated that at no time when his uncle would come during the night was any one trying to break into his home.

Denver Sergent, one of the attesting witnesses of the will executed February 24, 1950, and also a witness for the appellees, testified, in substance, that Verda approached him on the streets of Harlan one day n'ear the law office of George R. Pope, and asked him to come to the office and witness a will; that shortly thereafter Mr. Osborne arrived for the same purpose'; and that testator was there as were Mr. Pope and his secretary, Miss Alexander. " He further testified that the testator did not know Mr. Osborne, saying, “I don’t believe I know you,” whereupon Verda said, “Why, Jim, this is Bill Osborne,” that after the will had been executed and the parties had left the office, 'the testator again asked who that man was; that he, Denver Sergent, walked with the testator to the car, and the latter asked him if he knew the man and who appellant told him it was. He also stated that the testator, at the time he executed the will, appeared probably normal to him, but that he took a crying spell or two before he affixed his signature to the will and that he “seemed to be in a deep study.”

Verda’s testimony, bearing on the mental capacity of the testator, was that he was mentally alert at the time he made the will, had been mentally alert up to that time, and continued so thereafter. Although she testified he was physically disabled, she stoutly maintained that'his mind was clear and normal. The testimony of other witnesses, including that of Miss Alexander, Mr. Pope and Mr. Osborne, who were present when the will was executed, was to the effect that testator appeared to have a clear mind, was mentally competent to dispose of his property, and acted as though he knew what he was doing. Several other witnesses, who came in contact with the testator in the early months of 1950, gave him a clear bill of mental health during the period, one of them testifying that he took Mr. Middleton some squirrels three days before his death and he was mentally clear at that time.

The only medical testimony was that of Dr. W. P.

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302 S.W.2d 588, 1956 Ky. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/middleton-v-middletons-kyctapp-1956.