Miller v. Ford

1 Tenn. App. 618, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 82
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 28, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tenn. App. 618 (Miller v. Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Ford, 1 Tenn. App. 618, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 82 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

The controversy 'in this case arises over the purported nuncupative will of E. M. Russell, deceased; and a trial was had in the circuit court of Washington county on the issue of devisavit vel non. The proponents were successful in the lower court and the contestants have appealed. The amount of personal property involved is $2,000.

The deceased, R. M. Russell, was a federal soldier in the war between the States, commanding as captain a company of New York negro troops. He was a man of fine physique, intelligent and of high integrity; he had no immediate family and spent the greater part of his life since the war as an officer in the federal soldiers’ homes, coming to Johnson City and holding a position there in the national home for disabled soldiers until the year 1920, when the home was taken over as a sanitarium for diseased world war veterans. In this year he left the home, but did not return to the north because of the severe climate, preferring to remain in Johnson City for climatic reasons assigned by him to his relatives in the north.

Upon leaving the soldiers’ home he boarded in the home of Flora Ford, who is the mother of an eleven year old child who claims as beneficiary under the will. He remained in her home until the 4th day of September, 1924, when he moved into a house of his own, recently purchased in Johnson City.

During his stay with Mrs. Ford the record "shows that he became greatly attached to Mrs. Ford’s little girl, who was kind and affectionate to him and waited on him, and he took her with him about the neighborhood and would'buy her candy and toys. His mail came through the hands of Mrs, Ford, and she testified that he received only one letter from his relatives in the north during his stay with her. He carried on a vigorous correspondence with his relatives up until about the time he went to the home of Mrs. Ford, and when he quit writing the record shows his relatives sent several letters of inquiry addressed to him at Johnson City which were never returned to them, and Mrs. Ford testified that he never received them.

Mr. Russell was seventy-nine years of age at the time of his death. Sometime before his death he had a fall and his leg was injured. This injury never healed but became chronic, and on October the first, twenty-six days after he had moved into his own home, where he lived alone, he had another fall, again injuring his leg, making it necessary that his neighbors carry him into his house. Gangrene set üp and his condition became serious. He had no one to properly care for him here and Mrs. Ford and an attorney whom he knew and sometimes conferred with, interested themselves in his béhalf and *620 had him transferred to the national sanitarium for disabled war veterans at Johnson City, his then condition making him eligible to re-enter the institution. Upon his admission an examination was had and it is shown that he had gangrene in his wound which had progressed and indicated that he had been so affected for three or more days before his entry into the sanitarium.

He was admitted on the sixth of October, and upon the succeeding day Mrs. Ford and a neighbor, Mrs. Low, went to the sanitarium to see him, and while there they testify that he requested them to return to the city and request Mr. Hughes, his attorney, to come' to the sanitarium to see him. They immediately left the sanitarium, called a taxicab and went to the office of Mr. Hughes. They state that they did not know for what purpose Mr. Russell wanted to see Mr. Hughes, but Mr. Hughes’ law partner was present, and was used as a witness for the proponent, and he testified that he understood and heard that Mr. Hughes was wanted at the sanitarium for the purpose of executing a will; Mrs. Ford is recalled and denies this, but the witness was the proponent’s witness and the proponent is bound by his testimony, and furthermore his testimony is entirely reasonable and supported by the acts of the parties.

The two ladies and. Mr. Hughes returned immediately to the hospital and Mr. Hughes entered into a conversation with Mr. Russell, testifying that Mr. Russell talked upon general subjects, asked about the news of the day and expressed a desire for the daily papers. He says his conversation was rational and it is his opinion that Mr. Russell was of sound mind. He then states he asked Mr. Russell if he wanted him to make his will. He had with him yellow note paper and a pencil, and testifies that he took down a rough draft of the will, intending to return to his office and have it typewritten and executed in due form, transferring both his real and personal property to Virgie Ford. He gave as a reason'for not carrying out this purpose that he learned that the officials of the sanitarium objected to his presence at the sanitarium and for this reason he did not return. He states that he reduced to writing a purported nuncupative will, on the night of the same day, in typewritten form, which is as follows:

“I was called in by Mr. E. M. Russell, on October 7, 1924, at the hospital in the National Sanitarium where he had been taken for treatment. I went there at his request. After I was there Some seven or eight minutes, I asked if he sent for me, to which he repied ‘yes, I am a sick man and I want to make some arrangements as to my effects.’ I then asked him if he realized his condition, to which he replied yes. I then asked him if he wanted to make a will of his property and effects, if he wished me present as a witness to same, and he said yes. I then *621 asked him what he desired to do with his property, his money, personal effects and real estate, to which he said: ‘ I want Yirgie to have everything I have got.’ I asked him who he meant by Yirgie. He said: ‘Yirgie Ford. I want her to have it; she is my choice among all.’ I took this down as he stated it, with pencil, on a tablet, and reduced it to writing on the typewriter when I returned to my office.
Oct. 7, 1924.
A. D. Hughes.”

The memorandum taken at the bedside upon the yellow slips of paper, which, as Mr. Hughes testifies, was in the form of a will, was not accounted for upon the trial, nor called for. Mr. Hughes states that he knew an oral will would not be good as to real property, and for this reason it was his purpose to reduce the will to writing and have it duly executed. He states that the notes were the same as the will introduced and later reduced to writing.

It is indicated in the questions that Mrs. Ford was a beneficiary under the will and an attorney associated with Mr. Hughes and by him, was asked if he did not state that Mrs. Ford was a beneficiary, after some hesitation he denied this, but admitted he had stated that it was their purpose to set up the will as a nuncupative 'Will. Mr. Hughes further testifies that nothing was said by Mr. Russell as to how the will was fo be made, only stating that he wanted to make a will and there was nothing said about writing it; but Mr. Hughes has admitted that it was his purpose to write it and the purpose was flustrated for the reason he had heard it rumored he was not wanted at the sanitarium. An unsuccessful attack was made upon the character of Mr. Hughes, and a more successful attack was made upon that of Mrs. Ford, without an attempt to resuscitate her character. The execution of the will is dependent solely upon the testi- • mony of Mrs. Hughes, Mrs. Ford 'and Mrs. Low, proponent’s witnesses.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Thurman
49 Tenn. 110 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1870)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. App. 618, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-ford-tennctapp-1925.