Miller v. Harrell

194 S.W. 782, 175 Ky. 578, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 356
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 11, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 782 (Miller v. Harrell) 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
Miller v. Harrell, 194 S.W. 782, 175 Ky. 578, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 356 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

This is a controversy over a paper, purporting to be the last will and testament of Greenup Miller, a bachelor, of Bullitt county, who died August, 1915, leaving no father, mother, brother or sister; his nearest relatives being uncles, aunts and cousins. The alleged will disposes of both real and personal property, amounting in value to several thousand dollars. The testator became sick with walking typhoid in August, 1915, and shortly thereafter took to his bed. Within two or three days following he asked his attending physician, Dr. Tydings, to make a pencil sketch, or copy of a will, disposing of his property according to an outline which he gave. At first it appears that he wanted this as a model to go by, only. Accordingly Dr. Tydings prepared a paper with pencil, and this was duly signed by the testator, Miller, and witnessed by Dr. Tydings and W. F. Joyce. There is no question about the proper execution of this writing. Mr. Joyce was a cousin, by marriage, to the testator. On the day of the execution of the will in pencil, the testator desiring to put it into a more permanent and enduring form, requested Mr. Joyce to procure writing paper, pen and ink and make a copy of the pencil will so that it might be executed in permanent form. That evening Mr, Joyce obtained the paper, pen and ink, and undertook to rewrite the will, using almost the same verbiage and following the outline given by the testator as to the disposition of the property. However, he was unable to complete the copy that night, and next [580]*580morning, while assisting in waiting on the testator, the matter of rewriting the will was discussed between testator and Joyce, and Joyce inquired of the testator what disposition he desired to make of the property willed to Gladys Harrell in case of her death without issue? To which testator replied that he desired the remainder to go to the Kentucky Masonic Widows ’ & Orphans ’ Home. Following out this direction, Mr Joyce concluded the will, and at the suggestion of the testator, called two neighbors, W. B. Mattingly and J. D. Moore, as witnesses, who came to the house of the sick man to witness the will. Thereupon the testator signed the will written in ink, and called upon Mr. Mattingly and Mr. Moore to witness the same, which they did in proper form, and this is not questioned. Shortly after this, upon the same or succeeding days, Joyce, out of the presence and away from the testator and without direction from him so to do, destroyed the pencil will by burning it in a stove. This burning, however, was after-wards approved by Miller, who talked of it in these words: ‘ ‘ That is what I wanted done; I wanted that destroyed when the other was written.” The testator gradually grew worse, and his relatives gathered at his home. Not many days later, Miller had Joyce called on the telephone and asked him to come to his house. When they were alone the testator said to Joyce, “I want to' do away with my will.” Joyce asked: “Why?” To which Miller replied, “Well, the way I made it I am afraid there will be some trouble about it; I don’t want it;” then Joyce said, “Well, I have the copy.” Miller then said, “What did you do with it?” And Joyce replied, “The will — I did not have any place to keep the will, no safe, and I put it in an envelope and give it to Mr. Mattingly to put away in his safe, and it is down there.’-’ Then Joyce asked him, “Do you remember about the. one, the outline, Dr. Tydings made ? ’ ’ Miller answered, “Didn’t you bum that up, destroy it?” Joyce-answered, “Did you want that one?” Miller said, “No, I don’t want that one; the one written with pen and ink is my will, that is the one I am asking you about;” then Joyce answering said, “I will go to Mattingly’s and get it this evening or in the morning. ’ ’ The next day Joyce brought the will to the sick room while the doctor was there and offered it to Miller, whereupon Miller said, “The doctor don’t want me to get out of bed; don’t [581]*581want me to move. The nnrse says it is dangerous for me to move about. Will you destroy this paper for me ? ’ ’ To which Joyce answered, “Yes;” then Miller went on, ‘ ‘ There is no stove in here, Will, and I want you to take it out of the house and bum it up; I don’t want to risk setting the house on fire; and there is no stove to burn it in.” Joyce answered, “All right,” and further testifying, Joyce said, “I taken it out of the house to destroy the paper there and then and I decided to wait.” The will was not destroyed until some' days later.

When the question arose, Joyce, at the instance of the probate court, reproduced what he and, the other witnesses to the will considered a correct copy of it, which contains an exact disposition of the property as set forth in the original will. This paper is as follows:

“Cupio, Ky., Aug. 22, 1915.
“Know All Men by These Presents: — That I, G-. H. Miller, being of sound and disposing mind, memory and understanding, do hereby make this.my last will and testament, in the manner and form following, and do hereby will that in case of my demise, all of my property both real and personal shall be sold by two administrators who shall be selected out of the membership of Miles Lodge No. 341 P. & A. M., and who shall dispose of the proceeds of the sale as follows: After all of my just debts shall have been paid, one-half of the proceeds and money on hand shall be placed in the hands of the Kentucky Children’s Home for the purpose of giving my ward, Miss Gladys Harrell, of the Kentucky Children’s Home, the benefit of an education in some good school of training; after she shall have completed her education and arrived at the-age of twenty-one years, all the remainder of this amount, after her schooling is paid, shall be paid over to her; but in case of her demise during the time that she is in school, or afterwards, if she should die without issue, after all the necessary expenses shall have been paid, all of the remainder of this amount shall then be paid over to the Kentucky Masonic Widows’ and Orphans’ Home. Of the remaining half, five hundred dollars I will to the Miller family graveyard and to keep the same in repair. Three hundred dollars I will to the benefit of Knox Creek Church. One-half of the remainder I will to Miles Lodge No. 341 F. & A. M., to be used for any good that the members of [582]*582the Lodge may elect. The last remaining, I will to the Kentucky Masonic Widows’ and Orphans’ Home.”

The Bullitt county court refused to probate the paper as the last will of Greenup Miller, and the propounders appealed to the Bullitt circuit court where the case was fully heard before the court, without the intervention of a jury, and the paper was found to be the last will and testament of Greenup Miller, and was ordered probated. From this order the contestants appealed to this court.

About seven or eight years before the death of Greenup Miller and during the life of his mother, she and Greenup Miller obtained Gladys Harrell, an orphan child about six or seven years old, from the Kentucky Masonic Widows’ & Orphans’ Home, and took her into their home, as their ward, where she remained until after the death of the testator. She was never, however, legally adopted by Miller. The mother of Greenup Miller died some years previous to her son, but Gladys continued to' live in the home and was well taken care of and provided for.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 782, 175 Ky. 578, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-harrell-kyctapp-1917.