Monroe v. Holleman

185 So. 2d 443
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1966
Docket43911
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 185 So. 2d 443 (Monroe v. Holleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monroe v. Holleman, 185 So. 2d 443 (Mich. 1966).

Opinion

185 So.2d 443 (1966)

Mrs. Ruby Holleman MONROE, Executrix, et al.
v.
LeRoy Elliott HOLLEMAN, Co-Executor, et al.

No. 43911.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

April 18, 1966.

*444 Edward J. Currie, Sr., Edward J. Currie, Jr., Hattiesburg, E.J. Wohlt, Jr., Houston, Tex., for appellant.

John M. Dunnam, Jr., New Augusta, Travis & Travis, Hattiesburg, for appellee.

RODGERS, Justice.

This is an appeal from the Chancery Court of Forrest County, Mississippi, in the matter of the estate of Maggie Lou Holleman, Deceased, and involves the construction of the joint will and testament of Maggie Lou Holleman and her husband, George A. Holleman, Deceased. The question involves the determination of whether or not she, as survivor, had the right under the terms of the will to use the monies of their joint estate to establish certain joint savings accounts and to purchase certain joint savings bonds in the names of her brother and sisters. The testimony in this case reveals that on August 15, 1950, George A. Holleman, (sometimes referred to in the record as George Anders Holleman), and his wife, Maggie Lou Holleman, (sometimes referred to as Mrs. George A. Holleman and Mrs. Maggie Lou Holleman), made and published their joint last will and testament, at which time they were residents of the City of Chicago, Cook County, Illinois. The will was made and published when both Mr. and Mrs. Holleman had retired from active service.

George A. and Maggie Lou Holleman moved from Chicago, Illinois, to Columbus, Mississippi, in the year 1952. Prior to his retirement, George Holleman, among other things, was a professional singer and a composer of music. Maggie Lou Holleman was a civil service employee. On June 21, 1955, George A. Holleman departed this life at the age of fifty-two at his home in Columbus, Mississippi.

After the death of George A. Holleman, Mrs. Holleman filed her petition on July 11, 1955, in the Chancery Court of Lowndes County, Mississippi, to probate the joint will and testament of the parties. Mrs. *445 Holleman did not attempt to renounce the joint will as the widow of the testator, George A. Holleman. A decree was entered by the chancery court on July 27, 1955, admitting the will to probate in common form, and letters testamentary were duly issued to Maggie Lou Holleman. Thereafter, on February 6, 1956, the executrix filed her first and final account, and by decree made and entered February 8, 1956, the first and final account was approved and the estate finally closed, and Mrs. Holleman was permitted to take possession of the estate, under the terms of the will.

Following the death of her husband, Maggie Lou Holleman moved to Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where she died on January 12, 1963. On March 15, 1963, some two months following her death, LeRoy Elliott Holleman, (sometimes referred to in the record as L.E. Holleman), and Mrs. Ruby Holleman Monroe filed their joint petition in the Chancery Court of Forrest County, Mississippi, for the probate of the joint last will and testament and for letters testamentary, naming themselves as co-executors of her estate. The will was admitted to probate on March 15, 1963 for a second time, and the clerk was ordered to issue letters testamentary to LeRoy Elliott Holleman and Mrs. Ruby Holleman Monroe as co-executors of the said estate. Letters testamentary were duly issued on March 30, 1963. Thereafter, on April 11, 1964, LeRoy Elliott Holleman and Mrs. Ruby Holleman Monroe filed their joint petition to said court for approval of their first annual and final account as co-executors of the estate of Maggie Lou Holleman, Deceased.

After the petition for approval of the final account had been filed, Mrs. Ruby Holleman Monroe discovered that during the lifetime of the testatrix, she established certain joint savings accounts, naming herself and other contingent beneficiaries under said joint last will and testament as joint tenants, with the right of survivorship. It was also discovered that at the time of the death of said testatrix, there was on deposit in such joint accounts substantial amounts of money which were alleged to be a part of the assets of the estate and which should have been accounted for in said final account. The co-executor, Mrs. Ruby Holleman Monroe, thereupon filed her petition for authority to withdraw her application for approval of the first annual and final account. She alleged that the joint accounts were made in an attempt on the part of the decedent and her joint tenants to circumvent the provisions of the joint will and thereby deprive the petitioners of assets to which they were entitled under the terms of the will.

Following a hearing on the merits of the final account, the petition of executors, and the petition for withdrawal filed by Mrs. Ruby Holleman Monroe, the chancery court made and entered its final decree on January 22, 1965, approving said final account, and discharging said co-executors. The court dismissed, with prejudice, the petition of the executors, and dismissed the petition of Mrs. Ruby Holleman Monroe for withdrawal of her approval of the final account, and adjudicated the interests of the parties to the assets of the estate under the will.

The record shows that during the lifetime of Maggie Lou Holleman, she and her sister, Mrs. Ruth Holleman Calhoun, went to the Hattiesburg Savings & Loan Association on July 13, 1961, and withdrew from two savings accounts the sum of $20,000. Thereupon, at the request of Maggie Lou Holleman, the Association opened five joint savings accounts as follows: Account No. 7715 in the name of Mrs. Maggie Lou Holleman and Mamie Holleman Lewis, or to either of them, or to the survivor, in the amount of $4,000; Account No. 7716 in the name of Mrs. Maggie Lou Holleman and LeRoy E. Holleman, or to either of them, or to the survivor, in the amount of $4,000; Account No. 7717 in the name of Mrs. Maggie Lou Holleman and Willie Holleman Woodall, *446 or either of them, or to the survivor, in the amount of $4,000; Account No. 7718 in the name of Mrs. Maggie Lou Holleman and Alberta Holleman Coopwood, or to either of them, or to the survivor, in the sum of $4,000; and Account No. 7719 in the name of Mrs. Maggie Lou Holleman and Ruth Holleman Calhoun, or to either of them, or to the survivor, in the sum of $4,000.

The Hattiesburg Savings & Loan Association prepared signature cards for all of the joint tenants, and Maggie Lou Holleman signed all of them and took them with her and obtained the signatures of the joint tenants, and mailed them to the Association. Each card contained the following pertinent language:

"(A)s joint tenants with right of survivorship and not as tenants in common, and not as tenants by the entirety, the undersigned hereby apply for membership and a savings account in the Hattiesburg Savings & Loan Association and for the issuance of evidence thereof in their joint names described as aforesaid. You are directed to act pursuant to any one or more of the joint tenants' signatures, shown below; it is agreed that any one or more such person(s) so authorized shall have power to act in all matters related to this account, including, but not without limiting the generality of the foregoing, withdrawal in whole or in part of this account * * *"

On December 29, 1956, Mrs. Holleman opened a joint account in the First National Bank of Hattiesburg in the name of Mrs. George A. Holleman, L.E. Holleman and Mrs. J.B. Calhoun, or either of them, or their survivors, in the amount of $10,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 So. 2d 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monroe-v-holleman-miss-1966.