Muse v. Sluder

600 S.W.2d 237, 1980 Tenn. App. LEXIS 347
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 6, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 600 S.W.2d 237 (Muse v. Sluder) 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
Muse v. Sluder, 600 S.W.2d 237, 1980 Tenn. App. LEXIS 347 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

SUMMERS, Judge.

David M. Martin, a resident of Johnson County, Tennessee, died on April 10, 1977. At the time of his death he was approximately 98 years old. Shortly after his death, two documents were offered for probate in the County Court of Johnson County, both purporting to be the last will and testament of the decedent but each disposing of different property. The first document was dated March 11, 1974, and the second document was dated November 18, 1974.

The County Court of Johnson County appointed John H. Muse as executor and/or administrator of the estate of Mr. Martin. In September, 1977, Mr. Muse filed in the Chancery Court of Johnson County a Bill for Declaratory Judgment and prayed for the following relief:

1st. That the Court declare and find the heirs at law and next-of-kin of the deceased, Dave M. Martin, and that if need be, a Clerk’s Report be made for this purpose.
2nd. As to those Defendants whose names and addresses are known and who are residents of the State of Tennessee that proper process issue and be served against them.
3rd. As to those Defendants, heirs at law and next-of-kin of the deceased, David M. Martin, whose names and addresses are unknown and cannot be ascertained, that process issue and be served against them by publication, and that said publication be made to bring said Defendants before the Court.
4th. The Court ascertain and declare the true assets of the Estate, both personal and real, wheresoever situated.
5th. The Court declare the rights of the various parties herein, heirs at law and next-of-kin of the deceased, Dave M. Martin, accruing under the aforementioned documents, both of which purport to be the Last Will and Testament of the late David M. Martin, so that the Plaintiff herein may faithfully and adequately carry out his duties as Executor and/or Administrator with the Will annexed of the Estate.
6th. The Plaintiff be given general relief such as the court may deem proper.

At the time of his death, Mr. Martin was married to Dessie Malone Martin, but they had been separated since 1971. At the time of the separation, they executed a Contract of Separation and Settlement of Property Rights. Mrs. Martin answered the bill for declaratory judgment and alleged that the property settlement agreement did not extinguish her rights to certain of the property of Mr. Martin as the surviving widow. However, the court denied Mrs. Martin’s claim and found that the separation agreement was a full release of all claims of Mrs. Martin against the estate of her deceased husband. This finding of the chancellor was not appealed and is, therefore, not before this court.

The cross plaintiffs-appellees, Gurnie M. Potter, Selmer Potter, Mabel Jean Roark and Kirmit Potter, filed an answer to the bill for declaratory judgment and asked the court to treat their answer also as a cross bill. These four cross plaintiffs are the children of Wiley Potter who died in 1969. They alleged that their father was the illegitimate son of the decedent and that as his children they are entitled to inherit the property of Mr. Martin as his surviving heirs.

The cross bill denied that the two wills which had been presented for probate in the [239]*239County Court of Johnson County were valid wills. The cross bill further set out that in October, 1974, a suit was filed seeking to have a conservator appointed for Mr. Martin due to his advanced years and declining health. A fullscale hearing was held on November 13, 1974, and a conservator for Mr. Martin was appointed by order of December 14, 1974. In this order the court prohibited, restrained and enjoined all relatives of Mr. Martin or any person from interfering with the conservator in the performance of his duties or interfering with his functions as such conservator or in dealing with the property or person of his ward. The cross plaintiffs alleged that Walter Martin and Russell T. Martin, nephews of the decedent and beneficiaries under the two documents executed in 1974 by David M. Martin, were present at the November 13, 1974 hearing. Five days after the hearing these two nephews of Mr. Martin did carry him to an attorney’s office where he executed the purported will of that date.

The cross plaintiffs sought:
A. To enjoin the probate of the wills in the Chancery Court on the findings of fraud, duress and undue influence, and that the last purported Will in fact invalidates the previous Wills, and on the further finding that the parties procuring the Will of November 18, 1974 were in violation of the Court’s injunctive process, and should be dealt with accordingly, and that they would be judicially es-topped in the premises; on the further finding that David Martin was unable to transact business the last year previous to November 18, 1974, under the findings of this Honorable Court.
C. That such other relief be decreed, including general relief, and in order to bring the real property before the Court, some of the Defendants are non-residents, that same be attached by judicial Fiat.

The plaintiff-appellee, Mr. Muse, filed an answer to the cross-plaintiffs’ cross bill and inter alia, said:

This Plaintiff answering to any party who would seek to contest the validity of either Will herein, and would depend upon allegations of capacity of mind or other reasons relevent to the validity of the Wills, would for Answer say that this is not a Court of Competent Jurisdiction to the trial of a “Contest of Wills”. Therefore, to the extent that any party as a matter of Pleading seeks to contest either of the said Wills denies their right to do so.

The defendant, Russell Taylor Martin, could take only under the November 18, 1974 will. In his answer, he prayed that the court declare the will dated November 18, 1974, as the valid will of the late Mr. Martin, thereby revoking the will dated March 11, 1974.

The defendant, Walter Martin, filed a brief in which he alleged:

The Chancery Court has no jurisdiction to determine which of the two wills is the last will and testament of David M. Martin. It can only declare the two wills to dispose of the property therein named and to the beneficiaries therein named. It has no other jurisdiction other tha.n to declare both to be the last will and testament of Dave M. Martin.

After the hearing of the cause, Walter Martin died. His suit was revived by his widow, Josephine Martin, and his two children, Grady Martin and Pamela Martin Davis, who are three of the defendants-appellants in this case.

The plaintiff-appellee, John H. Muse, in his brief again contended that he did not purport to file a contest of wills. He alleged that the circuit court has exclusive jurisdiction on a proceeding to contest the validity of the wills; further, that there was a difference between a will contest and a bill for the court to declare what benefits, if any, the beneficiaries or devisees under the will and/or wills of the late David M.

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Bluebook (online)
600 S.W.2d 237, 1980 Tenn. App. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muse-v-sluder-tennctapp-1980.