Musgrove v. Holt

240 S.W. 1068, 153 Ark. 355, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 402
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 240 S.W. 1068 (Musgrove v. Holt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Musgrove v. Holt, 240 S.W. 1068, 153 Ark. 355, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 402 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

Wood,'J.

On the 26th of February, 1920, the probate court for the Southern District of Arkansas County, on the application of C. P. Chaney and Miss Myrtle Moon, admitted to probate -a written instrument as the last will andPtestament of Mrs. P. D. Porter, deceased. Certain parts"of the will are written in pencil, and other portions are written with ink. The will disposes of a large estate consisting of real and personal property. Several different parties are named as devisees and legatees in the will. The bulk of the estate was bequeathed to C. P. Chaney. The last clause of the will, as originally written in pencil, is as follows: “I appoint J. I. Porter and Earl Holt my executors of this, my last will and testament, without bond. Consideration $1,000 dollars. (Signed) P. D: 'Porter.” Pencil marks were run through the words “Consideration $1,000 dollars” and after tbe signature was written the following: “They to receive $1,000 in full for .their services.”

. William N. Musgrove, James L. Musgrove, Gilbert Musgrove and Lula Talbot objected to the probate of the will and were granted an appeal to the circuit court. In -the circuit court they were named as parties contestants and filed their petition setting1 forth their grounds of contest, which are as follows: “(1). That the entire body of the will and the signature thereto are not written in the proper handwriting of the testatrix. (2). That the said will is not subscribed to by the testatrix at the end thereof.”

At the trial Myrtle Moon, Vida Hamilton and Mrs, Vida Hamilton, as guardian, were made parties proponents as beneficiaries under the will. The issue as to whether the instrument presented for probate was the will of Mrs. P. D. Porter was by consent of parties tried by the court.

The testimony tended to prove substantially the following: Three witnesses made affidavits in the probate court that for several years they had been familiar with the handwriting of Mrs. Porter; that the entire body of the proposed will’and the signature thereto were in the proper handwriting of Mrs. P. D. Porter; that at the time of the execution of the alleged will she was more than twenty-one years of age and of sound and disposing mind and memory. Several other witnesses testified to the same effect. Oné of them stated that he had known Mrs. Porter all of his life and had made a study of handwriting for eight or ten years. This witness stated that the entire body of the will and the signature were written in the handwriting of Mrs. Porter. The words following the signature to-wit, “They to receive $1,000 in full for their services” were in the-handwriting of Earl Holt. ■

' The testimony of the county and probate clerk was to the same effect, and likewise that of J. L. Porter and E. F. Holt. Indeed, the testimony is undisputed that the entire body of the will and the signature were in the handwriting of Mrs. Porter, and that the -words following her signature quoted above were written by Earl Holt.

Witnesses Porter and Holt testified concerning the erasure of the words, ‘ ‘ Consideration $1,000 dollars ’ ’ and the words written by Holt following her signature, substantially as follows: The pencil marks were run through the words, “consideration $1,000 dollars,” after Mrs. Porter had signed and executed the will. This erasure was made and the words ‘‘They to receive $1,000 in full for their services” were written by Holt in lien thereof, or to explain the words through which the pencil marks had been drawn. This erasure was made and these words written after Mrs. Port,er had left. J., I. Porter, a nephew by marriage of Mrs. Porter, had discussed with Mrs. Porter the making of her will. She wrote the same when she Was on a visit to Hot Springs, and on her way from Hot Springs she stopped over in Stuttgart and talked with Porter about it. He read the will and sent word for Holt to come. Holt, who was a lawyer and a confidential friend of Mrs. Porter, took the will away to look it over carefully to see if any changes were needed. The next day or so he brought the will back to Porter’s office, and they read it over carefully, and Holt stated that he thought the three words, “Consideration $1,000 dollars,” should be a little clearer so that there would be no question among the heirs about it. Then at Porter’s request Holt drew those lines through the words and added the words after the signature above indicated. This was all done after Mrs. Porter had gone home, and she had absolutely nothing to do with it. The matter came about, as explained, because Porter was a close kinsman of Mrs. Porter. The will, in this form, was sent to Mrs. Porter, and was not seen any more until it was taken out of the desk drawer in her office after her death.

It was shown that Mrs. Porter had some property in California and a one hundred dollar Liberty bond not included in the will.

Upon the above facts, the court found that the instrument proposed and admitted to probate by the probate court was the last will and testament of Mrs. P. D. Porter, and that the same had been properly proved and admitted to probate, and entered a judgment so declaring and dismissing the petition of the contestants, and for costs, from which judgment is this appeal.

1. The appellants contend, first, that, inasmuch as parts of the will were written with pencil and part with ink, the presumption is that those parts written in pencil were written after Mrs. Porter had executed the will. They further contend that the parts written in pencil when read alone do not make sense, and that there were long blank spaces between paragraphs in the will, which show that the instrument on its face was merely “deliberative memoranda.” It is impractical to set out the will in this opinion as it appears in the record. We have examined the same, however, and cannot sustain learned counsel in their above contentions. The undisputed testimony, as we have stated, shows that the entire body of the instrument and the signature thereto, as originally written, were in the proper handwriting of Mrs. Porter, and that the parts appearing in ink and in pencil were all written by her and were in the instrument when the will was left with Holt to see if it was in proper form and whether or not he had any changes to suggest.

The will, when read as a whole, is not unintelligible. The names of the devisees and legatees are specifically mentioned and the several bequests to them are set forth with sufficient dearness of description to identify the property which the. testatrix intended the beneficiaries should receive. The fact that long spaces intervened between paragraphs or sentences of the will can make no difference where the testator by the language written makes a disposition of his property and the instrument is signed at the end thereof.

As was said by Judge Riddick in Arendt v. Arendt, 80 Ark. 204, quoting from Jarman on Wills: ‘ ‘ The law has not made requisite to the validity of a will that it should assume any particular form, or be couched in language technically appropriate to its testamentary character. It is sufficient that the instrument, however irregular in form or inartificial in expression, disdoses the intention of the maker respecting the posthumous destination of his property; and, if this appear to be the nature of its contents, any contrary title or designation which he may have given to it will be disregarded.” The above was said concerning a document that took the form of a letter which the court held to be a valid holographic will.

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Bluebook (online)
240 S.W. 1068, 153 Ark. 355, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musgrove-v-holt-ark-1922.