Parette v. Ivey

190 S.W.2d 441, 209 Ark. 364, 1945 Ark. LEXIS 559
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 19, 1945
Docket4-7748
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 441 (Parette v. Ivey) 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
Parette v. Ivey, 190 S.W.2d 441, 209 Ark. 364, 1945 Ark. LEXIS 559 (Ark. 1945).

Opinion

Holt, J.

Mary Edna Grimes died testate December 8,1944. Appellant, E. T. Parette, an only brother, sought to prevent the probation of the will on the grounds of lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence at the time the will was made.

Under the terms of the will, Mrs. Grimes gave a part of her real property to Carolyn Benson, a niece, and the remainder, both personal and real, to “my dear friend, Joe J. Ivey,” and appointed him executor without bond.

The trial court, after hearing the testimony, found against appellant’s contentions, and admitted the will to probate. This appeal followed.

The questions to be determined are: Did Mrs. Grimes lack mental capacity when she executed the will, and was she unduly influenced? The two questions are so interwoven that we consider them together. Brown v. Emerson, 205 Ark. 735, 170 S. W. 2d 1019.

The burden of proof was on the contestant, appellant. Smith v. Boswell, 93 Ark. 66, 124 S. W. 264.

The cause comes here for trial de novo and unless we can say that the decree is against the preponderance of the evidence, we must affirm it. Brown v. Emerson, supra.

After reviewing all of the testimony, we are unable to say that it does not support the findings and decree of the trial court.

Much of the material testimony is in conflict. Mrs. Grimes suffered a paralytic stroke on the morning of October 16, 1943, and on the afternoon of that day she executed a will — not in controversy here. Thereafter, on November 11,1943, she executed another will, the one here in question. She was confined in a local hospital from the 17th to 27th of October, 1943, and thereafter in her home until her death.

Dr. A. R. Sparks testified that he attended Mrs. Grimes from October 17th to November 15, 1943; that while she was in the hospital, he saw her once or twice a day, and three or four times between the date she left the hospital and November 15th. He testified: “AVell, she seemed to be in control of her faculties; that is, she was aware of her environment. Q. (Mr. AAreas) AVas she alwnys cooperative? A. Yes, sir. Q. And responded immediately to any of your questions? A. Yes, sir; she was surprisingly alert. Q. In your opinion, from the time you started to treat her until the last call you made, taking into consideration her responses to your questions and cooperation, would you ‘say she was capable of knowing and transacting business? A. AVell, I really believe sbe was. Most of the times, I would say that a patient in that condition wasn’t, but she seemed to be mentally clear the whole time. Q. She seemed to be mentally clear? A. I would say I would feel sure that she would know what she was doing. Q. And know how to transact business? A. I believe so.”

Dr. Howell Atkinson saw the deceased only once, and that was on October 16th, when she suffered the stroke. He testified: “A. Just as I said ,1 think she was physically unfit, and mentally, too, to transact any business the day I saw her. Now, before that, I don’t know, and, after that, I don’t know.”

Dr. Annie Bremyer, a chiropractor, saw Mrs. Grimes professionally November 11, 15, 19, 22, 25, 29; December 3, 6, 10, 13, 17, 31, 1943, and on eleven other occasions after December 31st and it was her opinion that Mrs. Grimes was mentally competent at the time she made the will in question here. She was present on November lltli when the will was being discussed by the deceased and her attorney, Mr. Weas; that on that occasion the deceased discussed and named her relatives, and in witness’ opinion realized the claims and deserts of her relatives and those close to her, and knew perfectly what she was doing. Mr. J. A. Weas, the attorney who drew both wills, corroborated Dr. Bremyer’s testimony.

Mrs. Pearl Coors testified: “A. When Joe first came out there, he used to play with my boys, and he couldn’t have been better to Mrs. Grimes if he had been her own son. When he first went to work for the WAP (WPA), he came in and gave Mrs. Grimes his check. She said, ‘Well, I have got to do so-and-so for my boy. That’s all he wants from me, is money to buy him his lunch or for me to fix his lunch. ’ He gave her his check all the time. When he came back from the army, he hadn’t been long-out when she had this stroke, and when she came back from the hospital nobody in the neighborhood took care of her except Joe, and nobody had much time except, as I said, I did. I went over there one to six times a day. I did her washing and Joe helped me. When she came home from the hospital — her family insisted on her going to the hospital — when she came back, there were no neighbors to sit with her, and it was my job to look up somebody to stay with her, day -and night. When she first came back from the hospital, she had bed-sores on her back as big as that. When she died, there were no bedsores on her anywhere. Mr. Doors’ mother was sick and I took care of her. She was nice and clean, and had everything she wanted to eat. Q. What was the condition of her mind? A. Well, I tried to get her not to give Carolyn anything. She told me, No, she knew definitely what she wanted to do. There wasn’t a thing the matter with her mind. The dajr before she passed away, I was over there and her mind was just the same as it was when she moved there, ten years ago.”

Mrs. Annie Priest testified that appellee, Joe Ivey, lived in the home of deceased seven or eight years and that during the last few years of her life she depended largely upon him for support; that when he went into the army he sent her a check every month; that he was good to the deceased and “was a better boy to her than lots of sons to their own mother.”

We quote from the testimony of Mrs. Minnie Shelton: “Well, I don’t think a son could have taken care of her as well. I know that he stayed with her day and night during the whole time after she came back from the hospital, and he fed her every bite she ate, and cooked the biggest part of'the meals — most all of them.”

Mrs. Eunice Hardy testified: “Well, an own son couldn’t have done as much as he did. ”

Testimony similar in effect was given by a great many neighbors of the deceased, some of whom visited her almost daily after her stroke until the time of her death. There is also testimony that many of these neighbors counseled and advised Mrs. Grimes to remember appellee, Joe Ivey, in her will.

As has been indicated, there is testimony on the part of appellant contradicting that offered by appellee. The. majority of these witnesses were related to appellant. Mrs. Carolyn Benson was-his daughter, Mrs. E. T. Parette, his wife, Mrs. Leona Green, another daughter, Cecil B. Green, a son-in-law, and Elmer Paretto, a son. Appellant testified: “Q. I want to ask-you just one question. Did you furnish to your sister, Mrs. Grimes, the money, or any part of the money, with which she purchased the property where she lived at the time of her death? A. I brought a certified check from Morrilton down here for $1,600. That’s what I brought,” and “A. Paid back? No, sir. No, sir; they never paid me anything, no.”

We do not attempt to set out the testimony in detail, for as above noted, on the question of testamentary capacity, it is in hopeless conflict. As was said by this court in Puryear v.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 441, 209 Ark. 364, 1945 Ark. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parette-v-ivey-ark-1945.