Poindexter's Adm'r v. Alexander

125 S.W.2d 981, 277 Ky. 147, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 612
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 24, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 981 (Poindexter's Adm'r v. Alexander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poindexter's Adm'r v. Alexander, 125 S.W.2d 981, 277 Ky. 147, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 612 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Stites

Affirming.

Mrs. Emma B. Poindexter died in Daviess County on February 7, 1935, in her eightieth year. The appeal now before us involves the propriety of a judgment of *149 the Daviess Circuit Court refusing prohate of an alleged will of Mrs. Poindexter on the ground of its improper execution under the Statute of Wills, Kentucky Statutues, Section 4828. The will was executed approximately three weeks before her death at a time when she was apparently bedridden and very weak. Mrs. S. C. Swift is a practical nurse and lived in the home of testatrix for about three years prior to her death. She is one of the attesting witnesses to the will and is the only one who testified in the circuit court concerning its execution. According to her testimony, on the morning of the day when the will was executed, Mr. Poindexter (who died before this case was tried in the circuit court) came into the kitchen where Mrs. Swift was at work and told her that he was about to write a new will for his wife. Sometime later that same day, Dr. S. P. Oldham came to visit the testatrix and, as he was preparing to leave, Mr. Poindexter asked him not to go until he had witnessed Mrs. Poindexter’s will. He then called to Mrs. Swift, and the doctor and Mrs. Swift lifted Mrs. Poindexter to a sitting position in the bed and Mr. Poindexter presented the paper with the statement: “I want you to sign this.” Mrs. Poindexter then scrawled her signature to the paper and was immediately lowered to her pillow. When Dr. Oldham and Mrs. Swift had placed Mrs. Poindexter back upon the pillow, the paper was taken by Dr. Oldham to a small table near the foot of the bed and there signed by him.

About four to six feet from the head of the bed in which Mrs. Poindexter was lying, there was an archway about eight feet wide leading into the dining room of her house. There were no doors in this archway but there were draperies. It does not appear whether or not the draperies were drawn, but a floor plan of the house introduced with the testimony of Mrs. Swift shows very clearly that the wall of the room in which Mrs. Poindexter was lying effectually cut off any view of the buffet which stood in the corner of the dining room at right angles to the wall running at the head of the bed. Mrs. Swift testified:

“Q. Where did you sign your name to that will! A. I stepped back in the dining room to a big buffet in the dining room at the side of the door there and a big curtain hanging up and I stepped out in the dining room.
*150 “Q. Why? A. I just done it. I don’t know why.
“Q. Explain to the jury what was your idea for going outside of that room and signing that on that buffet when there was a table at the foot of the bed? A. I just felt sorry for her and I just stepped out there and he just came on back and said for me to sign it and I signed it on the buffet in the dining room.
“Q. Because you felt sorry for Mrs. Poindexter you signed that will on the top of a buffet in the dining room? A. Yes sir.
“Q. How did that will get back out of your hands? A. Mr. Poindexter taken it. He brought it in and laid it down for me to sign it and picked it up and that is the last I saw of it.
“Q. Mrs. Swift, was there any door leading from that living room into the dining room? A. No sir, no door only a curtain, and I stepped back in there about three feet back to the buffet and signed it. She was on one side of the wall and I was on the other side in the dining room.”

The will is short and a photostatic copy of it is in the record. It is apparently entirely written in pencil in the handwriting of Mr. Poindexter. We quote it in full:

“This is my last will and testament. Being of sound mine and disposing memory, I, Emma B. Poindexter, bequeath all my property of whatever kind to my beloved husband, B. H. Poindexter in fee simple, and it is my desire that he qualify as my executor without bond.
“Given under my hand this 22 of January, 1935.
“Emma. B. Poindexter,
“Witnesses:
“S. P. Oldham,
“Mrs. S. C. Swift.”

On February 14, 1935, this paper was probated in the Daviess County Court. Mrs. Swift did not then testify and the probate seems to have been based entirely upon the testimony of Dr. Oldham. Thereafter, *151 both Dr. Oldham and Mr. Poindexter died and an appeal was prosecuted to the Daviess Circuit Court from the order of probate. At the trial in the circuit court, the proponents of the will introduced the county clerk to testify concerning the regularity of the probate. A son of Dr. Oldham identified his father’s signature and Mrs. Swift, after identifying the signatures, testified to the facts as set out in substance above. The propounders introduced the county judge, before whom the will had originally been probated, in an effort to have him state the substance of the testimony of Dr. Oldham when the will was originally offered. The court excluded this testimony of the county judge and it is not seriously contended that this was error. Appellants, with creditable frankness, state that they are unable to show any basis for predicating a claim of error on this point and we see none. Following the testimony of the county judge, the propounders rested and the court thereupon peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict against the will. This appeal followed.

Section 4828 of the Kentucky Statutes requires that the attesting witnesses: “shall subscribe the will with their names in the presence of the testator.” The general rule seems to be that if the act is done in the same room it is prima facie done in the presence of the testator; while, if it is done in another room, it is prima facie not done in his presence. 1 Page on Wills, 2d Ed., page 538. In Orndorff v. Hummer, 12 B. Mein. 619, the testator signed the will there in question while lying in bed and then relapsed into sleep or into a coma for some hours. Finally, the attesting witnesses approached the bed and offered the will to the testator. The testator opened his eyes, acknowledged the will, and immediately relapsed into sleep or a coma. The witnesses (and it will be noted that they were the attesting witnesses) testified that they then immediately went to a table just behind the head of the lounge on which the testator lay. The head-board of the lounge intervened between the testator and the table so that, at the moment of the subscription by the witnesses, he could not, as he lay in the bed, see the table, and, probably, not even see the witnesses. It was doubtful whether, if awake, he could have changed his position without assistance so as to see them. In holding the execution of that will to be not in the presence of the testator, the reasoning of the court is pertinent to the present con *152 troversy. It need not here be repeated in full. However, the court said:

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 981, 277 Ky. 147, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poindexters-admr-v-alexander-kyctapphigh-1939.