Ragsdale v. Hill

269 S.W.2d 911, 37 Tenn. App. 671, 1954 Tenn. App. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 26, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 269 S.W.2d 911 (Ragsdale v. Hill) 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
Ragsdale v. Hill, 269 S.W.2d 911, 37 Tenn. App. 671, 1954 Tenn. App. LEXIS 99 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

FELTS, J.,

This appeal presents a contest of the validity of a paper-writing propounded as the last will and testament of Newman H. Hill, deceased. The principal question is whether this instrument was “attested” as prescribed by the applicable law so as to entitle it to be probated as the will of the deceased.

*675 He was a resident of Davidson County, Tennessee, unmarried, childless, and had no ldn except his mother, Mrs. Ophelia Hill, and some cousins, one of whom was proponent Walter D. Ragsdale. He and Ragsdale were about the same age and had been intimate friends since childhood; and he and his mother had spent much time in Ragsdale’s home where they had both been treated with great consideration and kindness.

He was a veteran of World War I and was a patient in the Veterans’ Hospital at Biloxi, Mississippi, where he executed this instrument on July 14, 1948. He called two of the hospital employees, Mrs. Ruth R. Merritt and Frank E. Baker, a notary public, to his room, and read over this paper, which had already been prepared in typewriting, declared it to be his will, and signed it in the presence of these two witnesses. But they did not subscribe their names to it, though Baker took Hill’s acknowledgment and affixed his name and seal to it as a notary.

By this paper he gave all of his personal effects to his mother, if living, otherwise to proponents Walter D. Ragsdale and wife, Mattie Sue, and he gave the rest of his property in trust to the Nashville Trust Company as trustee for the use of his mother during her life, and provided that the trust should cease at her death and the balance of the fund should go to Walter D. Ragsdale and wife. He also appointed the Nashville Trust Company his executor.

He had a bank account with the Nashville Trust Company, and that concern was already acting as trustee in a small trust which he had set up for the use of his mother. After executing this paper as above stated, he sent it by mail to the Nashville Trust Company. On receiving it *676 tlie trust officer failed to note that it was notarized instead of being subscribed by two witnesses. It was kept by the company in Hill’s file and is now sent up in the original.

A week or so after receiving this paper the Nashville Trust Company received notice of the death of Newman H. Hill, which death occurred about the 2'2nd of July, 1948. On August 13, 1948, the company’s trust officer took this paper to County Judge Hickman, who stated that it could not be probated. But it was marked filed and kept in the Clerk’s office. The trust officer was appointed administrator of the estate of Newman TI. Hill, deceased, and proceeded with its administration.

About a year later Walter H. Ragsdale learned for the first time that Newman TI. Hill had executed the paper in question, and then went to see it in the office of the County Court Clerk. On September 30, 1949, the County Judge entered an order denying probate of it because it was not witnessed by two subscribing witnesses as required by the Acts of 1941, Chapter 125, Section 4, now 1950 Tenn. Code Supp. Section 8098.4.

On February 4,1950, Walter D. Ragsdale was permitted to withdraw this paper from the files of the County Court Clerk, and on February 7, 1950, the witnesses Frank E. Baker and Mrs. Ruth Merritt signed and swore to an attestation on a separate sheet of paper which was physically attached to the will.

This attestation stated that Frank E. Baker and Mrs. Ruth R. Merritt “witnessed the execution of the annexed and foregoing instrument by Newman H. Hill, on the date same bears date, to wit: July 14, 1948, as and for his last will and testament, at his request, in his presence and in the presence of each other and we now sign as subscribing witnesses thereto.” This attestation was dated February 7, I960’, and signed by these two witnesses.

*677 At the same time also was attached an affidavit by both of them, the substance of which was as follows:

On Jnly 14, 1948, abont a week before the death of Newman H. Hill, affiants were called to his room to witness his will. He read over the paper, which he had already cansed to be prepared, and stated it was his will and he wished to sign it in their presence and have his signature properly attested. He did sign it but both he and they thought it should be signed and attested before a notary public under the notary’s seal, and not by the signatures of two attesting witnesses.

Affiant Baker thereupon took the acknowledgment of the testator to the will and affixed the notary seal, as it now appears on that paper; but neither of affiants signed the paper as witnesses, though both were qualified to do so. They further stated that, by the “instrument hereto attached, ’ ’ they signed as witnesses to said last will and testament “as of this date.” It was further stated that the testator was of sound and disposing mind and memory.

On March 28, 1950, Walter D. Ragsdale and wife commenced the present proceeding by filing their petition in the County Court of Davidson County, exhibiting the paper-writing and the papers attached thereto, and prayed that said writing be admitted to probate as the last will and testament of Newman H. Hill, deceased.

Mrs. Ophelia Hill, the Nashville Trust Company as her guardian, she having been adjudged of unsound mind, and Overton Thompson, Jr., administrator of the estate of Newman H. Hill, were made defendants to the petition. They demurred to it upon the grounds that the alleged will was not executed in accordance with the law of Tennessee or the law of Mississippi, and that the former *678 order denying probate of it was res judicata and a bar to the petition.

The G'onnty Court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the petition. Petitioners appealed to the Circuit Court, that court overruled the demurrer, and defendants answered. Mrs. Ophelia Hill died and the cause was revived as to the beneficiaries named in her will. The case was tried before the Circuit Judge, without a jury, and he decreed the paper was a valid will, and remanded the cause to the County Court for further proceedings. Defendants appealed in error to this Court and have assigned errors.

Petitioners have moved to dismiss this appeal in the nature of a writ of error, upon a number of grounds.

First, it is urged that the 1950 supplement to the Code, Section 10622', provides that all cases, both actions at law and suits in equity, tried without a jury “shall be reviewed upon a simple appeal, as now provided in equity casesthat the only mode of review in all non-jury cases is now an appeal; and that this Court has no jurisdiction of an appeal in the nature of a writ of error in such a case as this one.

The 1932 Code, Section 9059, provides that any party to a decree in equity shall have the right to take an appeal in the nature of a writ of error from such decree, upon the same terms as an appeal. That is, both modes of review were ‘ ‘provided in equity cases ’ ’ when Section 10622 was enacted in its present form. Grib son’s Suits in Chancery, 4th Ed., Sec. 1266.

It may well be doubted whether this earlier section was repealed by the later one.

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Bluebook (online)
269 S.W.2d 911, 37 Tenn. App. 671, 1954 Tenn. App. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ragsdale-v-hill-tennctapp-1954.