Reed v. Lemacks

28 S.E.2d 441, 204 S.C. 26, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 63
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1943
Docket15602
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 S.E.2d 441 (Reed v. Lemacks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed v. Lemacks, 28 S.E.2d 441, 204 S.C. 26, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 63 (S.C. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Associate Justice Stukes

delivered the unanimous Opinion of the Court:

Laura B. Lemacks died in the State Hospital in Columbia on May 20, 1941. Her brother-in-law, J. C. Lemacks, filed in the Probate Court of Colleton County and procured on May 28, 1941, the probate of her purported will dated September 28, 1928, of which he was sole beneficiary and was also executor. It recited that the testatrix was a resident of Walterboro, Colleton County, “but now in Columbia, South Carolina,” and was witnessed by the superintendent and two other members of the medical staff of the -hospital who'appended their certificate, in addition to the *29 usual attestation, to the effect that they had thoroughly examined the mental condition of the testatrix just prior to the execution of the will and that in their opinion she was mentally capable of making it, that it was read by her and explained by them, that she understood it, etc. Mr. Lemacks qualified as executor by taking the usual oath and letters testamentary were issued him.

On March 13, 1942, appellant’s attorney inquired by letter of the Probate Judge of Colleton whether the will of Mrs. Lemacks (who was his client’s aunt) had been probated and he was promptly and correctly so informed by reply addressed to him in Charleston. Appellant then appeared in the Probate Court for Colleton by her petition, verified April 9, 1942, in which she alleged that before committal of the testatrix as an insane person to the State Hospital she had been confined as such in the Roper Hospital whence she went from petitioner’s home; that the deceased had moved earlier in the same year, 1925, from her former home at Walterboro in Colleton County to live with petitioner with the intention of permanently residing in the City of Charleston, and was committed as a resident of Charleston, which she was when last a sane and competent person, which fact required the probate of her will in that county; that the purported will dated September 28, 1928, was executed when she was confined as an insane person and the probate of it was obtained upon the allegation that she was at the time of her death an inhabitant of Colleton; that respondent, the sole beneficiary of the purported will which had been admitted to probate, would take the entire estate tó the exclusion of the blood relations of the decedent, of whinh latter appellant is. q

It was further alleged in the petition that on November 9, 1922, when testatrix was sane, she executed her will whereundér petitioner (appellant) was the sole beneficiary and respondent was executor and the latter furnished appellant with a copy of that will, he having the original for safe *30 keeping; and that the first will, just mentioned, has not been legally revoked; but respondent, despite demand, has refused to deliver the original or procure its probate, though admitting possession of it; that petitioner (appellant) is an heir-at law and distributee of the deceased and is thereby interested, and under the alleged true will, that executed in 1922, is the sole beneficiary; that the legal requirement of jurisdiction of a Probate Court of the estates of deceased inhabitants of only the county of such Court deprives the Colleton Probate Court of jurisdiction, which exists in this case only in the Probate Court of Charleston County under the facts alleged and particularly under the order of the Charleston Court committing the testatrix to the State Hospital in 1925, from which order there has been no appeal and which was in effect at the time of the death of the testatrix in 1941, so that the Colleton Court is entirely without jurisdiction of the will and estate.

The prayer accompanying the petition was for a rule against respondent individually and as executor to show cause why the prior order of the Court, dated May 28, 1941, admitting the will to probate in common form should not be revoked for the reason that jurisdiction thereof existed only in the Probate Court for Charleston County where testatrix was last an inhabitant, and that testimony be taken by the Court to establish the issue of residence and domicile; and why the certificate of the attesting witnesses as to the alleged mental capacity of the testatrix should not be can-celled and the filing of it refused; and finally “for such other .and further relief as to the Court may seem just and proper.”

The Judge of Probate thereupon issued his rule dated April 15, 1942, to respondent individually and as executor requiring him to show cause why the order admitting the will to probate in common form should not be revoked, etc., for the reason that jurisdiction thereof lies in Charleston County because of the committal of testatrix to the State Hospital by the Probate Judge of the latter county, with his *31 accompanying findings; why there should not be such revocation because the residence and domicile of testatrix was in Charleston County when she was last sane, and under the committal order testatrix continued as a patient in the State Hospital until death, in such mental condition; and third, why the certificate of sanity by the attesting witnesses, attached to the will, should not be withdrawn from the record and filing of it refused.

In addition to making return, respondent moved for discharge of the rule upon the grounds that there had been no appeal from the order admitting the will to probate and qualifying respondent as executor and the record thereupon showed no jurisdictional defect and appellant was a stranger thereto.

The Probate Judge heard only the motion which he sustained upon the grounds that there had been no appeal from his former order and want of jurisdiction of the Court did not appear upon the face of the proceeding. He overruled respondent’s third ground, that appellant was a stranger to the proceeding, saying that the record before him affirmatively showed her interest in the estate “would entitle her to contest the validity of the will * * * and any relevant matter growing out of its admission to probate.” He expressly refused to receive any evidence.

Thereupon appellant appealed to the Court of Common Pleas, in form both from the order of May 28, 1941, admitting the will to probate and qualifying the designated executor and from the later order, dated May 18, 1942, refusing hearing upon the merits of the rule to show cause, the first appeal being based principally, at least', upon the attempted showing of the adjudication in 1925 of the testatrix as an insane person by the Charleston Probate Court arid it was alleged that thereafter that Court had exclusive jurisdiction of the person of the deceased and of the probate of her will, she being last a resident of Charleston County. The appeal from the order discharging the rule to *32 show cause was upon eight exceptions which attempted' to raise many issues, including a sufficient one under our view, in effect that the Probate Court erroneously refused to receive and pass upon evidence affecting its jurisdiction of the matter of the probate of the will and the qualification of the executor.

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Related

Asbury v. South Carolina National Bank ex rel. Will of Fuller
231 S.E.2d 306 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1977)
Henry v. Cottingham
170 S.E.2d 387 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1969)
S.C. Nat. Bank of Charleston v. May
44 S.E.2d 836 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1947)
Reed v. Lemacks
35 S.E.2d 34 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E.2d 441, 204 S.C. 26, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-lemacks-sc-1943.