Smith v. Smith

232 S.W.2d 338, 33 Tenn. App. 507, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 26, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 232 S.W.2d 338 (Smith v. Smith) 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
Smith v. Smith, 232 S.W.2d 338, 33 Tenn. App. 507, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

*510 ANDERSON, P. J.

This was a proceeding for the probate of a script as the holographic will of Fred E. Smith, deceased, of Bristol, Tennessee! It was tried in the Law Court at Bristol upon an issue of devisavit vel non. There was a verdict against the propounded instrument. A judgment was entered accordingly, and the proponents appealed in error.

The determinative question is presented by the proponents’ contention that under applicable principles of law there was no material evidence to support the verdict, and hence that their motion for a directed verdict sustaining the script as the holographic will of the deceased, should have been granted.

Fred E. Smith died on December 29, 1946, survived by his widow, Bessie A. Smith, and four children, Alexander Smith Sh'ipley, June Smith Esser, Martha A. Smith and Judy Smith Melver, as his only heirs. The propounded script is dated October 31, 1942. The deceased’s estate consisted of both real and personal property worth $40,000 to $50,000. Following his death, no will having been found, his widow,.Bessie A. Smith, and Bert E. Smith, a brother, qualified as joint administrators of the estate on January 4, 1947. Bessie A. Smith resigned the trust and was succeeded by E., M. Esser, husband of June'Smith Esser, who qualified on January 31, 1947, as a joint administrator, with Bert E. Smith.

On the first Sunday in February, 1947, the propounded instrument was found in a drawer of a desk in the business office occupied by the deceased at and prior to his death.

The undisputed evidence showed that this instrument, including the signature, is wholly in the handwriting of the deceased, Fred E. Smith; and as the *511 case was developed, the issue narrowed to the single question of whether the deceased intended the instrument to operate as his will.

The original is in the transcript, and is in the following language, with abbreviations, interlineations and erasures reproduced exactly as they appear, insofar as it is possible to do so on a typewriter:

“Last Will and Testament
“After all legal [and personal] * indebtedness paid, in appreciation valuable financial aid and wise counsel, 10% to Bert E. Smith or Bert E. Smith Jr. if Bert E. Smith deceased, if both deceased to revert to my general estate, 10% to three causes, Home Mission Committee
_ Bristol ,,
_ of Holston Presbytery, King College yMCA
$1000.00 Bessie A. Smith, Remainder to my children, Alexander Smith Shipley, June Smith Esser, Martha Hamilton Smith and Judith (Judy) Smith, share and share alike.
“Such real and personal property that may be vested in me at my death shall be sold and converted into cash
final
before / distribution is made.
“Executor not to be limited by time to convert, except limited to 5 yrs after my death until distribution made. Advise early disposition.
“Share to Martha Hamilton Smith held in trust by executor, acting as trustee $40.00 Mo. until married and lived continuously with husband 2 yrs. If severe illness trustee distribute as in his discretion is needed.
“Appoint Bert E. Smith, my brother, executor, if de- or physically unable
ceased / Bert E. Smith, Jr, my nephew.
*512 “May serve without bond as executor and/or trustee Those of my children who may have completed a college education and to whom [a charge] * I have entered a charge shall be accounted for in settlement.
‘ ‘ Oct. 31-1942 Fred E. Smith. ’ ’

The entire instrument was written with a pencil on one piece of yellow paper approximately 8V2 by 13 inches in size, such as is usually found in business offices in pads and used for scratch paper and memoranda.

The words crossed out in the first line were marked over heavily with a pencil so as to obliterate them. As indicated, they appear to have been, “and personal”. The words, “Advise early disposition”, in the last line of the third paragraph, have the appearance of having been written with a different pencil, or at least one with a different lead.

The deceased was 59 years of age at the time of his death. For many years he operated an insurance business in Bristol under the firm name of “SKM Agency”. He had attended college for two years and was an experienced and apparently successful business man. He was habitually careful and precise in executing his business transactions, and exacted like conduct on the part of his employees, of whom there were four at the time of his death.

The yellow pads of paper, on one sheet of which the propounded script is written, were customarily used by the deceased for making memoranda and rough drafts of instruments preparatory to putting them in final form. Sometimes he drafted letters on such paper, which were turned over to his secretary to be typewritten. In his business office the deceased had an iron safe, or “vault”, *513 in which were kept his “insurance policies, deeds of trust and things like that, wrapped up in a bundle with a string tied round them”. Records of his business, “some church papers”, contracts and letters, were also kept in the safe. After his death no papers of any permanent value were found elsewhere.

Shortly after the deceased died, a search for a will was made at his business office and elsewhere, but, as stated, none was found, and administrators of his estate were accordingly appointed and qualified. In the prosecution of their trust, they reorganized the insurance business and sold the controlling interest therein. On the first Sunday in February, 1947, the day before the purchaser was to take over the business, Messrs. Esser and Shipley, sons-in-law of the deceased, went to the office in which the business was conducted, for the purpose of separating the personal belongings of the deceased from those of the business. While so engaged, Esser discovered the propounded script in one of the bottom drawers of an open desk which had been customarily used by the deceased in the prosecution of his business. The desk had been searched before by Esser and his co-administrator, Bert Smith, in an effort to locate a will, and Esser was unable to explain why the script had not been discovered at that time. Referring to the discovery of the will, Esser testified: “This was on a tablet form, I mean the tablet, and it was lying in the desk drawer in the left hand side desk drawer, with some old books and some old seals of SKM Incorporated, long time ago, and some other things”. Elsewhere he testified that the books were “old, out-of-date insurance books”, and “this (the script) was lying down flat, just flat. I don’t know whether it was on top or middleway or *514

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W.2d 338, 33 Tenn. App. 507, 1949 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-smith-tennctapp-1949.