Starnes v. Andre

421 S.W.2d 616, 243 Ark. 712, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1175
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 11, 1967
Docket5-4364
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 421 S.W.2d 616 (Starnes v. Andre) 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
Starnes v. Andre, 421 S.W.2d 616, 243 Ark. 712, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1175 (Ark. 1967).

Opinion

John A. Fogleman, Justice.

This appeal comes from a probate court judgment setting aside its previous order admitting a certain paper writing to probate as the last will of Lillian Frances Starnes, deceased. Appellant is the surviving spouse and appellees are the surviving heirs at law. The judgment appealed from was rendered upon appellees’ petition to contest the probate of the will based on allegations that the will had been revoked by the testatrix. After hearing the evidence, the court made a specific finding that the will was intentionally and effectively revoked by the decedent through her cancellation of it by writing the word “void” at the top of each page of the instrument and by placing cross marks through the provisions of each page.

Appellant urges two points for reversal. They are:

I. The court erred in finding that the will of decedent was intentionally and effectively revoked.
II. The court erred in failing to apply, in the alternative, the doctrine of dependent relative revocation.

To sustain his first point, appellant argues that: (1) the action taken does not constitute an intentional revocation even if done by the testatrix and (2) the preponderance of the evidence does not support the court’s finding that it was done by the testatrix with that intention.

Certain facts are undisputed. After the burial of Mrs. Starnes on the afternoon of August 12, 1966, the day after her death, Mr. Starnes, her husband, and Jay C. Calloway, a certified public accountant who had been serving her professionally since 1942 or 1943, went through, her personal papers at the Starnes home. These papers were in a metal box which Mr. Starnes had at his home and brought to the dining room table. The box appeared to have been unlocked. Certain personal papers and letters were put in one pile and the “pertinent” papers in another. Mr. Starnes put those in the latter pile in a letter container similar to a brief case and Calloway advised him that he should take them to his attorney, Mr. Blackmon, whom they had called. No will was found at that time. On Monday, August 15th, Starnes took the papers he had put in the letter carrier to Calloway’s office. The four sheets of paper alleged to constitute Mrs. Starnes’ holographic will were then found folded inside a small envelope. The writing on these pages was the handwriting of the decedent. On the upper part of each of the first three pages the word “void” was written so that no part of the word touched any of the writing constituting the will. Over the face of each of the four sheets were cross marks commonly called X-marks and sometimes referred to at the hearing as “hatch” marks. On the first three pages there were two or more of these marks and on the fourth page there was a single elongated X-mark virtually as long as the written matter on the page. On the first three pages a few diagonal lines appeared, in addition to those necessary to form the X’s. The first three pages were testamentary in nature and signed by Mrs. Starnes. The fourth page seems to have been a memorandum of property belonging to her. Mrs. Starnes had a custom or practice of marking an “X” through the writing on personal records and papers when she was through with them.

The statutory requirements for revocation of a will are set out in Ark. Stat. Ann. § 60-406 (Supp. 1967) which is a section of our probate code. Insofar as pertinent under these circumstances, a will can be revoked only:

“ b. By being burnt, torn; cancelled, obliterated or destroyed, with the intent and for the purpose of revoking the same, by the testator himself or by another person in his presence : and by his direction. If such act is done by any person other than the testator, the direction of the testator and the facts of such injury or destruction must be proved by two witnesses who are not benefited by the revocation of the will.”

This provision has been virtually the same since the approval of the Revised Statutes on March 3, 1838. While the parties have cited cases from many jurisdictions as to the requisites for cancellation of a will, we need not go beyond our own statutes and decisions on two appeals involving the same will. Cook v. Jeffett, 169 Ark. 62, 272 S. W. 873; Jeffett v. Cook, 175 Ark. 369, 299 S. W. 389. While two wills were involved in those appeals, we are concerned with only the earlier one made by the testatrix in 1917, as that is the one as to which there was an issue as to revocation by cancellation. Certain words in two clauses of that typewritten will were interlined by running a pen, or pencil through certain of the words in these clauses in such a way that the typewritten words were not illegible. The court said:

a* * * [T]hat if the proof warrants the finding that these erasures were made by the testator or by her direction they operate only as a revocation of the parts of the will thus obliterated, * *

Since there was no direct evidence as to the custody of the will during the lifetime ■ of testatrix and no direct proof as to who made the erasures or the circumstances under which the same were made, the court remanded the case for a fuller development of the facts without expressing any opinion as to inferences that might he drawn from the circumstances proved. On the second appeal, it was said that the will had been found with the personal effects of the testatrix after her death. The judgment of the lower court finding the whole will to have been revoked was reversed and the case remanded with instruction's to the trial court to enter a judgment to admit the will to probate. This court stated, however, that the testatrix had marked these words out and that the manner of marking or crossing them out plainly-showed the intention of the testatrix to revoke her will insofar as these two clauses were concerned. In applying the opinion on the first appeal, this court said that its effect was to hold that if that which is essential to the validity of the whole will is cancelled or obliterated with the intention of revoking it, the whole will is revoked.

The writing of the word “void” on the pages of the will, together with the marks across the pages ther©-of in the manner and form used by Mrs. Starnes to cancel papers which had served their purpose, would justify the inference that it was done with the intention to revoke the will, if it was done by her.

Testimony was offered by appellant that the word “void” was in the handwriting of the testatrix. Callo-way stated that he was familiar with her handwriting and thought that the word “void” was in her handwriting. Appellee Naomi S. Andre, a sister of Mrs. Starnes, stated that the word was definitely in her handwriting. Appellee Mavis Redmond, another sister, said that the word looked like her sister’s handwriting. Camilla F. Watson, who had been employed by Mrs. Starnes as a waitress in 1942, had lived in the home of Mrs. Starnes and her first husband and had worked in Mrs. Starnes’ liquor store, said that she was familiar with Mrs. Starnes’ handwriting and that the word was written by her.

On the other hand, Juanita Henderson, an employee in Mrs. Starnes’ liquor store since 1965, said that the word did not look like the handwriting of the latter, but she would not say positively that it was not. Lela Mae Crow said that she had worked in the liquor store for ten years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
421 S.W.2d 616, 243 Ark. 712, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starnes-v-andre-ark-1967.