Wall v. Wall

30 Miss. 91
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 30 Miss. 91 (Wall v. Wall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wall v. Wall, 30 Miss. 91 (Mich. 1855).

Opinion

HANDY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The material facts presented by the record in this case, are ■briefly these:—

Jehu Wall, of Amité county, on the 11th February, 1845, executed an instrument in writing of the following tenor: “ For and in consideration of the good will and affection that I have for, and bear towards my brothers and sisters, and in consideration of the further sum of one dollar to me in hand paid by each, the receipt whereof I do hereby acknowledge, and for other good causes and services to me rendered, I do give, grant, bargain, sell, alien and convey to each of the following named brothers and sisters, the following named property.” And after specifying what was conveyed to each of them, the instrument concludes as follows: “ All of the aforesaid property I do hereby entail to my aforesaid brothers and sisters, to them and their heirs, in and for their own personal use and benefit, and not to be disposed of during their lifetime, but to be used for the benefit of raising each of their families — the deed to take effect, as far as regards the handing over of the property, at my death; and I reserve to myself the right to revoke it at any time during my life, by filing in the clerk’s office a written revocation, under my hand and seal. And I do hereby make known and declare that the signing, sealing and delivery of this deed, and placing the same amongst my papers, is intended by me as a delivery of said property at my death, and to take effect at that time. Signed, sealed and delivered, the 11th day of February, 1845.

“Jehu Wall, [l. s.]”

This instrument was formally acknowledged by Jehu Wall on the day of its date, before a justice of the peace, to be his act and [95]*95deed, and shortly thereafter, it was delivered by him to his brother Charles J. Wall, together with his last will and testament, which bore date the 11th March, 1845, with directions to keep them safely. He subsequently called upon his brother for the papers, saying that he would return them, and his brother delivered them to him, and they were not returned to his brother. But when the testator was in his last illness, and absent from home, he wrote to his brother, stating, in expectation of his death, that the instrument which he called a deed was among his valuable papers at home, in a certain place which he described, and requesting him to get the papers and have their provisions carried into effect, and after his death his brother called upon his widow, and they found the will and the paper in question in this case, where the testator had said in his letter they were deposited.

John Wall died in the year 1852 without issue, leaving a widow, having appointed his brother Charles J. Wall, his executor, by the regular will above mentioned, which will, as well as the instrument above described, dated 11th February, 1845, was in due form admitted to probate by the Probate Court of Amité county, at March term, 1852, as the last will and testament of Jehu Wall.

In July, 1855, the brothers and sisters filed their petition in the Probate Court, alleging that the instrument dated 11th February, 1845, was erroneously admitted to probate as a testamentary paper, and seeking to have the probate of it set aside and annulled. Upon the hearing of the case upon the pleadings and proofs showing the foregoing facts, the petition was dismissed, and the probate established ; from which decree the case is brought here by appeal.

The first question to be considered is, whether the Probate Court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the petition. It is contended, that after the will had been admitted to probate in common form, its validity could only be impeached upon a petition filed, and an issue awarded of devimvit vel non, to be tried by a jury, and that such is the provision of the act of 1821. Hutch. Code, 651, § 30. But we do not consider this a just view of the statute. It is undoubtedly true, that the probate in common form, as it is called, is merely an incipient step to be taken in order to give the court jurisdiction of the matter, and is not conclusive upon the [96]*96' parties interested in tbe estate, but may be opened and set aside upon sufficient legal grounds shown. This is tbe rule in tbe ecclesiastical courts in England, 1 Wins. Ex’ors, 876, 891, and is beld to be tbe rule bere. Hamberlin v. Terry, 7 How. 148; Garner v. Landsford, 12 S. &. M. 560; Cowder v. Dobyns, 5 Ib. 82. It would be strange that this right should be capable of being exercised solely by means of an issue of fact to be tried by a jury; for tbe grounds of objection to tbe validity of tbe alleged will might be purely of a legal character, involving no contested point of fact to be determined by a jury; and in such a case, it would be absurd to say, that tbe Probate Court would not have power, upon tbe petition of tbe heir or distributee, to set aside its probate of an instrument which appeared by facts not denied, not to be of a testamentary character. And this construction has already been recognized in tbe cases above cited.

Let us proceed, then, to consider tbe principal question in tbe case, whether the instrument before us is in law a deed or a will.

The determination of the legal character of instruments of this kind, depends mainly upon the question, whether the maker intended to convey any estate or interest to vest before his death, and upon the execution of the paper, or on the other hand, whether all interest and estate whatever, were to take effect only after his death. For the most part, that is governed by the provisions of the instrument, which may be sometimes aided by the concurrent circumstances of its execution; and the rule is well established, that whatever may be the form of the instrument or the circumstances of its execution and delivery, if upon the whole, the intention was, that it should have only a future operation after death, it must be held to be a will. And in such case, it is immaterial, whether the maker calls it a deed or a will; for it must nevertheless, have that effect which the law gives to it. Habergam v. Vincent, 2 Ves. Jr. 204, 231; Hester v. Young, 2 Kelly, (Ga.) 41; Harrington v. Harrington, 2 How. 720.

We must, therefore, in the first place, examine the terms of this instrument, as indicating its legal character.

The first feature .in it to be observed is, that it purports to be a deed of conveyance, in consideration of love and affection, and [97]*97also for a nominal money consideration. In tbis respect, it should rather be regarded as a deed of gift, than as one of bargain and sale; and from the statement of the consideration, it would appear that the money part of it.was inserted under the idea that it was necessary to give validity to it, when the instrument was really intended to be a gift to his brothers and sisters. McKee v. Moore, 5 S. & M. 243. But however this may be, it is in form a deed of conveyance.

The next thing to be noticed is, that it was acknowledged as -a deed duly “ executed and delivered;” and in conformity to the mode of delivery, stated in the instrument as the one adopted by him, and which was intended to be sufficient for that purpose; it was found after his death, “placed among his papers;” and shortly before his death he gave directions, as to the place where it was deposited, and as to its being carried into effect.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Miss. 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-wall-miss-1855.