Warren v. Sidney's Estate

184 So. 806, 183 Miss. 669, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 281
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1938
DocketNo. 33442.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 184 So. 806 (Warren v. Sidney's Estate) 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
Warren v. Sidney's Estate, 184 So. 806, 183 Miss. 669, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 281 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

*675 Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Chancellor in his opinion, made part of the record, embodied his findings of fact and conclusions of law. We are of the opinion that his findings of fact were amply justified by the evidence, and his conclusions of law are the correct governing principles. We do not think we could do better than to adopt his opinion as the opinion of the Court. It follows:

This is a proceeding to establish a lost or destroyed will alleged to have been executed by Mary Sidney, deceased, in her lifetime and attested by J. W. Isabel and Lonnie Banks as witnesses. R. D. Warren, Sheriff of Yazoo County, as public escheator, under the authority of Chapter 27, Code of 1930, section 1511 et seq., instituted a contest of the will on the grounds that it was not properly executed and that Mary Sidney did not have testamentary capacity at the time of the alleged execution of the will.

The first question presented is whether or not the state has a right to contest the ¿nob ate of a will. It seems to be settled by the weight of authority that the state, both in view of its rights under escheat to the property of intestates who die without heirs, and as par-ens patriae for the protection of the interests of any possible unknown heir who might appear, may bring suit to contest a probated will. 68 C. J., sec. 671, page 928, citing State v. Rector, 134 Kan. 685, 8 P. (2d) 323; State v. Nieuwenhuis, 43 S. D. 199, 178 N. W. 976; contra In re Leslie’s Estate, 92 Misc. 663, 156 N. Y. S. 346, 350, affirmed 175 App. Div. 108, 161 N. Y. S. 790. So far as known, Mary Sidney left no heirs at law.

The burden of proof as to the validity of a will is on the proponents thereof throughout the contest of the same. Brown v. Walker (Miss.), 11 So. 724; Isom v. Canedy, 128 Miss. 64, 88 So. 485. And this burden of proof extends to (1) the proof of the existence and proper execution of the will, (2) to the evidence of its loss or *676 destruction, and (3) to the proof of its contents, but it is well settled that when the contents of a will lost or improperly destroyed without the knowledge of the testator are satisfactorily proved by witnesses, it will be established as the will; but the policy of the law requires such contents to be established by the clearest, most convincing and satisfactory proof. Vining v. Hall, 40 Miss. 83.

Section 1602 of the Code of 1930 provides:

“The due execution of the will must be proved by at least one of the subscribing' witnesses, if alive and resident in the state, and competent to testify; but if none of the subscribing witnesses can be produced to prove the execution of the will, it may be established by proving the handwriting of a testator, and of the subscribing witnesses to the will, or of some of them. ’ ’

Secondary evidence cannot be used to prove due execution of a will if the subscribing witnesses will and can prove the facts, until they have been called or produced. Helm v. Sheeks, 116 Miss. 726, 77 So. 820. But proof of the due execution of the will may, if necessary, be made by others than subscribing witnesses, although subscribing witnesses must be produced, if possible. Tyson v. Utterback, 154 Miss. 381, 122 So. 496, 63 A. L. R. 1188.

J. W. Isabel testified that, with the aid of a business guide and a dictionary, he drafted the will for Mary Sidney according to her directions and at her special request. He states that Mary Sidney told him she wanted to draw up a will so that if she died at any time Durwood Collins, whom she had raised from a child, would get everything, because it had been understood between her and her dead husband that the property should go in this manner after her death. He testified that Mary Sidney signed the will, and that h& and Lonnie Banks signed as attesting witnesses in the presence of Mary ■Sidney and in the presence of each other. Mary Sidney could not write, but she signed by her mark, made by *677 the witness J. W. Isabel. The witness stated further that Mary Sidney was at the time more than 21 years of age and of sound and disposing memory. The other attesting witness to the will, Lonnie Banks, testified that he did not remember signing as an attesting witness or being present at the execution of the will, and that, according to his recollection, he had never attested the will and was not present when it was executed. J. W. Isabel further testified that Mary Sidney requested him to prepare two copies of the will and then mail the original will to the Rankin County Bank at Brandon. He stated that the copies prepared by him were true, correct and exact copies of the original will, and that said copies were made sometime after the execution of the original will. Mary Sidney instructed him to mail the original of the will to the Rankin County Bank at Brandon and to mail a copy of the will to Durwood Collins in Washington, D. C., and to deliver the other copy to her for her keeping. He undertook to comply with these instructions and mailed a copy to Durwood Collins and thought he was mailing the original of the will to the Bank at Brandon. It was his intention and Mary Sidney’s intention to deliver the other copy to Mary Sidney for her keeping.

However, after the death of Mary Sidney, it developed that Isabel had sent a copy of the will to the Bank at Brandon and a copy of the will to Durwood Collins and had evidently delivered the original will to Mary Sidney. After the death of Mary Sidney a thorough search was made by witnesses through the papers and belongings of Mary Sidney, but no will was found among her papers. The copy of the will procured from the Bank at Brandon, and supported by the proof of its execution and the competency of the testator at the time of the execution by the attesting witness, Isabel, has been offered in evidence. The question is whether or not the proponent has met the burden of proof and has established by the clearest, most conclusive and satisfactory proof that the *678 will was properly executed aud was in existence or believed to be in existence by Mary Sidney at tbe time of her death; that the original will has been lost and that the copy of the will offered in evidence is a true copy of the will executed by Mary Sidney.

Section 1602 of the Code of 1930, as set out above, does not require that the execution of the will be proved by more than one of the subscribing witnesses, and this has been done by the witness, Isabel. In the case of Crusoe v. Butler, 36 Miss. 150, the court used this language:

“When it appears from the face of a will that there are three subscribing witnesses, it may be proven by one witness so as to authorize its probate to pass realty, if the witness examined prove that it was duly attested by the others. . . . If the record of the probate . . . state that ‘it was duly proven by one of the witnesses, and admitted to probate,’ and it does not affirmatively appear that that witness proved only the attestation by himself and execution in his presence, it will be presumed . . . that the witness testified to every fact necessary to the due execution.”'

The witness, Isabel, testified to every fact necessary to the due execution of the will by Mary Sidney.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 So. 806, 183 Miss. 669, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-sidneys-estate-miss-1938.