Williams v. King

760 S.W.2d 208, 1988 Tenn. LEXIS 193
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 760 S.W.2d 208 (Williams v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. King, 760 S.W.2d 208, 1988 Tenn. LEXIS 193 (Tenn. 1988).

Opinions

[209]*209OPINION

O’BRIEN, Justice.

We granted the application for permission to appeal filed by Mary R. Williams in order to address certain problems occurring as a result of Mrs. Williams effort to bring to probate what is purported to be the last will and testament of her brother, Sam D. King, who was a resident of Claiborne County, Tennessee.

The instrument offered for probate is titled Last Will and Testament of Sam King. By its terms he leaves his entire estate to Mrs. Williams. The instrument is dated 17 June 1974, appears to bear his signature, and is signed by Joe Standifer, Jean E. Davis and Fern Singleton, as attesting witnesses. It was also sworn to and acknowledged before the Claiborne County Court Clerk, Aileen L. Standifer. Mr. King died on 7 September 1985. Mr. King married sometime between the date of the execution of the instrument offered for probate and his death. After his demise his widow, Mrs. Billie Jean King, qualified as administratrix of his estate. On 10 January 1986 Mrs. Williams filed a petition to admit the will of Sam King for probate in solemn form. Process was served on Mrs. King. When the cause came on to be heard on 4 February 1986 she was present in response to the citation. No transcript was made of the probate proceedings. At the conclusion of the hearing the probate judge held the evidence to be insufficient and denied admission of the instrument to probate. He found that the purported will was witnessed by the three individuals noted heretofore. He took judicial notice that Joe Standifer was deceased. He found that Fern Singleton, the one attesting witness who appeared, testified that the subscribing witnesses did not sign in the presence of each other.

A subsequent motion to reconsider was filed and came on to be heard. A transcript of those proceedings has been preserved. It consists entirely of argument of counsel and the ruling of the court. Counsel for the proponent of the will advised the court that he had, “everything available that is available here today to probate it in solemn form if the court feels like it should be, or in common form ...” Counsel for the administratrix of the estate insisted she was not contesting the will, however, it is apparent that from the initiation of the petition for probate she has assumed an adversarial role throughout the trial and appellate proceedings. Through counsel she insisted that the court did not have authority to reconsider the matter having previously rejected the will for probate. At the conclusion of the arguments propounded by respective counsel the trial judge overruled the motion to reconsider based upon the fact that “in this court all witnesses have to be produced for probate in solemn form.” He noted that his prior judgment contained certain findings and in his opinion was valid and of record. Counsel for Mrs. Williams requested the court to consider admitting the will to probate in common form and the judge responded that he could not, in view of the prior judgment.

The case went to the Court of Appeals in this condition. The petitioner prepared a proposed statement of the evidence to which the administratrix filed objections. This statement averred in pertinent part that Fern Singleton, the only attesting witness who testified, did not specifically recall seeing the other two witnesses sign the will but said she may have been busy with something else while one or both of them was signing the will. The trial judge did not accept the statement of the evidence filed by the petitioner and made the following findings as a correct statement of all the evidence presented in the original probate proceeding:

(1) One witness, Fern Singleton, testified at the hearing on February 4, 1986.
(2) At that hearing, Fern Singleton testified under oath as follows:
A. The document presented for probate at the hearing on February 4, 1986, was drafted at the request of Samuel D. King.
B. Samuel D. King signed the document.
C. Samuel D. King acknowledged to Fern Singleton that the instrument in [210]*210question was his Last Will and Testament.
D. Fern Singleton knew Samuel D. King.
E. Fern Singleton saw Samuel D. King sign his will.
F. Fern Singleton signed the will as a witness to the signature of Samuel D. King, in the latter’s presence. Fern Singleton signed the will in the public office of Aileen Standifer, who was then County Court Clerk of Claiborne County.
G. Fern Singleton testified that the subscribing witnesses did not sign in the presence of each other.
H. The subscribing witness, Joe Stan-difer, husband of Aileen Standifer, was deceased on the date of the attempted probate before this court.
I. The subscribing witness Jean Davis is currently a resident of Claiborne County, Tennessee and is employed with the Claiborne County School System in Powell Valley.

The Court of Appeals concurred in the findings of the trial judge and affirmed his judgment.1 After careful consideration of the meager record presented to us for review we have come to the conclusion there was error in the proceedings in the trial court brought about by the manner in which the matter was presented by both counsel for the proponent of the will and for the administratrix of the estate.

The petition to admit the will of Sam King for probate requested that process issue and be served upon Billie Jean King in accordance with the law in cases of probate in solemn form. There is no doubt that the proponent of the will was aware that Sam King’s widow had been appointed administratrix of his estate. It is inconceivable that she and her counsel had not considered the possibility, nay, the almost certainty that the administratrix would respond to the notice served upon her and come to court as an avid contestant ready to preserve and protect her right to the intestate estate. Proponent’s counsel came to court, with one of the attesting witnesses in tow, relying, as he says, on the provisions of T.C.A. § 32-2-104(a), providing that written wills with witnesses thereto, when not contested, shall be proved by at least one of the subscribing witnesses, if living. He proceeded with the effort to prove the will while Mrs. King sat on the sidelines waiting for her counsel to, as he said, “cross-examine the witnesses that were presented with regard to them presenting this will in solemn form.”

Counsel for the Will proponent, cites Pritchard on Wills, Sec. 332, for the statement that “[t]he statute is silent on the subject of proof of wills in the county court in solemn form.” The exact quotation seems to be:

“The statute is silent on the subject of proof of wills in the county courts in solemn form, but by implication, con-formably to the practice in the ecclesiastical courts, requires that all the subscribing witnesses to be found should give testimony to establish a written will with witnesses in solemn form, even when no opposition is interposed.”

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Bluebook (online)
760 S.W.2d 208, 1988 Tenn. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-king-tenn-1988.