Winstead v. . Bowman

68 N.C. 170
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 68 N.C. 170 (Winstead v. . Bowman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winstead v. . Bowman, 68 N.C. 170 (N.C. 1873).

Opinion

Rodman, J.

This was an issue upon a writing propounded as the will of Andrew Lindsay. It was admitted on the trial to be entirely in his handwriting. It was not subscribed, but his name was written in the first part of the writing, which declared-it to be his will.

Three issues were submitted to a jury:

1. Was the paper writing, &c., found among the valuable papers and effects of the deceased at his death ?

2. Is it in his handwriting ? (This was admitted.)

3. Did the alleged testator intend the script propounded to be his last will and testament?

The jury under the instruction of the Judge, found “that the script was in the handwriting of the deceased, but was not found among his most valuable papers, and that it is not his last will.” -Whereupon the Court gave judgment .for the caveators and the propounders appealed.

The only issue upon which the Judge seems to have instructed the jury or to have been requested to instruct them, was the first. His instructions on this excluded any consideration of the third issue. As in. the view we take of this case, it must go back for a new trial. The instructions of the Judge upon the first issue will be the only subject considered.

They were these: “ Upon the hypothesis of there being but one proper place of deposit, to-wit: with the valuable papers and effects, that is, the most valuable, (the word “in” is here in the record, but evidently by mistake,) the trunk *172 ;in which, the script was found, was not a proper depository under the statute. The propounders however insisted that there might be two proper depositories for a holograph will under the statute; but to constitute such, he (the Judge) was satisfied there must be a somewhat equal division of the valuable papers and effects between the two places claimed ■as legal depositories. So that, if in this case, the jury are satisfied that the papers and effects found in the trunk were •insignificant in appreciable value as compared with the papers and effects found in the tin box, then the trunk was ■not a legal depository in any view which can be taken of it under the statute.” The evidence as to the place of finding was, in substance, this: The deceased was a single man. He lived in Greensboro for several years before his death -.and occupied a room in the same building with the Bank of Greensboro. He died in Richmond, whither he had gone for his health, in November 1870. After his death the room in Greensboro was found locked, and in it was found a trunk, also locked, one of the keys to- which was found in •the tin box hereafter spoken of. In a tray of the trunk ■were found the script in question, some old letters and receipts, accounts of the settlement of a partnership in which the deceased had been concerned, several memorandum books, seven notes payable to deceased, amounting in all to the nominal value of $600 or thereabouts, and a list of the bonds, &c., hereafter mentioned as found in a tin box. In the trunk, below the tray, were found articles of wearing •apparel. Some of the above papers were tied up in bundles, -but most of them were lying loose. One envelope was •endorsed in the handwriting of the deceased, “ Receipts and valuable papers,” but it contained only old accounts receipted at the foot, and some notes made by the deceased Which he had paid and from which he had torn his name.

In a tin box, which had been left by the deceased in the 'care of the Bank of Greensboro, were found a key to the *173 above mentioned trunk, bonds of tbe State of North Carolina to the nominal amount of $11,500, and bonds and note® of individuals to the nominal value of. about $10,000.

It will be seen that while the. papers found in the trunk, were not insignificant, and possessed some value, both as evidences of past transactions and of existing credits, yet their value in both respects was greatly less than that of those found in the tin box.

We will now consider the instructions of the Judge founded on this state of the evidence.

The Revised Code (ch. 119, sec. 1) enacts that no last will shall be good unless signed by the testator and witnessed* “ or unless such last will and testament be found among the valuable papers and effects of any deceased person,” &c.

Can this script, upon a proper constru^ion of the statute* be said to have been found among the valuable papers and effects of the deceased ? The word “ and,” italicized above* stood or ” in the Revised Statutes, but was substituted in the Revised Code (1856). We do not think that this substitution was intended to make any change in the meaning of the Act. At all events, it made none to affect the present-case. We only notice it to put it out of the way.

The leading case in this State — we may say the only one touching the question before us — is Little v. Lockman, 4 Jones, 494 (1857). We do not mean to question the propriety of the judgment in that case. But with great respect-for the learned and able Judge who delivered the opinion of the Court, it seems to us that he put too much stress on the-definite article “ the” in the expression “ the valuable papers,” &c. It may be inferred from the argument of the learned Judge, though probably it was not intended to be* that if a man has two places in which he keeps his valuable papers, &c., and what purports to be his will, be found in that one of them in which other papers are found of considerable value in themselves, but very greatly surpassed by *174 .the value of those found in some other place, the script (not being found among the most valuable papers) is not found in rsuch a place as the statute requires in order to give it validity as a will. This inference, however, is not a legitimate one, .(although the learned Judge below seems to have drawn it); for, the Judge whose opinion we are considering, clearly admits that a man may have two places in which he keeps his valuable papers, and then goes on to contrast, not two places in both of which are papers of value, but of unequal values, but two places in one of which are found papers of no appreciable value, and in the other papers of value. Thus ■understood, the justness of the opinion will not be questioned. In the present case, however, the deceased did have two places, in both of which he kept papers of value, although the value of those in one was greatly in excess of that of those in the other. ' So the question is distinctly presented : must the script be found in that place in which the most valuable papers were kept? "We think that it is not only possible for a man to have more than one place for keeping his valuable papers and effects, but that men of any considerable estate, or engaged in any considerable business, do in general have two such places or more. A merchant in a city will probably keep his cash on deposit in a bank; the sum he carries in his pocket-book or keeps in the drawer >of his counting-house desk, will be inconsiderable.

If he owns real estate, or government or other bonds, as •a permanent investment, he may keep them in a tin box in the vaults of a security company or of a bank.

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.C. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winstead-v-bowman-nc-1873.