Young's v. Toliver's Administrator

284 S.W. 389, 214 Ky. 769, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 435
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 4, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 389 (Young's v. Toliver's Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young's v. Toliver's Administrator, 284 S.W. 389, 214 Ky. 769, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 435 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Samrson

Reversing.

A writing purporting to be the last will and testament Of Susan M. Young, a colored woman, of Louisville, who died on the 17th day of May, 1923, is the subject of *770 this controversy. It was admitted to probate by the Jefferson county court, and the Louisville Trust Company named as executor, duly qualified as such and undertook the discharge of its duties. The testatrix left no kin save Julia Toliver, an old colored woman, a cousin, who has departed this life since the first trial of this case. The estate consisted of a small house and lot in Louisville worth about $1,000.00 and about $1,200.00 in money and personal property. Excluding the preamble the will reads:

“(1) In this my last will and testament, I hereby direct my executor, hereinbefore named, to pay all of my funeral expenses and just debts.
“ (2) In this my last will and testament. I hereby devise and bequeath to Gladys Evans, for whom I have acted as god-mother, the sum of fifty (45) dollars.
“(3) I hereby devise and bequeath to Richmond W . Jones, Jr., the sum of fifty ($50) dollars.
“(4) I hereby devise, bequeath and give to Julia Toliver the sum of twenty-five ($25) dollars.
“(5) I hereby devise, bequeath and give to Minnie Miller the sum of ten ($10) dollars.
(6) In this my last will and testament I hereby devise, bequeath and give unto Mary E. Merritt, my good friend, all the rest and residue of my estate, both real, personal and mixed, the same being for her own use and benefit, free from the control of my husband she may have at the time of my demise or that she may thereafter, I make this bequest to my dear friend Mary E. Merritt, because of the many kind acts and deeds that she has done for me and of the continued interest and care for me during my lifetime.' I do not believe that this little bequest I am making to her will in any way pay her for the services rendered, and I trust that she will accept it in the manner in which it is given.
“(7) In this my last will and testament, I hereby name, constitute and appoint the Louisville Trust Company executor of my will, and ask the court that said trust company be allowed to qualify and act without any other bond excepting their capital stock.”

It was prepared by a colored lawyer named W. R. Wright, of Louisville, and was witnessed by him and his *771 stenographer, 'Kathryne Wise. It was contested upon the grounds (1) that the testatrix was without testamentary capacity, (2) was unduly influenced, and (3) the paper purporting to he the will was not signed by the alleged testatrix but was a forgery. The court by its instructions only submitted to the jury the question of testamentary capacity but appellee does not complain of the ruling of the court in this regard.

The testatrix was about seventy (70) years of age at the time of the making of the will and had been a widow about two months, her husband, John Young, having committed suicide by cutting his throat. He was an old Union soldier and had been drawing a pension and saving some of the money which he kept in a safety box at the bank. He gave by will all of his property to his wife, the testatrix. Up to the time of the death of John Young, the husband of the testatrix, it is admitted that the testatrix was of sound mind. From the evidence it would appear that she was above the average in intelligence among women of her race. Some of the witnesses say that she was very active in church and social affairs, and was president of one or more societies among her people. She had a great number of friends and neighbors where she lived and most of them have testified on one side or the other of this case. For the contestant there were about a dozen witnesses, all laymen, who said in substance that they were acquainted with Susan Young in her lifetime and had observed her conduct and listened to her conversation along about the time of the making of the will, and were of the opinion that she did not have mental capacity sufficient to know her property, appreciate the duties she owed to her relatives, know the objects of her bounty and dispose of her property according to a fixed purpose of her own. Some of them gave little or no reason for the opinion expressed in their evidence, but some of them testified that the testatrix was an old lady at the time her husband committed suicide and that she immediately rushed to the scene and beheld her husband with his throat cut and bleeding and that this sight so upset her and preyed upon her mind that she became very nervous and to some extent, if not entirely, unbalanced in mind; that after the death of her husband she was changed from what she was before and often exclaimed, ‘ jOh, if I could forget the scene;” that on other occasions she said, “Take me to my mother,” although her mother had been dead many years; and *772 again would speak of her husband as though he were alive; that she was feeble in health, having undergone four major surgical operations, before the death of her husband. One or more witnesses stated that her memory was poor and that she would enter a store and propose to buy an article and then change her mind.

For the propounders of the will it was proven by Wright, the lawyer who prepared the instrument, that he had never met or known the testatrix until she came to his office to have the will prepared and that he invited her into the private office where they were seated and the testatrix without aid or suggestion from anyone told him in detail how she wanted to dispose of her property, of what her property consisted and to whom she wanted it to go, and that he wrote the will exactly as she directed it written; that testatrix talked like a woman of sound mind and that he obseerved nothing in her conversation or conduct that indicated that she was not of sound mind. Two physicians who were acquainted with the testatrix testified that they had known her for some years; one of them lived close to her and the other had attended her in sickness, and each gave it as his professional opinion that testatrix was of sound mind at the time of the making of the will, and one of them said she was of sound mind up to within forty-eight (48) hours of her death; that she was a sensible old lady, and knew the extent of her property, the objects of her bounty, and possessed mind and will power enough to dispose of her property according to a fixed purpose of her own. Her most intimate associates through the latter part of her life were called as witnesses by the propounders and stated that the testatrix always appeared to be of sound mind; that they never heard of her being out of her mind until after her death; that she was regarded as a sensible, sane person by all of her associates. Some twenty-five witnesses gave testimony of this general tenor, and all professed to be intimate friends of the testatrix.

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Bluebook (online)
284 S.W. 389, 214 Ky. 769, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/youngs-v-tolivers-administrator-kyctapphigh-1926.