In Re West's Will.
Decision Date | 19 March 1947 |
Docket Number | No. 235.,235. |
Citation | 227 N.C. 204,41 S.E.2d 838 |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
Parties | In re WEST'S WILL. |
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Appeal from Superior Court, Wayne County; Hubert E. Olive, Special Judge.
Proceeding in the matter of the last will of Hardy West, deceased, wherein W. L. West filed a caveat to the will offered for probate by Johnnie Chase and Paul Shackleford executors and trustees. From an adverse judgment, proponents appeal.
New trial.
This proceeding involves a contest over the last will and testament of Hardy West, a resident of Wayne County.
West, a bachelor, lived alone in what has been referred to as his "ancestral home, " --a property derived in part by descent from his mother and part acquired by purchase. It consisted of a farm, dwelling house and out houses which, with several tracts added by West from time to time, was estimated to be worth about $20,000.
West was prosperous up to the time of his death and had accumulated considerable personal property. He personally conducted his business and farming operations, and the marketing of his produce up to the time of his death, although in his last years he was in bad health, in a dropsical condition which needed and received hospitalization, medical and surgical treatment.
In a separate dwelling in the "yard" lived Gertrude Sherard, an unmarried colored woman who had cooked and washed for West and lived "around his house" for about 20 years. During that time there were born to her two children, the boy, Earl, and a girl, Burnicc. At the time of Hardy West's death Earl was about 17 years old and Burnice 12 or 13.
On West's trips away from the farm, made in connection with his business, getting in supplies and marketing his crop, he was in later years usually accompanied by Earl Sherard. To him, at different times, West had given two automobiles, and frequently gave him money, particularly when he requested it, in sums of $10, more or less, for his spending. Gertrude Sherard, the mother, had died some months before the making of the will. For some time prior to the execution of the will, L. D. West, a nephew of Hardy and son of Walter West, the caveator, returned from military service and with his wife and children took up his abode with his uncle.
The will makes an approximately equal division of the real estate and personal property, devises the real estate to L. D. West and Earl Sherard, respectively, for life, with remainders to their children upon named contingencies not necessary to consider at this time, and bequeaths the personalty one-half to L. D. West and one-half to Earl Sherard upon stated terms. A trusteeship is set up for the two minor beneficiaries, Earl and Burnice Sherard. The will having been probated in common form, W. L. West, brother of the testator, filed a caveat, setting up a want of mental capacity on the part of the testator and undue influence exercised upon him by persons unnamed in the petition. L. D. West aligned himself with the caveator, his father.
The executors undertook to propound the will in solemn form under the single issue devisavit vel non.
The adverse testimony relating to testamentary capacity came principally from the caveator and those related by family ties. Testifying to the testamentary capacity of West, and affirming the same, were a large number of persons who, the evidence indicates, had been in intimate contact with him in business relations up to the time of his death and others who observed him and had communications with him, who gave as their opinion that he was in full possession of his mental faculties, had sufficient mental capacity to know his property, the objects of his bounty, and to fully understand the full force and effect of his will; that he was of sound mind.
In the cross-examination of these witnesses there was repeated recurrence of questions so formulated as to bring out the fact that West had devised about one-half of his property, including that descended from his mother, to negroes, to the exclusion of his brother or white relatives. Answers to some of these questions were to the effect that the negroes to whom he gave the property were his own children. There was further evidence that testator had said, "The only ones that cared about him and would do anything for him, were these two children, Earl and Burnice Sherard."
Typical of these questions is the following:
A similar inquiry brought this response from the witness:
And, again, upon the same query:
Similar questions brought various answers, one of the witnesses stating in positive language that Earl and Burnice She-rard were children of Hardy West.
Upon this state of the evidence the propounders except to the instructions given to the jury by the court for that in stating the contention of the parties, the contentions of the caveator with respect to the phase of the case above mentioned were stated at length, whereas the explanation of what might be regarded as an unusual disposition of the property in giving it to those not the natural objects of his bounty was not given at all, no reference having been made in the charge to the fact or the possibility that Earl and Burnice She-rard were the natural children of the testator.
There is further exception to the charge respecting the burden of evidence contained in the following passage:
And, further: ""
As stated, the issue submitted to the jury was: "Is the paper...
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In Re Franks' Will.
...his blood kin, such fact may be considered, with other evidence, on the question of mental capacity and undue influence. In re Will of West, 227 N.C. 204, 41 S.E.2d 838; In re Will of Redding, 216 N.C. 497, 5 S.E.2d 544; In re Hardee's Will, 187 N.C. 381, 121 S.E. 667; In re Staub's Will, 1......
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State v. Brannon
...court's charge, and when it is considered contextually, as it must be, it is in our opinion, without prejudicial error. In re Will of West, 227 N.C. 204, 41 S.E.2d 838; State v. French, 225 N.C. 276, 34 S.E.2d 157; State v. Davis, 225 N.C. 117, 33 S.E.2d 623; State v. Manning, 221 N.C. 70, ......
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Worrell's Will, Matter of
...capacity of the testator, and hence was the proper subject of discussion by counsel in his argument to the jury. In In Re Will of West, 227 N.C. 204, 41 S.E.2d 838 (1947), the testator, a white bachelor, devised and bequeathed a substantial part of his property to two Negro children of whom......