Parker v. Hill

Decision Date06 January 1908
PartiesPARKER v. HILL.
CourtArkansas Supreme Court

Suit by Lynn Parker against F. P. Hill to recover land and set aside a conveyance. From a decree in favor of defendant, plaintiff appeals. Reversed.

Campbell & Stevenson, for appellant. P. R. Andrews and J. F. Summers, for appellee.

HILL, C. J.

T. T. Locke died in October, 1902. He left Mary E. Locke his widow. She was his second wife, and there were no children born of their marriage; but they had lived together for 26 years, and evidently were an affectionate couple. Mrs. Hill, wife of the appellee, was the daughter of Mr. Locke by his first marriage, and his only child. Mr. Locke left a will leaving all of his property to his wife and $10 to his daughter. This will was made some three years before his death, and was duly attested; and after his death was duly probated in November, 1902. Mrs. Locke made a will in April, 1903, which was duly attested before subscribing witnesses. This will gave various legacies and remembrances to her brothers and sisters, and nieces and nephews, and devised to her nephew Lynn Parker all of the real estate which she had received of her husband, T. T. Locke; and she devised to her nephews Fred Parker and Lynn Parker, and her niece Mary Will Parker, jointly, all of the real and personal property, except these small legacies heretofore mentioned and except that left her by Mr. Locke, which, as stated, she devised to Lynn Parker individually. She seems to have had a considerable estate aside from that derived from Mr. Locke. Subsequent to the execution of this will by Mrs. Locke, and within a year of the probation of the will of Mr. Locke, Mr. Hill wrote Mrs. Locke a letter in regard to making a contest of the will of Mr. Locke. Mr. Hill was a brother of Mrs. Locke, a man of affairs and considerable estate; and his wife, the daughter of Mr. Locke, was also possessed of considerable means. Mrs. Locke was at this time about 64 years of age, and in feeble health, and went to Mountain View to visit a sister there in the hopes that the change would be beneficial to her health; and it was while there she received this letter from Mr. Hill. The letter has been lost, and there is a conflict as to its contents, more as to the way in which it was stated than the substance of it. She wrote to a nephew's wife that Hill had said in that letter, if she would renounce the will, saying it was a mistake, or sell the land at a nominal price to his wife, all would be well, but that, if not, his wife would exhaust every resource to set it aside. She also told her relatives that he said in that letter that she had better settle that case out of court; that she would not live to see the end of it, and it would only shorten her last days to fight the case in court, and that his wife had thousands of dollars to back the case; that he had consulted a lawyer, and had found that Mr. Locke's will could be broken; that, when the will was made, Mr. Locke had been prompted by unfair and adverse influences. Mr. Hill does not admit that the letter contained all of these things, but says that he wrote her that she was old, and would probably not live to see the end of the litigation, and appealed to her sense of justice and reason, and suggested several ways of settlement, and awaited her reply. She replied that she would never say that the will of her husband, leaving to her this tract of land in consideration of 26 years of faithful service as his wife, was a mistake, and that she would not make him out a liar by telling one herself. She added that Hill might not live to see the end of the litigation either. Shortly after this she was visited by her nephew Kennedy. Whether he came to see her as the hired emissary of Hill, or whether he was an officious intermeddler, his testimony and Hill's differ. Be the truth as it may, Hill accepted the fruits of his negotiation, and obtained from Mrs. Locke a deed to himself to the land that Locke had devised to her, and which she had, in turn, devised to Lynn Parker, which is the subject-matter of this suit. Kennedy says that his aunt, when he found her at Mountain View, was very much wrought up mentally, and pretty nearly broken down physically. He suggested to her that it might be better to settle the matter without a lawsuit; that the suit would give her a great deal of trouble in her old age, and there was a bare chance that she might lose it all in the end. He called her attention to the fact that Hill was able to spend as much as the property was worth, and it would leave her in bad shape, and he thought any kind of a settlement was better than a lawsuit. She stated to him that she was getting $400 annual rent from the land, and he told her he would attempt to get that much for her annually during her lifetime if she would convey the property to Hill, and she finally agreed to do so. Kennedy went to Woodruff county, and reported to Hill what Mrs. Locke was willing to do, and he and Hill then fell out as to whether he was to have $500 for having induced her to consent to this arrangement; and Hill sent his son to Mrs. Locke to obtain the deed, and subsequently obtained a second deed to supply a defect in the first deed. By this deed Mrs. Locke conveyed to Hill all the land which she had derived through her husband's will for a consideration of $350, payable annually during her natural life, on the 20th of December each year. It seems that Kennedy objected to the deed being drawn for $350 annually, instead of $400, and Hill then gave notes for $50 additional so as to make the consideration $400 per year. This deed in final form was executed September 8, 1903.

Subsequent thereto Mrs. Locke wrote a holographic will, which she considered a codicil, and which has been treated as a codicil to her attested will. This holographic will began as follows: "Knowing the uncertainty of life and the certainty of death and being of sound mind, I write this my last will and testament, which I want my executor Will T. Trice to use in conjunction with a former will written by him, and which he now holds, and I want him to retain until my life is extinct, not allowing any one to handle or read it without a written permit from me to him during life. There is so little honor, so much fraud, duplicity, you hardly know who to trust." Then she gives many bequests, legacies, and remembrances to relatives and friends, many of whom she speaks of in terms of great affection. The will shows a minute knowledge of all of her affairs and property, and her affection for those whom she had remembered in her former will was evidently undiminished. After making various bequests of matters immaterial herein, the will then proceeds: "All of my real estate I bequeath to Fred Parker, Lynn Parker and Mary Will Parker Kyle, to be equally divided. The W. T....

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2 cases
  • Parker v. Hill
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • 6 Enero 1908
  • Caldcleugh v. Caldcleugh
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • 9 Abril 1923
    ...within the rule announced above, and the chancery court properly set it aside. 2 Pomeroy's Eq. Juris. (3d Ed.) § 951, and Parker v. Hill, 85 Ark. 363, 108 S. W. 208. The settlement with regard to the personal property was had on the 16th day of March, 1920. She conveyed her interest in it i......

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