Succession of Dunlap
Citation | 408 So.2d 424 |
Decision Date | 22 December 1981 |
Docket Number | No. 14491,14491 |
Parties | In the Matter of The Succession of Minnie Seale DUNLAP. |
Court | Court of Appeal of Louisiana — District of US |
Delos R. Johnson, Jr., of Johnson & Kuhn, Franklinton, for Patrick joey crain.
Robert J. Black, of Seal, Lee, Branch & Brown, Bogalusa, for Cullen A. Seal.
Before CHIASSON, EDWARDS and LEAR, JJ.
Appellant, Patrick Joey Crain, appeals a trial court judgment declaring the will of his great aunt, Minnie Seale Dunlap, invalid for want of form. Cullen A. Seal, the son of Mrs. Dunlap and appellee herein, contested the validity of the nuncupative will by public act 1 on the ground that it was not written or typed by the Notary who allegedly prepared the purported testament. 2 It is not questioned that the will was valid on its face and complied with all other requisites of the statute.
The trial court, basing its decision on the testimony of one of the subscribing witnesses, held that the will was not typed by the Notary himself, and therefore, under the case of the Succession of Killingsworth, 292 So.2d 536 (La.1973), on rehearing, March 25, 1974, the will must be ruled invalid for want of form.
In the Killingsworth case, on rehearing, the Supreme Court stated:
The will in this case recites:
"This last will and testament of Minnie Seal Dunlap was dictated by her to me, Notary, in the presence and hearing of the three aforesaid and undersigned competent witnesses, and the same was reduced to writing by me, Notary, as dictated by said testator."
At the hearing, only one witness was called. That witness, Mrs. Frances Greer, was not only a witness to the making of the will, but she was also the legal secretary of the Notary who purportedly prepared the will.
Mrs. Greer testified that she did not know whether she had typed that particular will, but assumed that she did; that she could not swear that the Notary typed the will himself because she did not know; and that she could not recall the events of seventeen years ago, but she did not recall the Notary ever having to type a will or anything else.
Appellant contends, and we agree, that although parol evidence is admissible to attack the validity of a nuncupative will by public act, the testimony of a subscribing witness to a nuncupative will by public act contradicting the solemn recitals in the testament is entitled to little weight and is insufficient to overcome the presumption of validity in the absence of sufficient independent facts or reasonable inferences to overcome the presumption. Succession...
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