Frances Simmons LEE, Executrix, et al.
v.
J.C. LEE, Conservator.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*714 M.M. Roberts, S. Wayne Easterling, Hattiesburg, for appellants.
Holmes, Dukes & Welborn, Alfred B. Jernigan, Jr., Hattiesburg, for appellee.
Before INZER, SMITH and BROOM, JJ.
BROOM, Justice, for the Court:
While his estate was under conservatorship, Herbert Hall Lee (now deceased) executed his Last Will and Testament without court authority or knowledge of his conservator. The Chancery Court of Forrest County decreed that the Will was invalid, but we reverse.
The controlling issue is: May a person whose estate is under conservatorship execute a valid will without court authority or consent of the conservator?
In 1968 Herbert Hall Lee, because of old age and physical incapacity, was placed under conservatorship by a decree which limited the conservatorship to the property and estate of the deceased. In 1970, while the conservatorship was still pending, he executed his Last Will and Testament. On March 28, 1973, he died still under the conservatorship. The will was duly admitted to probate upon affidavit of two of the three subscribing witnesses. Pursuant to the decree admitting the will to probate, letters testamentary issued and notice to creditors was published. The will devised the homestead property to the widow and the remaining land in equal shares to her and the four children. Two of the children were of the first marriage of the decedent, and the other two were of his second marriage which was to Mrs. Frances Simmons Lee (one of the appellants).
By our per curiam affirmance in Lee v. Lee, Conservator of Estate of Herbert H. Lee, and Herbert H. Lee,
Who has the power to execute a will is set forth in Mississippi Code Annotated § 91-5-1 (1972). Under that statute any person "of sound and disposing mind" who is twenty-one years of age, or a married minor eighteen years of age, may execute a will. The testator, Herbert Hall Lee, was within the purview of § 91-5-1 when he signed the will now before us. Our earlier decision in Miss.,
In the decree admitting the will to probate, the court found that the deceased was of sound and disposing mind and memory at the time he executed the will. The record reveals no finding by the chancellor that the testator was mentally incompetent. He based his decree on the theory that one under a conservatorship, pursuant to Mississippi *715 Code Annotated § 93-13-251 (1972), simply cannot execute a valid will without the knowledge of the conservator or permission of the court. The general law (recognized by the chancellor) is that an insane person may execute a valid will "in a lucid interval." Gholson v. Peters,
The general rule is that testamentary capacity is in nowise cut off by the existence of a conservatorship. Thomas v. Hamlin,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
GILLESPIE, C.J., PATTERSON and INZER, P. JJ., and SMITH, ROBERTSON, SUGG, WALKER and LEE, JJ., concur.
