60 Tenn. 390 | Tenn. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents an issue devisavit vel non, upon a script propounded as the holographic "will of James R. Sharp, deceased. The plaintiff offered the paper ,for probate in the County Court of Franklin County. Whereupon objection was made by one of the heirs at law, and the matter was certified to the Circuit Court for an issue devisavit vel non, which upon trial resulted in a verdict and judgment establishing the
The testator was a young man who had just reached his majority when he entered the Confederate army in the spring of 1861. He had been a resident of Franklin County prior to 1860, and at the time of his death he owned an interest in certain real estate in said county, and an interest also in certain choses in action in the possession of his agent or attorney in said county.
In 1860 he went to Aberdeen, Mississippi, and was there on the 30th of April, 1861, when it is alleged he wrote the following letter to the plaintiff, as his last will and testament:
“Abekdeen, Miss., April 30, 1865.
“Dear Cousin: I received your letter two or three days ago, and was very glad to hear from you. I hope that you will soon be united with us in the defence of your country. Our company leaves to-day for Corinth, Mississippi — there will wait for further orders. "With enclosed please find my accounts in the town of Aberdeen for the last two years. It is a good . . but don’t say anything about it to any one. I am ashamed to let you see them. Don’t let any one see them at all. Please pay them as soon as you can. "Write to each one about it as soon as you get this, and give them some encouragement. For I am going to fight to-day, and they*393 do not know any thing about me, although they have confidence in me, and I don’t want them to lose it. Write to them, please, soon, each one separate. Their names are on the heads of the accounts. • ' Tell them you will pay them as soon as you can. I want to pay all my debts, if possible. My love to all. I expect to get killed in the first fight. So please pay all my debts for me, and if any thing is left after I am dead, it is yours. You may have it. Tell these men down here that I have got plenty, if I could only get it collected. Good-bye. We leave at 2 o’clock this evening, for battle. Tell sister good-bye for me, and every one. I would like for you to send me fifty dollars, if you can, to Corinth. We will stay there a week or more. Yours,
“J. R. SHARP.”
The name of the correspondent to whom this letter was addressed does not appear upon it, but when 'shown to the witnesses with a view to prove the hand-writing of the writer, it was produced with an envelope addressed to G. Y. McCutchen, the plaintiff, and it was shown by a number of witnesses that the superscription upon the envelope and the letter were in the hand-writing of Sharp, but the connection between this envelope and the letter, or the fact that this particular letter had been actually transmitted in said envelope to the plaintiff - does not appear in the proof. Upon this point it seems no testimony whatever was adduced, and it seems to
Reverse the judgment and award a new trial.