138 Tenn. 1 | Tenn. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the Court.
E. J. Halley died on October 19, 1910, leaving the following will:
“I, E. J. Plalley, of a sound mind, will make this my last will and testament. I bequeath to the following people mound set of the names, E. 0. Kolley, $500, Mr. R. Gr. Ramsey, $500, Miss Elizabeth Berry $500. I give to A. Goodman and Armstrong $10,000 a piece, Ed. Hurlburt $5000, Jack Brennan $5000, George Becktall $20,000, Mrs. Moseley $20,000, Mrs. Moseley’s housekeeper $20,000, W. M. Palmer $20,-000. Mrs. Mergle, Sr., $20,000, Ed. Mergle, $20,000, Theadore Mergle $10,000, the balance of my real . estate I give to the St. Peter’s Orphan Asylum.
E. J. Halley.”
The validity of this will was determined in the case of State ex rel. v. Goodman et al., 133 Tenn., 375, 391-393, 412, 181 S. W., 312. In that case it was held, under the proof therein introduced, that the defendant Mrs. Lillian Trimble was the person intended by the name Mrs. Moseley. The question in that case, with respect to this particular matter, was whether the will was void for vagueness, it not appearing upon the face of the will what particular Mrs. Moseley was intended. It was shown in that ease that the testator was accustomed to address Mrs. Trimble as Mrs. Moseley, that she was therefore the person he intended, and so the will was saved from uncertainty. Mrs. Lenoir Moseley, the complainant in the presen' case, however, was not a party to that suit. Soon after the death of Halley she notified the administrator that she claimed the legacy. Notwithstanding this fact, however, she did not cause herself to be made a party to the suit in which the validity of the will was tested. She stood to one side, and permitted Mrs. Trimble to make the defense and save the
Mrs. Lenoir Moseley filed the present hill claiming this legacy. She made Mrs. Trimble a party defendant, setting forth the claim of the latter, and attacking the validity of that claim, 'insisting that she herself was the Mrs. Moseley intended, and that Mrs. Trimble was not and could not be such person. A jury was asked for, and the chancellor submitted the following issue or question: “Who was meant by the testator when he bequeathed $20,000 to ‘Mrs. Moseley’?” The jury responded that the testator meant Mrs. Lillian E. Trimble. The chancellor pronounced a judgment on the verdict. Prom this an appeal was prayed to the court of civil appeals, and his judgment was there affirmed. The case was then
The facts disclosed hy the record, hy the overwhelming weight of the evidence, are as follows: .
The testator was for many years engaged with his mother in business on Main street, in the city of Memphis, in the sale of liquors, tobacco, and cigars. • He and his mother bought, through a series of years, cigars from Mr. F. S. Trimble, the husband of Mrs. Lillian E. Trimble. Mr. Trimble was the city salesman for one R. L. Moseley, and, as such, for several years, sold cigars to testator and his mother. Testator generally addressed him as “Moseley,” it seems, because he sold the Moseley cigars, and the Moseley sign'was Very prominently displayed at the front of the building where Trimble worked. It does not appear that testator dealt personally with R. L. Moseley himself at all. Mrs. Trimble, during the same period, bought goods about once a month from testator and his mother, and the testator called her “Mrs. Moseley,” and admired her character very greatly. He spoke of her to others as a fine woman. The mother of testator died about January, 1910, and he then fell into the habit. of drinking, and became quite dissipated. He made a foreign tour with one Harper, he himself paying all the expenses. His mother had left him about $230,000. He claimed, when he came hack, that' he had spent $6,000 on this trip. He drank a great deal while he was traveling,
Mrs. Trimble, at the time testator returned to “The Monarch,” had, as her housekeeper for that institution, Mrs. Anna Lang. Both Mrs. Trimble and Mrs. Lang gave the testator very devoted attention, such attention as a sick man needs, serving night and day. Mrs. Trimble brought him milk and soup and other delicacies. Mrs. Lang ministered to him very assiduously and with great kindness in the way of sponging^ him and doing other things for his comfort. He appeared to be very grateful for these attentions. He generally called Mrs. Trimble Mrs. Moseley, though occasionally he called her Mrs. Trimble. There is evidence to the effect that he always- called her Mrs. Moseley. The witness Rothschild deposed to this fact. He testified that on one
It does not appear that he knew Mrs. Lenoir Moseley.' It does appear that he knew her husband, E. L. Moseley. Mrs. Moseley herself testified that she did not know Mr. Halley at all. She endeavors to connect herself with the legacy not only by the fact that her name was Mrs. Moseley, hut by the further fact that her sister, Miss Jessie Dunlap, was her housekeeper at her private home. It is in proof that the testator incidentally met Miss Dunlap on one occasion at “The Monarch.” Both Mrs. Trimble and Miss Dunlap say that the meeting was in one of the halls of “The Monarch.” Both agree that Mrs. Trimble introduced Miss Dunlap to Mr. Halley. Mrs. Trimble says that she introduced Miss Dunlap as her little friend, “sister of Mrs. E. L. Moseley.” Miss Dunlap says the introduction was in this form, “Mr. Halley, I want you to meet the best friend I have in the world, a sister of Mrs. Moseley, old Bim Moseley’s wife;” and he replied, “I have known Bim Moseley for twenty years.” It does not appear that Halley ever saw Miss Dunlap again. Likewise there is no legal evidence that Halley knew that Miss Dunlap , was housekeeper to her sister, the complain
If the testimony was competent to the effect that the testator always or generally spoke of Mrs. Trimble as Mrs. Moseley, or generally called her Mrs. Moseley, there was ample evidence to sustain
The general principle is well stated in Ayres v. Weed, 16 Conn., 290, as follows: - -
“If a person is commonly called and known by a name which does not properly belong to him, but which properly belongs to another, it cannot with propriety be said that that name, although a false one, is not in fact descriptive of the forjner, unless we go so as to say that a person is not described by the name by which he is known. That: would clearly be a case where two different persons would be described by the same name, and where, therefore, parol evidence might be introduced to remove the doubt as to which of them was intended. That the name given to a person as a nickname does not render it the less a description of him, although, indeed, a less correct one, than if his true name were used; and it is well settled that if a legacy is’ given, or a devise made, to a person by his nickname, paroLevi-dence is admissible to show that the testator usually called him by that name, in order to show that he was*12 intended; much, more would it be admissible to show that lie was generally known in the community by that name.”
Now, there is no evidence in this record that Mrs. Trimble was generally known by the name of Mrs. Moseley; but it was sufficient to indicate the meaning of the testator if it be shown, as it is shown here, that he was accustomed to call her by that name. In Boper on Legacies, vol. 1, p. 185, it is said:
“If when, upon opening wills, such bequests are found as ‘to-Jones, the son of- Jones,’ or ‘to Mrs. B.,’ and parol evidence is admitted to ascertain the persons intended by those ambiguous terms, it would seem a vain attempt to justify that admission upon the doctrine of latent ambiguity, when the ambiguity is patent upon the will. The principle upon which parol testimony is admitted in these cases is probably, in the first of them, a presumption of possible ignorance in the testator of the Christian name of the legatee, and in the second a similar presumption of his being in the habit of calling a person by the name of Mrs. B.; presumptions which, being raised upon the face of the' will, may be confirmed and explained by extrinsic evidence. Upon these grounds the admission of parol evidence in these two instances will be consistent with the established doctrine of its admissibility to raise and remove latent ambiguities,” etc.
“It is argued at the bar that evidence may be read to raise as well as to dissolve an ambiguity in a will; this is good law, for it must be raised by evidence. It has gone so far as to give the legacy to a certain person, where there.was no such person in existence as was described in the will; as to John A. Style, where there was no such person, but the testator used to call a certain person John A. Style.”
There is a collection of cases on the subject in a note to Siegley v. Simpson, 47 L. R. A. (N. S.), at page 523. Thus a devise to a person by any name,] however different the name used in the will from thej| true name of the person, is good, provided it is shown that the name used was one by which the testtator was accustomed to designate the person, and such showing may be made by parol proof. Chambers v. Watson, 56 Iowa, 676, 10 N. W., 239. To
Persons entited to a bequest given under nicknames, by which the testator habitually designated them, by extrinsic evidence may establish this fact, and upon so doing are entitled to the legacy. Beatty v. Corey Universalist Society, 39 N. J. Eq., 452. Thus a bequest to Harrison H. may be shown by parol proof to have been intended for William H. a son-in-law of the testator, who- was known and called by the name of Harrison H., there being no other person answering the description. . Hockensmith v. Slusher, 26 Mo., 237. A bequest to Edward may be shown to have been intended for a person named Samuel by proof that the testator was in the habit of calling him Edward. Parsons v. Parsons, 1 Ves. Jr., 266. A devise to a person or society by the name by which he or it is known to the testator is a good devise to such person, although known to others by a different name. Tilton v. American Bible Society, 60 N. H., 377, 49 Am. Rep., 321. A bequest to “the nursery,” where there is no existing society bearing that name, by extrinsic proof was shown to be intended for a society named “St. Mary’s Orphanage,” which had taken over the operation of a
When, as in Ward v. Epsy, the ordinary words of the English language are used in a will, they must be held to bear the customary meaning attached to
Now, it is of course true, within the authorities just referred to, that if the bequest had been made in terms to “Mrs. Lenoir Moseley,” the fact that the testator was accustomed to call some other person “Mrs. Moseley” would not be sufficient to raise an ambiguity; but where the bequest was simply to “Mrs. Moseley,” without any Christian name, that of itself required the introduction of parol evidence to identify the legatee; and under such circumstances we think evidence that the testator was accustomed to call a certain person “Mrs. Moseley” would be sufficient to raise the question whether she was intended or some other person whose real name was “Mrs.-Moseley,” the matter to be -decided being the meaning which the term “Mrs. Moseley” bore in the testator’s mind when he used that expression in the will. It would not do to say that because some person was found whose name was “Mrs. Moseley” fur
This, in our judgment, is a mistaken view. The name “Mrs. Moseley,” without a prasnomen, or Christian name, or other specific designation or description in the will, was, as we have already pointed out, so general as to need parol evidence to place the name on some individual, or point out some individual as the, one meant by the testator. doing, then, to the parol evidence with the same name borne by two competing persons (one being the name by grace of the testator), the solution turns on a comparison of the circumstances presented in favor of each. The facts which we have stated show a weighty preponderance in favor of the latter, even if it be conceded that the complainant has any lawful evidence to show that she had a “housekeeper.”
Counsel for the complainant insist that if the court should hold that Mrs. Trimble was the person intended, and so should affirm the judgment of the chancellor and the court of civil appeals decreeing-the legacy to her, that' would be nothing short of striking the name of Mrs. Moseley from the will, and inserting in its place that of Mrs. Trimble, and so
It is insisted for the complainant that the trial judge erred in permitting Mrs. Trimble to give in evidence the opinion which Miss Dunlap had expressed to her concerning the complainant’s right to recover, and the complainant’s belief herself that she was not entitled to anything. Of course, this was erroneous; but there could be no reversal for it under the act of 1911, chapter 32, because we are convinced that this error had no effect upon the verdict of the jury.
It is insisted that there was error in the chancellor’s instruction as to the burden of proof. We think there was no ground of reversal in this. Certainly the burden of proof was upon the complainant to show that she. was the Mrs. Moseley intended, and she could not be injured by the chancellor’s imposing
It is further insisted that the chancellor committed error in not stating the plaintiff’s theory of her case. It was not stated as fully as it ought to have been stated, yet the theory was stated in a general way. Under the act of 1911 we do not think there should be a reversal for an error of- this kind. We do not believe it affected the verdict.
It results there was no reversible error in the judgment of the trial court, nor in that of the court of civil appeals, in affirming that judgment.
Judgment will therefore be entered "here affirming the judgment of the court of civil appeals, with costs.