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James L. Chaffin, an elderly Davie County
farmer, died on September 7, 1921, after a fall downstairs. In
a will dated November 16, 1905, 16 years earlier, he bequeathed
the family farm and all of his possessions to his third son, Marshall,
who was named sole executor of the estate.
The widow and three other
sons, John, James, and Abner, were left nothing. This came as no
surprise, as the will had not been a secret. Marshall was his father’s
pride and joy. The will was duly probated and the property turned
over to Marshall.
Almost four years later, in early June 1925,
the second son, James, told of having a vivid dream. His father
appeared to him, wearing his familiar long black overcoat. The
apparition said nothing but pointed to an inside pocket of the
overcoat again and again.
James awoke in a cold sweat. Unable to
get the dream out of his mind, he went to the old homeplace in
search of the overcoat. His mother remembered that
she had given the coat to the older son, John. John now lived in
Yadkin County, about 20 miles away.
Later in the week, James drove
over to his brother John’s
house. John was not at home, but his wife found the old overcoat
tucked away in a closet. It was too big for John. Together the
two of them examined the coat. The inside pocket was sewn shut.
When they cut it open they found a roll of yellow paper, tied up
with string. James untied the string and unrolled the paper to
read, in his father’s faded handwriting, “Read the
27th chapter of Genesis in my daddy’s old Bible.”
This
Bible, a family heirloom, was kept in a bureau drawer at the old
Chaffin farmhouse in Davie County. Before James left, he and his
sister-in-law looked up the reference in her Bible. It is the story
of how Jacob won his father’s blessing and received his brother
Esau’s
birthright.
James decided he should take witnesses with
him to examine the Bible of his grandfather, Nathan S. Chaffin.
He and his daughter got a neighbor, Thomas Blackwelder, and Blackwelder’s
daughter to accompany them to the old homestead. There the four
of them followed James’ mother
upstairs. When the old book was lifted out of the bureau drawer
it fell into three pieces.
Mr. Blackwelder picked up the section
containing the Book of Genesis. At the 27th chapter a paper was
found, written in the elder James Chaffin’s handwriting.
It read:
After reading the 27th Chapter of Genesis,
I, James L. Chaffin, do make my last will and testament, and here
it is. I want, after giving my body a decent burial, my little
property to be equally divided between my four children, if they
are living at my death, both personal and real estate divided equal,
if not living with share going to their children. And if she is
living, you all must take care of your mammy. Now this is my last
will and testament. Witness my hand and seal.
James L. Chaffin
This January 16, 1919
Prior to the time this will was found,
Marshall had died. Upon being shown the will, his widow immediately
agreed that it was in her father-in-law’s handwriting,
and therefore valid.
The
court ordered the first will canceled, and the second will was
probated.
This may be the only instance in modern legal history
in which a ghost played a part in changing a court decision.
This
story is told in “Immortality, The Scientific Evidence”,
by Alson J. Smith, published in 1954 by Prentice-Hall, Inc., New
York.
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