Court Opinion

ID: 5448666
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:15:30.325449+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:17.813645
License: Public Domain

McFarland, J.
This is an appeal by the proponents *265of the will of Bridget Wilson, deceased, which was probated on May 9, 1893, from a judgment vacating the probate and from an order denying proponent's motion for a new trial.
The said Bridget Wilson died on the fourteenth day of March, 1893, at Los Angeles, California. She left a will, dated February 27, 1893, and executed on that day, and a codicil to said will, executed and dated on the 11th of March, 1893. These two instruments were admitted to probate as constituting the last will and testament of the deceased. She left no children or lineal descendants, and her husband, John Wilson, was her only legal heir. By the instrument of February 27th (which, for convenience, we will call the will, to distinguish it from the codicil), after making bequests and devises to several different parties, and, among others, one thousand dollars to Charles McMahon, she left the residue of her estate to Alicia McMahon, who is the mother of said Charles McMahon. She also in this will gave to her husband fifty dollars per month. By the codicil she revoked the gifts to both said Charles and Alicia McMahon, and left the greater part of her estate undisposed of, so that it would go to her husband as her legal heir.
On the last day of the year succeeding the probate of said instruments as the will of the deceased, the said John Wilson filed a written contest of the same, in which he averred that for various alleged reasons the will had not been properly executed. He further alleged that at the time of the execution of both the will and the codicil the deceased was not of sound mind or competent to make a will; and also that the will and codicil were procured by the undue influence of one John Mc-Connachie, the undue influence alleged being that the said McConnachie was the agent of the deceased and possessed great power and influence ever her, and “was continually poisoning the mind of said Bridget Wilson against the contestant herein, the said John Wilson, her husband, by reporting to her false and scandalous *266reports concerning the conduct of the said John Wil- . son”; and that by means of said false reports, while she was physically and mentally weak and suffering great pain, he induced her to change her will and leave property of great value to him. The attack of the contestant Wilson was against both the will and the codicil. On the same day the said Alicia McMahon and Charles McMahon also filed a contest directed against the codicil alone, averring that the deceased at the time of making said codicil “was not of sound and disposing mind, but was, on the contrary, of unsound mind and insane, and mentally incompetent to make a will”; and that the codicil was procured to be made by the undue influence and fraud of the said McOonnachie and Michael Curran and his wife, Mary Curran, who, it is alleged, falsely represented to the deceased that the McMahons had no love or affection for her, and that they were exceedingly wealthy, and in no need of any gifts from her, and thus poisoned the mind of the deceased against them and induced her to revoke the said gifts to them. They also allege that McOonnachie and the Currans prevented friends of the deceased from seeing her, etc. It thus appears that the contest of John Wilson goes upon the theory that the deceased was of unsound mind and incompetent to make a will, and was improperly influenced at the time this -will was made and also at the time the codicil was made, while the theory of the McMahons is that she was competent to make a will and was free from any undue influence on the 27th of February, but was incompetent and improperly influenced twelve days afterward, when the codicil was made. To complicate the matter further Wilson filed an answer to the written contest of the McMahons, in which he denied all its allegations. Afterward Wilson was allowed, over the objections of the proponent, to file an amendment to his contest, in which he sets up the facts which he claims to have constituted undue influence, by averring substantially that McOonnachie falsely poisoned the mind of the deceased *267with stories about her husband being too intimate with a woman by the name of Sanchez, and also that deceased was unduly influenced by Michael and Mary Curran, the averment being substantially that McConnachie and the Currans prevented the friends of John Wilson from seeing the deceased, and made false representations to her about the conduct of John Wilson and the said Sanchez.
The jury returned a special verdict in answer to eleven interrogatories proposed to them. In answer to all the interrogatories touching the signing of the will and codicil, their proper attestation, publication, and execution, the verdict was in favor of proponents. They found also that at thedate of the execution of both the will and the codicil the deceased was not of sound mind. The interrogatory as to undue influence was as follows: “Was the execution of said instrument of date February 27,1893, procured through the undue influence of John McConnachie, Michael Curran and Mary Curran, or either of them?” and the answer was “Yes.” The interrogatory as to the codicil was in the same form, and the answer was the same. The interrogatory as to whether the instruments were procured through fraud, was also in the same form, and the answers were the same; that is to say—was the instrument “ procured through the fraud of John McConnachie, Michael Cur-ran and Mary Curran, or either of them?” and the answer was “Yes.”
Appellants took a great many exceptions to rulings of the court, which are elaborately argued by the respective counsel; but, under our views of the case, it is not necessary to notice all, or, indeed, the greater part of these exceptions. Such as are necessary to be considered, we will notice hereafter. We may say here, however, that the part of the amendments to the Wilson written contest which set up fraud should have been stricken out, because the amendments were made more than a year after the probate of the will, and, as the alleged fraud was a new cause of action, it could not be *268set up for the first time after the expiration of the year. Appellants also contend that the court erred in allowing the Wilson amendments made after the year on the subject of undue influence. In the original, undue influence was charged against McConnachie, which was averred to consist in “ reporting to her false, scandalous reports concerning the conduct of the said John Wilson”; but the nature of the reports was not stated, and in the amendments it was stated what those reports were, and also that undue influence was exercised by Michael and Mary Curran. The point of appellants is, that these amendments state new matters which could not be set up after the expiration of the year. This contention of appellants cannot be maintained as to the amendments about the alleged undue influence of McConnachie; it was a mere amplification of the original charge, and may properly be considered as simply a more definite statement of what had been formerly averred. But the point must be sustained as to the averment in the amendment about the undue influence alleged to have been exercised by Michael and Mary Curran; these averments are not amendatory or explanatory, or in amplification of anything alleged in the original, but are statements of entirely new matters, constituting another and independent cause of contest, which could have been presented only within a year after the probate. Therefore, the demurrer to these should have been sustained, or they should have been stricken out or disregarded. And, for this reason, the answer of the jury, “Yes,” to the various interrogatories asking whether the will or codicil was procured through the undue influence of McConnachie, Michael Curran, and Mary Curran, “ or either of them,” has no significance. It is not a finding that it was procured through the undue influence of McConnachie; and the question of the undue influence of the Currans was not properly before the jury. As to the undue influence alleged in. the contest of the McMahons, there is no pretense that, there was any proof of it; and there was none. And if *269it were allowable to consider the answers of the jury to the interrogatories submitted to them by the court as findings that the will and codicil were procured through the undue influence of McConnachie, we are satisfied that under 'the decisions of this court in former cases, and particularly in Goodwin v. Goodwin, 59 Cal. 560, Estate of Carpenter, 94 Cal. 406, In re McDevitt, 95 Cal. 33, Estate of Carriger, 104 Cal. 81, and Estate of Langford, 108 Cal. 608, the evidence was clearly insufficient to support such finding, or any finding of undue influence by any person.
The real question in the case is whether or not there was evidence sufficient to justify the findings that at the time of the execution of the will and the codicil the deceased was not mentally competent to make a will; and we are satisfied that the question should be answered in the negative.
Counsel for respondents say very properly that the rule as to conflicting evidence is the same in will contests as in other cases; and they seem to intimate that the rule has not been applied in some former probate cases, and to indicate a fear that it may not be applied in the case at bar. Of course, the rule is the same in all cases. Wherever there is a fair and reasonable amount of evidence to support the finding of a jury, it will not be disturbed here, though in our opinion it is against the preponderance of evidence; but where one side of an issue is clearly, amply, and firmly established by an unbroken line of evidence, and the jury find the other way upon no evidence that is “ really and substantially conflicting,” or upon a mere pretense of such evidence, or upon evidence so slight as to leave no room to doubt that the verdict was the result of passion or prejudice—there the finding should not be allowed to stand. This has always been the rule. And if it has happened here that quite a number of verdicts upsetting wills have been reversed, it was not because the rule as to conflicting evidence had not been properly applied, but because in will contests more than in any *270other class of cases are juries wont to render verdicts upon insufficient evidence. The history of this species of litigation shows that quite a number of people have come to think that the right to dispose of property by will has but little significance, and may be legally disregarded whenever the testator has not disposed of his property in a manner which suits the views of a jury. “ But the right to dispose of one’s property by will is most solemnly assured by law, and is a most valuable incident to ownership, and does not depend upon its judicious use. The beneficiaries of a will are as much entitled to protection as any other property owners; and courts abdicate their functions when they permit the prejudices of a jury to set aside a will merely upon suspicion, or because it does not conform to their ideas of what was just and proper.” (In re McDevitt, supra.)
With respect to the mental competency of the deceased at the date of the will and at the date of the codicil, the court, among other things, correctly in-" structed the jury as follows: “ Upon these two issues I instruct jmu that the burden of proof rests with the contestant, John Wilson. The law presumes that every person possesses a sound and disposing mind, and itis incumbent upon the contestant to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that Bridget Wilson did not, on February 27, 1893, or on March 11, 1893, possess a mind sufficiently clear and strong to enable her to know and understand the nature of the act in which she was then engaged, to know and recollect those who were the natural objects of her bounty, to know and remember the character and extent of her property, the manner in which and the persons to whom she'wished it distributed; and if he has failed to show that such was the condition of the mind of the deceased on February 27, 1893, your answer to interrogatory number 1 should be ‘Yes’; and if he has failed to show such to have been the condition of her mind on March 11, 1893, your answer to interrogatory number 2 should be ‘ Yes.’” *271Now the evidence introduced by appellants showed clearly and fully that on the two occasions referred to the deceased did “ possess a mind sufficiently clear and strong,” within the meaning of said instruction, to make a valid will; it leaves no doubt on that subject. The witnesses to the will were Mr. Winder, the lawyer who wrote it at her dictation, and who had been one of her legal advisers for a long time, Mr. Hannon, who was then a clerk in Winder’s office, and Dr. Boyd, who was one of the physicians attending the deceased. The witnesses to the codicil were the said Winder and Boyd, and a gentleman named Wiskotschill. All these attesting witnesses were examined at the trial, and their testimony was clearly and fully to the point that when the will and codicil were executed the deceased was in full possession of her mental faculties, knew what she was doing, and was perfectly competent to do it. There were three physicians who attended the deceased during her last illness—Dr. Worthington, who had attended her on several former occasions, Dr. Boyd, who was called upon immediately after the accident which caused her illness and subsequently her death, and attended her during nearly the whole period of her illness, and Dr. Lasher, who was in attendance for several days before her death. Appellants put all these physicians on the stand as witnesses; but on the objections of respondents, based on subdivision 4 of section 1881 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the offered testimony of Worthington and Lasher was excluded. Dr. Boyd, being an attesting witness, was allowed to testify, and his testimony was fully to the point of the competency of the deceased. He said: “ At the time the will was executed and also when the codicil was executed her mind was perfectly clear. At either of those times I had noticed nothing at all to indicate any failure of mind in any way. My opinion is that her mind was perfect, both at the time of the execution of the will and of the codicil. On the day after the codicil was written her mind was perfectly clear.” Dr. Worthington was afterward recalled by appellants for the pur*272pose of proving a conversation which he had with , deceased about a certain child who was a beneficiary in the will, and also for the purpose of trying to show that he had formed an opinion of her mental soundness from matters not of a professional and confidential nature; and it clearly appeared, from- testimony that was admitted, that he considered her of sound mind. In the course of his examination counsel for respondents asked him this question: “ Well, doctor, in treating patients such as Mrs. Wilson was, is it not necessary, and is it not your habit, in prescribing for her, to ask her something in connection with the condition of her mind?” To which he replied: “Well, in this case, it never occurred to me.” He was then asked by counsel for respondents: “Well, I say, isn't it necessary?” To which he replied: “Well, if there was any—if there was any doubt about her mind at all, then I should; but in this case I did n’t think so. Therefore I did n’t, you know, pay any particular attention at all. She was perfectly clear, of course, in every way, and I therefore-” Q.
“Well, that isn’t, I think, in response to my question.” What he afterward said on the subject of her mental condition we will not allude to, because it seems, although it does not clearly appear, that it was stricken out. In addition to the testimony of the physicians and the attesting witnesses, a large number of persons who were intimate acquaintances of the deceased who saw her during her last illness, about the time of and before and after the dates of the execution of the will and codicil, testified to her mental soundness; and the testimony of these witnesses need not be detailed here or commented on, because no witness of respondents testified to the contrary, although many of their witnesses were intimate acquaintances of the deceased and visited her during her last illness. In addition to the opinions of appellants’ witnesses that her mind was sound, conversations and acts of the deceased about the time of the execution of the will and codicil were testified to, by various witnesses, which showed mental capacity and *273her ability “ to know and understand the nature of the act in which she was then engaged, to know and recollect those who were the natural objects of her bounty, to know and remember the character and extent of her property, the manner in which, and the persons to whom, she wished it distributed.” To the lawyer who drew the will and codicil she gave descriptions of her property, and named, with apparent accuracy, many persons and places in California and Ireland. Some of her acts especially showed a strong and determined will; for instance, she was much attached to a member of the firm of lawyers who had done her legal business for many years, and desired to make a bequest to him,, which he declined; but, when he requested her to bequeath a certain amount to the public library of the city of Los Angeles, she peremptorily refused, because she thought that, in certain matters, the city had treated her very unjustly. There were many other incidents in proof which present cumulative evidence of her mental competency; and it is beyond doubt that the evidence touching her mental condition, at the times of the testamentary acts, clearly shows her testamentary capacity at those times.
A clear case of the testamentary capacity of the deceased at the very time of the execution of the will and codicil, having been made by the evidence of the appellants above noticed, the question is, Did the respondents introduce evidence so inconsistent and contradictory of that introduced by appellants as to protect the verdict of the jury by the shield of the doctrine of “conflicting evidence”? We think not.
In the first place, there is no contradiction of the direct testimony of the numerous witnesses who knew the deceased, and saw and conversed with her during her last illness, that, in their opinion, she was of sound mind. It is a remarkable circumstance that, although respondents examined about thirty witnesses, many of whom were intimate acquaintances of the deceased, none of them were asked by respondents if, in their *274opinion, she was mentally competent, and none of them testified that she was not.
Looking through the evidence, it is apparent that respondents’ claim that the deceased lacked testamentary capacity at the date of will and codicil rests almost entirely upon these two facts: 1. That, for many years prior to that date, she had been addicted to the intemperate use of intoxicating drinks; and, 2. That, at the time of the execution of said instruments, she was suffering from very distressing wounds on her person, caused by a bum, from the effects of which she afterward died.
There is no doubt that, under the evidence, it must. be taken as true that, at times, she drank to excess, and was sometimes greatly intoxicated. As to the extent to which her habit of drinking went, there is a marked conflict of testimony—it being much more excessive, according to respondents’ witnesses, than as represented by witnesses of appellants. But the jury had the right to accept the testimony of respondents’ witnesses on the point. That testimony, however, leaving out of view the contradictory testimony of appellants’ witnesses, went no farther than this: That for many years the deceased used intoxicating liquors; that she frequently used them to excess; that she was sometimes drunk, when, like other people in that condition, she talked foolishly; but that, when not in that condition, she was, as one of respondents’ witnesses said, “perfectly straight,” and that, although an illiterate woman, being unable to read or write, she had ordinary intelligence and shrewdness, and capacity such as an illiterate person may have to do business. Mark Leonard, one of respondents’ witnesses, and certainly not an unwilling one, after having testified to her intoxication on certain occasions, said: “She was sober enough to transact business most of the time, but I am only speaking of a few times.” William Maxey, another witness for respondents, having testified that he saw her intoxicated on a certain occasion, said: “I used to see Mrs. *275Wilson quite frequently. I have seen her at times when not under the influence of liquor. When I saw her at her house, I couldn’t say that she was under the influence of liquor as far as I could see. I used to see her in town when she was not under the influence of liquor, and I have seen her at times when she was. I have seen her sober. She attended to her business person a’ly—a great deal of it.” Another witness for respondents, Mrs. Blewett, having testified that the deceased “ drank pretty ofte p” said: “In the afternoon, generally, she seemed to be more inclined to the effects of it. I know in the forenoon she was always right, but in the afternoon I would often find her asleep. Sometimes) at such times as I would find her asleep, she would be under the influence or liquor.” George J. Dalton, a witness for respondents, said: “I have seen her sometimes that I thought she was under the influence of liquor, or something else; and other times that she seemed to be perfectly straight.” I. W. Heilman, a witness for respondents, testified that he had known her about twenty-five years, and had done business with her as her hr ulcer for a long time, and that she came very frequently to his bank. He further testified as follows: “ She was generally sober when she came. Bridget Wilson, though an illiterate woman, was a very bright woman, and a woman of a good deal of business. She talked nicely. Was rather an attractive woman in some respects, in her way of talking.” Other quotations of a similar character might' be made, but the foregoing are sufficient to indicate the general nature of her drinking habit and the limitations put upon it by respondents’ own witnesses.
Of course, it is possible for long continued excessive use of alcoholic stimulants to so permanently impair the intellectual faculties of the person indulging in it as to degrade him or her to the condition of imbecility, or mental incompetency to do any legal act. But the question, in a case like the one at bar, always is, not what might have been the mental condition of the tes*276fcator at the time of the execution of the will, but what was that condition. While evidence of the condition of the testator’s mind both before and after the date of the testamentary act is admissible, yet it is important only as it bears upon that condition at the very time of the execution of the will. It unfortunately is often the case that exceedingly bright and strong-minded people are addicted to the excessive use of alcoholic drinks, and are frequently intoxicated; and to hold that the wills of such persons, although shown to have been executed when they were in full possession of testamentary capacity, can be upset by a jury upon mere proof of such drinking habit, would be to carry the rule of “conflicting evidence” beyond all reasonable bonds. Upon the point of excessive drinking, see Ayres v. Hill, 2 Addams Ecc. 268; Peck v. Carey, 27 N. Y. 9; Elkinton v. Brick, 44 N. J. Eq. 154; Andress v. Weller, 3 N. J. Eq. 604; Harmony Lodge’s Appeal, 127 Pa. St. 276; Bannister v. Jackson, 45 N. J. Eq. 702; Wheeler v. Alderson, 3 Hagg. 211; Kahl v. Schober, 35 N. J. Eq. 461—in which it is said that “it is familiar law that habits of drunkenness do not of themselves take away a man’s capacity to make a will.” Under the circumstances of the case at bar the testimony of respondents’ witnesses as to the use of alcoholic liquors by the deceased is entirely insufficient to justify the finding of the jury that at the time of the execution of the will and codicil she was not of sound mind. And the evidence affords no pretense for contending that she was intoxicated at the times of the testamentary acts.
Ueither does the fact that deceased, at the time of the testamentary acts, was suffering from the injury which afterward caused her death afford any sufficient ground “ for the finding that she was incompetent to make a will at the time the will and codicil were made. A couple of days before the execution of the will she was badly injured by a fire which occurred in her house while she .was, beyond doubt, in a state of intoxication; and she afterward died from the effects of the wounds then re*277ceived. She was badly burned on her thighs, and almost her entire abdomen was blistered, and a spot on it about the size of a silver dollar was burned through the skin. It is possible that these wounds might have had the effect of destroying her testamentary capacity, but the question is, Did they have that effect? And the evidence abundantly shows that they did not. A multitude of wills could be conveniently set aside by juries who do not like their contents, and the beneficiaries left without any redress, if mere evidence that a will was made during the last illness of the testator, which might have rendered him incompetent, is a sufficient “conflict” with clear proof that he was competent at the time of the testamentary act to warrant a verdict against the validity of the will. Would mere evidence of old age, which might possibly have so impaired the mental faculties of a testator as to render him incompetent, be sufficient to justify a verdict upsetting his will in the face of clear proof that he was competent at the time of the testamentary act? (See Carty v. Connelly, 91 Cal. 15; and cases cited in note on pages 61, 62 of 1 Jarman on Wills, 6th ed.)
The other arguments in favor of upholding the verdict do not need much notice. It is said that the will was unnatural, because but little was left to the husband of the deceased. This is not the fact if we consider both the will and codicil which were probated together; but, as was said in the Estate of Langford, supra, “ the consideration of the question whether or not a will is ‘unnatural’—by which is meant, we suppose, different from what it might have been expected to have been— is of no importance except in a case where there is some evidence immediately tendingto show mental incapacity, fraud, or undue influence; in which event it might serve to help out a weak case.....A will cannot be upset because, in the opinion of a jury or court, it is unnatural.” And in In re McDevitt, supra, Temple, 0., speaking for the court, said: “Although I do not think it of special interest here, it is well to remember that *278one has the right to make an unjust will, an unreasonable will, or even a cruel will.” However, if a man ■who had always lived in apparently the most affectionate relations with his family should leave a will in which all his property was given to strangers, and no reason could be suggested or explanation made why he thus disinherited those near relatives whom he had always seemed to love—this circumstance would certainly tend to show some delusion or alienation of reason at the time of the testamentary act. But it would not be sufficient to overturn the will in the face of clear and plenary proof of full testamentary capacity at the time the will was executed; and it would vanish in the presence of a reasonable explanation of the act and a clear intent to do it with a full present knowledge of conditions and consequences. In the case at bar the facts are such as to put it beyond the reach of the rule that under certain circumstances importance should attach to the consideration that a will was unnatural. Here the deceased and her husband had been for a long time on unfriendly terms. They had frequent quarrels; and she was highly incensed against him for what she believed to be improper relations between him and another woman. When the will was being drafted she said that fifty dollars per month was enough for her husband, and that if he got any more “ he would only spend it on Eliza Sanchez,” and that “he had told her that he would marry Eliza Sanchez before she was cold in the ground.” Here, then, the fact that she did not give her husband more is fully and reasonably explained, and affords no evidence of testamentary incapacity; and the case presents no just reasons for a finding that, the will was invalid because “ unnatural.”
Some contention is made that the contents of the will and codicil, considered in connection with two former wills, show mental incapacity. We see nothing in this contention. The deceased had made two former wills which she had canceled; and the worst that can be said about the contents of those wills is that she a *279number of times changed some of the beneficiaries and particularly her residuary legatees. We see nothing extraordinary in this. It certainly affords no evidence of testamentary incapacity. A steady purpose to cut off her husband with a small monthly allowance runs through all these wills, except the codicil in contest. That being her fixed purpose, and having a large estate and no other'near relatives, it is not at all strange that she changed her mind as to whom the great residue of her property, remaining after certain legacies, should go. But during her last sickness, and after she had made the will of February 27th, her husband frequently went to see her, and they were often together alone; and it was quite natural that under these circumstances, her animosity to him should soften, as it evidently did. So with full knowledge of the consequences of the provisions of the codicil, which were explained to her by the lawyer who drafted it, although she apparently had such knowledge before the explanation, she by that instrument disposed of only a part of her estate, and knowingly left the greater part to go to her husband by operation of law.
There are no other suggestions made in the interest of respondents which we deem it necessary to notice. Looking through the entire record we are forced to the conclusion that there is not sufficient evidence to support the verdict; and that the case presents another instance of a jury being, insensibly perhaps, carried away from the real issues legitimately before them by the notion that the will was not such as in their opinion it ought to have been, and, therefore, should be set aside.
There are one or two other points made by appellants which, perhaps, need notice.
We do not think that the court committed any error of which appellants can complain by ordering the contests to be tried together. They were proponents of the will and codicil, and bound to maintain them against all attacks; and if the contestants were willing to pro*280ceed together, there were no just grounds upon which appellants could object. Whether or not the contestants could have rightfully demanded separate trials is a question not before us.
The court did not err in allowing respondents to introduce evidence of the manner in which the deceased acquired property disposed of in the will. It bore in some degree, however remotely, on the question of testamentary capacity. (Estate of Ruffino, 116 Cal. 304.)
The instructions of the court as to the general propositions of law applicable to the case were clear and correct; and the contention that there was no evidence at all to warrant some parts of the charge can hardly be maintained.
We do not think it necessary to notice the numerous exceptions to rulings of the court as to the admissibility of various items of evidence, as the questions may not again arise; and there are no other matters which demand further discussion.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.
Temple, J., concurred.