Court Opinion

ID: 6440553
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:16:37.194219+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:20.338178
License: Public Domain

Rugg, C.J.
This petition filed on January 2, 1932, by the executor of the will of Bridget Hurley sets out that he filed a petition on July 1, 1930, for the allowance of the will of Bridget Hurley; that the present respondent, Catherine M. Clare, a beneficiary under said will, appeared in opposition to its allowance; that the petitioner filed a motion to strike her appearance from the record; that she filed an answer to said motion setting out that she was a beneficiary and that the deceased was unable to make a will on the date thereof because of physical and mental disability; that his motion to strike her appearance from the record was allowed and a decree entered allowing the will on September 29, 1930; that on a petition in equity brought by Thomas Whelan as executor of, and the present respondent as sole remainderman under, the will of Daniel Hurley, to declare a waiver of the provisions of said will of Daniel Hurley, filed by said Bridget Hurley, widow of Daniel Hurley, null and void on the ground of her mental and physical disability, a decree was entered in accordance with its prayer declaring the waiver null and void. (See Whelan v. McNally, 277 Mass. 391.) The petition alleges that these two decrees are in conflict one with the other. The prayers of the petition are that the court will revoke its decree of September 29,1930, allowing said will, and grant a rehearing on the petition for probate of said will of Bridget Hurley. Decree was entered after hearing dismissing this petition. The petitioner appealed and asked for a report of the material facts. That report recites in substance the facts already narrated and further that Daniel Hurley died on April 14, 1930, that his will was filed on May 23, 1930, and allowed on June 23, 1930, that his widow, Bridget Hurley, on June 18, 1930, waived the provisions of his will and claimed the portions of his estate to which she would have been entitled if he had died intestate, that this waiver was, *84upon petition filed on October 2, 1930, and after hearing, declared null and void by decree entered on March 10,1931; that Bridget Hurley executed her will on June 19, 1930, died on June 26, 1930, and her will was allowed without opposition on September 29, 1930.
No error of law is disclosed on the face of this record. The parties to the proceeding in equity brought by the executor of the will of Daniel Hurley and the present respondent as sole remainderman under that will to declare null and void the waiver of Bridget Hurley of the provisions of that will are not the same as those to the present proceeding. Therefore the decree in that case is not res judicata as to any issue raised on the present petition. The present petition does not allege evidence bearing upon the mental capacity of Bridget Hurley, newly discovered since the allowance of her will. The entry of the decree declaring her waiver of the provisions of her husband’s will null and void was not newly discovered evidence. Existence of evidence, subsequently found sufficient to require that decree, was disclosed to the petitioner by the answer of the respondent to his motion to strike out her appearance in opposition to the allowance of the will of Bridget Hurley filed prior to ■the allowance of that will. The situation is that the petitioner, having sought a decree allowing the will and the <court having entered a decree in his favor on that point, can hardly now on the facts shown ask the court to set it aside. The issue raised on the petition to declare the waiver null and void was different from the issue raised on the petition to allow the will of Bridget Hurley. It is quite conceivable that a widow may have mental capacity to make a comparatively simple will and yet not have sufficient understanding to comprehend the nature of a waiver of the provisions of the will of her husband. Sutcliffe v. Heatley, 232 Mass. 231, 232. Daly v. Hussey, 275 Mass. 28, 29.
Decree affirmed.