Court Opinion

ID: 6443228
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:19:02.913044+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:40.174888
License: Public Domain

Dolan, J.
This case comes before us upon the respondents’ appeals from a decree, entered in the Probate Court, denying their motion that issues be framed for jury trial in the matter of the petition for probate of two instruments purporting to be the last will and codicil of Maud Young, late of Brookline, deceased. The motion was heard upon statements of expected proof made by opposing counsel. After providing in the will for a legacy of $5,000 to a grandniece, described as residing in Brookline, in this Commonwealth, the deceased left the residue of her estate, amounting to about $23,000, in trust to pay the net income to the committee on scholarships of the Brookline High School and their successors, to be paid by the committee “in such manner and in such amounts as it may deem advisable for the benefit and assistance of deserving girls in the stenography course at the Brookline High School, to be known as the Maud Young Scholarship Fund.” The will was executed on October 26, 1933.
The codicil was executed on March 7, 1934, and under its terms the legacy given by the will to the grandniece of the deceased was reduced to $3,000 and legacies of $1,000 each were given to two friends of the deceased. In all other respects the provisions of the will were ratified and confirmed. The deceased died on November 10, 1938.
The statements of expected proof would warrant the judge in finding that the following facts are not disputed by the parties: Both of the instruments presented for probate were prepared by the same attorney at law at the direction of the deceased. He supervised their execution and was an attesting witness to each of them. The deceased had never married and for many years had been a teacher of stenography and typewriting in the Brookline *242High School. At the time of the execution of the instruments she was about seventy years of age and was pursuing her duties in that school, teaching five classes on each of the school days. The contestants are two nephews of the deceased, now in their “fifties.” They left the' Commonwealth in their “teens” and have since resided outside of its borders, returning now and then on their vacations. They saw the deceased but occasionally. She entertained some resentment toward their father, upon whom she blamed financial reverses suffered by her many years before her death.
We discover nothing in the record to support a conclusion that the judge erred in denying the respondents’ motion for the framing of jury issues. See Fuller v. Sylvia, 240 Mass. 49; Hannon v. Gorman, 296 Mass. 437, 438.

Decree denying jury issues affirmed.