Court Opinion

ID: 7135863
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:23:52.444346+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:37.514385
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Judge Payntee
Affirming.
This appeal results from a contest over the will of John McDonald. He left six children — three sons and three daughters — and the children of Mrs. Davis, a deceased daughter. His will provides for the distribution of his estate into seven parts. Each of his children takes one part, and the children of the deceased daughter one.part. The children were not given fee-simple titles to the interest devised to them, but only a life estate. They were given no more freedom in the use of the life estates than that afforded by law. Some of those taking life estates had children and some did *216not have; and, if any died without children, the parts devised went back to the estate. A trial resulted in a verdict for the contestants. A reversal is asked upon the following grounds: (1) That there was no evidence tending to show a want of testamentary capacity; (2) that the verdict of the jury was flagrantly against the weight of the evidence; (3) that the instruction given was erroneous and misleading.
The testimony is volumious, and we will therefore only state in -brief some of the evidence introduced by the contestants which tended to show a lack of testamentary capacity: The testator accumulated-a large estate. Early in life he developed a great desire to make and save money. He was grasping and miserly, and evidently cared more for money than he did for his family. If the testimony of the contestants is to be believed, he had no genuine affection for his family, and not the proper Conception of his duty to them. There is evidence tending to show that he did not want his wife and children to have any of his estate —as he expressed it, he did not want them to have a ‘ ‘ damn dollar; ’ ’ that he would like to leave it in debt, so that it would take the rents of the land 30 or 40 years to pay it; that, if he knew the day he was going to die, he would buy land so it would take that period of time for the rents to pay for it; that he wanted to leave it in such a way that the children would have to work like dogs to get a living out of it. "While he seemed to express a pride in the good looks of one of his daughters, yet he only allowed her $70 to clothe her and to pay the other expenses incident to her social position. His daughter, Mrs. Davis, married contrary to his wishes. She lived away from home. Sometimes she would return home with her children, and-he would tell her to take her children out of his sight ímd Éetwa home with them, He lived in & com*217fortable house, and on one occasion when one of his sons returned home, sick, he put him in a cabin on his place, which had been occupied as a residence by negroes. -When one of his married daughters visited his house upon one occasion, her mother had to slip coal to-the daughter’s room to malee it comfortable. When his daughter, Mrs. Davis, died in Lexington, he refused to go where her body was, though he went to the funeral and sat in the back part of the church. One witness testified that he said concerning his deceased daughter, Mrs. Davis, “She is dead now, and, I hope, in hell.” One of Mrs. Davis’ sons was ill, and an operation was necessary to save his life. A doctor offered to perform the operation free, if the testator would pay the hospital fee. He said he had nothing to do with it; “Damn him! let him die.” He said on one occasion that, if he could take his property with him, be could die happy. In speaking of one of his sons, he said that he was ‘1 a thieving son of a b — , ’ ’ and was robbing him of his wheat. There was much testimony offered by the contestants tending to show thát the testator did not know the obligations he owed to his children. He unquesionably had the mind to know his estate, and the nature and value of it. He seems to have had a fixed purpose as to the disposition of his estate, and that purpose was to give his children as little interest in it as possible. The contest was waged upon the ground that his aversion to his children was such that he did not know the obligations he was under to them. It is as necessary, in order to have- testamentary capacity, for one to have such sensibilities as will enable him to know the obligations he owes to the natural objects of his bounty, as it is for him to have the capacity to know the nature and value of his estate, and a fixed purpose to dispose of it. (Murphy’s Ex’r v. Murphy, 65 S. W., 165, 23 Ky. Law Rep., *2181460 ; Wise, &c. v. Foote, &c., 81 Ky., 10, 4 Ky. Law Rep., 643; Woodford v. Buckner, &c., 111 Ky., 241, 63 S. W., 617, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 627.) We are of the opinion that there was abundant evidence tending to sbow a lack of testamentary capacity to justify tbe court in submitting tbe ease to tbe jury. We do not think tbe verdict of tbe jury is flagrantly against the weight of the evidence.
The instruction defining “testamentary capacity” is substantially tbe same as was given in tbe case of Woodford v. Buckner, etc., and, in our opinion, was a proper definition of “testamentary capacity.”
The judgment is affirmed.