Williams v. Davis , 52 Mont. 192 ( 1916 )


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  • ME. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

    delivered the opinion of the court.

    Upon the former appeal (In re Williams’ Estate, 50 Mont. 142, 145 Pac. 957) a new trial was awarded because the evidence was insufficient to show due publication of the writing proffered as the last will and testament of Eachel E. Williams, deceased. Upon the second trial the subscribing witness Estabrook so far changed his testimony as to supply the deficiency noted in our former opinion, but the testimony of Norbeck, the other subscribing witness, is to the effect that nothing whatever was done or said by Mrs. Williams, at the time the writing was signed, to indicate that it was understood or intended by her to be her will. The jury were at liberty to accept Nor-beck ’s testimony and find that there was not any publication, or they could believe Estabrook and Harley and reach the contrary conclusion. They chose the first alternative and, in response to special interrogatories, returned that Mrs. Williams did not publish or declare to either subscribing witness that the writing in question was her will. That finding is supported by competent evidence. The jury passed upon the credibility of Norbeck in the first instance; the presiding judge reviewed the evidence on motion to adopt the findings and a distinguished member of the state’s judiciary, called in to pass upon the motion for a new trial upon the cold record, in denying the motion has stamped the seal of his approval upon the special verdict. Under these circumstances we might with propriety refer to our former decision as conclusive, and upon that authority affirm the judgment and order below. But counsel for appellants insist that certain prejudicial errors were committed, and because of them a fair and impartial trial of the issues was not had.

    *1991. The proponents first made ont their prima facie case to the court sitting without a jury. The will was received in evi[1] denee and was then formally offered for probate. The court reserved its decision upon the offer, ealled a jury and tried the contest—the contestant assuming the burden as plaintiff—and the will was again offered and received in evidence. The jury returned special findings which were adopted, and a judgment was rendered in which the trial court declared: “That the said instrument offered herein for probate be and the same is hereby adjudged to be rejected and to be of no force or effect as the or any last will and testament of Rachel E. Williams, deceased; that the same is held for naught, and that the same is denied to probate.” Complaint is made that the court never passed upon appellants’ offer of the instrument for probate, but the recital from the record above is a sufficient answer. In the matter of procedure, the cause was tried so well that it deserves commendation. It was in all respects technically correct. (In re Murphy’s Estate, 43 Mont. 353, Ann. Cas. 1912C, 380, 116 Pac. 1004; Farleigh v. Kelley, 28 Mont. 421, 63 L. R. A. 319, 72 Pac. 756; In re Williams’ Estate, above.)

    2. Mr. Andrew J. Davis was called as a witness for contestant and, over objection, was required to answer as to his wealth [2] at the time the alleged will was executed. He testified in substance that he was then worth more than $1,000,000. The court’s ruling upon the admissibility of this evidence is assigned as error. By the terms of the alleged will, this contestant, Dorothy Alice Williams, was cut off with $500; a domestic was to receive $1,000; and all the residue of the $100,000 estate was bestowed upon “Andrew J. Davis, adult banker * * * as his property absolutely.” The will was attacked for (a) failure of due execution, including publication; (b) incapacity of the testatrix;' and (c) undue influence.

    Rachel E. Williams had but one child, George H. Williams, who died about January 7, 1907, leaving surviving him an only child, Dorothy, the contestant herein, who was then but 7% years old. The record establishes that Mrs. Williams had always *200manifested the greatest affection for her granddaughter, and had confided to the wife of her family physician that she intended to devote at least $20,000 to Dorothy’s education; that the child visited her grandmother frequently and, when away from her, they corresponded to some extent; that about January 24, 1907, Dorothy went from her home in Helena to Anaconda and spent three or four days with Mrs. Williams. The record further discloses that as early as December 21, 1906, Mrs. Williams, a woman then of seventy years or upward, was suffering from a general breakdown; that she was the- victim of nephritis, commonly called Bright’s Disease; that the disease was in an advanced stage and progressing rapidly; that to take her from her home in Butte to Anaconda it was deemed necessary to move the railway car to a point near her home, rather than attempt to move her to the depot, and that her family physician should accompany her; that she was very weak on January 7; that at the time this writing was signed, according to the witness Norbeck, “she looked like a very ill person # # * and did not seem to be much interested in the proceedings. * * * There was nothing said by Mrs. Williams or anyone about the nature of the contents of the papers.” On February 27, Mrs. Williams was in a state of coma, and on March 3 she died.

    Bowed down by the keenest grief for the loss of her only child—George—without near relatives in all the world, except her seven year old granddaughter, to whom her attachment would naturally be greatly intensified after her son’s death, and within two weeks after that loss occurred, it is pretended that Mrs. Williams made her will, cutting off her only blood kinship with a bare pittance and bestowing her comfortable fortune upon a millionaire banker, not in any wise related to her by ties of blood, marriage, or even intimate friendship, and that two or three days after making such disposition of her property, she received and entertained her granddaughter for a considerable time at her apartments in Anaconda. It is unnecessary to refer to the medical testimony characterizing the *201dread disease from which Mrs. Williams suffered and died, or the effect upon the mind of the retention in the system of the morbid matters which the diseased organs were powerless to throw off. It suffices for present purposes to say that we incline to the belief that the evidence of the intimate relationship between Mrs. Williams and her grandchild, of her physical condition and the peculiarly unnatural disposition of her property furnished a sufficient foundation for the legitimate inference that at the time this writing in question was executed, Mrs. Williams did not possess testamentary capacity. Upon this hypothesis, the evidence of Mr. Davis’ wealth was unquestionably competent and material; but in their brief counsel for appellants insinuate, without asserting, that the disposition of her property by Mrs. Williams was neither harsh nor unnatural, but, on the contrary, evidenced her wisdom and her business acumen. They say: “She made a millionaire adult banker her ostensibly sole beneficiary under the will for the express purpose of protecting Dorothy, and of providing a safe conduit for Dorothy’s second very considerable fortune until the day when the law says that Dorothy is wise enough to handle it herself. ’ ’ In this counsel exceed the bounds of argument. There is not the slightest intimation in the record, so far as we can ascertain, that this contestant has ever received a cent from any source, or that Mrs. Williams intended to create a trust fund for Dorothy’s use or benefit. The alleged will itself declares that the devise is to Mr. Davis ‘‘as bis property absolutely,” and the history of this litigation demonstrates that the principal beneficiary is standing upon what he deems his strict legal rights to have this property as his own.

    Upon the record we say that the will undertook to make a most unnatural disposition of the property, and evidence of such fact is always admissible as a circumstance to be considered with other evidence, as tending to show an unbalanced mind or a mind easily susceptible to undue influence. (Ross on Probate Law and Practice, sec. 51.)

    *202In Wilson’s Estate, 117 Cal. 262, 49 Pac. 172, the court said: “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 granted 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.”

    In 1 Schoiiler on Wills, fifth edition, section 77, the same subject is covered in a sentence: “In fine, a harsh and unnatural disposition by the will in question is a circumstance which tends to discredit the maker’s testamentary capacity.” (See, also, section 240.)

    The evidence of the principal beneficiary’s great wealth was competent for the very purpose of emphasizing the unnatural and unusual disposition which Mrs. Williams apparently attempted to make of her fortune. (Mowry v. Norman, 223 Mo. 463, 122 S. W. 724; In re Esterbrook, 83 Vt. 229, 75 Atl. 1; 40 Cyc. 1034, 1035; 28 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 2d ed., 106; Manatt v. Scott, 106 Iowa, 203, 68 Am. St. Rep. 293, 76 N. W. 717.)

    The testimony relating to Mr. Davis’ wealth was competent. The weight to be given to the evidence of an unnatural' disposition of the property was for the jury.

    3. Counsel for proponents having objected to a question asked [3] the witness Mrs. Freund,, the attorney for contestant called the court’s attention to Meier v. Buchter, 197 Mo. 68, 7 Ann. Cas. 887, 6 L. R. A. (n. s.) 202, 94 S. W. 883, and over objection read to the court, in the presence of the jury, Judge Lamm’s vigorous opinion. We cannot upon this record convict counsel of unprofessional conduct in seeking by indirection to get before the jury the facts of the Meier Case and the comment thereon, when ordinarily he would not be permitted to read the opinion to the jury directly. (Mahoney v. Dixon, 34 Mont. 454, 87 Pac. 452.) We must assume that counsel acted in good faith, and, if so, it was a matter within the discretion *203of the trial court whether the jury should be excused during the reading. There is no evidence of any abuse of discretion. We think the presiding judge remarked' pertinently that he could not excuse the jury every time an objection was to be considered.

    4. The contestant’s case depended very largely upon the [4] evidence furnished by the subscribing witness Norbeck. His testimony was placed before the jury by contestant in her case in chief. Proponents then introduced a deposition which disclosed that at the date of this second trial, Norbeck was confined in the federal prison at McNeil Island, serving a sentence imposed by the United States district court for the district of Idaho. In rebuttal, contestant called certain witnesses who, over objection of proponents, were permitted to testify to Norbeek’s good reputation. It is quite evident that the principal, if not the sole, purpose of introducing the deposition was to discredit Norbeck. It was a direct attack upon his character, and the correctness of the court’s ruling in permitting contestant to fortify his credit by evidence of his previous good reputation is so manifest that the citation of authority would seem unnecessary. The rule is as old as the law itself, and is embodied in our statute. (Rev. Codes, sec. 8026.) .See 5 Jones’ Commentaries on the Law .of Evidence, sections 865-867, where abundant authority to sustain the trial court’s ruling will be found and the decided cases cited.

    5. The trial court submitted to the jury thirteen special interrogatories, which were all answered. It is now insisted that [5] these findings are so inconsistent that they destroy each other, or at least demonstrate that the jurors were actuated by bias or prejudice. Briefly summarized, the findings are: That on January 21, 1907, when the alleged will was executed, (a) Rachel E. Williams was not of sound and disposing mind; (b) she did not subscribe the instrument as her last will and testament; (c) she did not publish it as her will; (d) she did not request Norbeck and Estabrook each to sign his name as a witness; (e) Mrs. Williams was not acting freely, but was under *204the undue influence of Lyman M. Harley. The only possible inconsistency is between the first and the last; but a finding of want of testamentary capacity is not so far inconsistent with a finding of undue influence that both may not stand. (In re Murphy’s Estate, above.) It may be conceded that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the finding of undue influence. We have already determined that the finding of want of publication is sustained by sufficient competent evidence, and that finding alone is fatal to appellants’ claim. Without due publication there is not a will, and if the writing is not a valid will, neither of these appellants is concerned in the least.

    The further findings that Mrs. Williams was without testamentary capacity, and that she labored under the undue influence of Harley, might well be disregarded. There were facts and circumstances from which the jury might have determined the question of mental capacity as they did, and from which they doubtless drew their conclusion that the testatrix was acting under undue influence. Whatever else may be said of the evidence upon which these two findings were made, there is sufficient substance to it to exonerate the jury from any imputation that the findings are merely indicative of passion or prejudice.

    It cannot be contended that because of an erroneous finding, [6] a judgment, otherwise proper and fully sustained by correct findings, must be set aside. Appellants must bear the burden of showing that there is not any correct finding which will sustain the judgment. (McDermott v. Severe, 202 U. S. 600, 50 L. Ed. 1162, 26 Sup. Ct. Rep. 709; Dexter v. Codman, 148 Mass. 421, 19 N. E. 517; Morgan v. Adams, 29 App. Cas. (D. C.) 198.)

    It is beside the question that the evidence upon all the issues submitted was in sharp conflict, or that there were presented other facts and circumstances from which a different jury or another trial judge might reach a different conclusion. The jury passed upon the credibility of the witnesses in the first instance, and the trial court did likewise in review upon the *205motion for a new trial. With their determination we do not feel justified in interfering. -

    The judgment and order are affirmed.

    •Affirmed.

    Me. Chief Justice Bbantly and Me. Justice Sanner concur.

Document Info

Docket Number: No. 3,690

Citation Numbers: 1916 Mont. LEXIS 40, 52 Mont. 192, 156 P. 1087

Judges: Bbantly, Holloway, Sanner

Filed Date: 4/30/1916

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/11/2024