Judges: Burke
Filed Date: 6/25/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On the 26th day of February, 1912, Lucy B. Townsend executed a paper writing purporting to be her last will and testament, which was admitted to probate by the Orphans' Court of Baltimore City. This paper, which we shall denominate in this opinion, her will, contained fourteen items. It appointed Samuel Clinton Townsend and William Stone *Page 173 Townsend executors, and letters testamentary were issued to them.
The first eleven items of the will contained pecuniary bequests to certain named persons. By the twelfth item she bequeathed to her sister, Anna Grace Lyon, all her jewelry, clothing, furniture, pictures, books and silverware, if she should be living at the time of the testatrix's death; if, however, she should be dead at that time, the same should constitute a part of the rest and residue of the estate. By this item she also bequeathed to her said sister the rents, issues and profits on the sum of fifty thousand dollars, which she directed to be set aside for the use of her sister for life, and after her death to be and become a part of the residue of the estate. By the thirteenth item the rents and profits of a like sum were directed to be paid to her brother, John Lyttleton Lyon, for life, and at his death said sums should fall into and become a part of the residuary estate. The fourteenth item, which deals with the residuary estate, is here transcribed:
"Item XIV. All the rest and residue of my estate, real, personal and mixed, including the respective amounts set aside for the use of my brother and sister, for life, and after their respective deaths unto such persons living at that time who would, under the laws of Maryland, inherit real estate of me had I died intestate."
A caveat to the will was filed by John L. Lyon and Anna Grace Lyon, the only surviving brother and sister of the testatrix, and thereupon the Orphans' Court of Baltimore City transmitted certain issues to the Baltimore City Court for trial. The case was tried three times. Twice the jury were unable to agree. Upon the third trial a jury in the Superior Court of Baltimore City, to which the case had been removed, rendered a verdict sustaining the will. The appeal before us is taken by the caveators from the ruling of the Court made during the progress of the trial. *Page 174
The first and third issues were withdrawn by consent, and the case was tried upon the following issues:
2. Was the paper writing, dated the 26th day of February, in the year nineteen hundred and twelve, and purporting to be the last will and testament of said Lucy B. Townsend, executed by her when she was of sound and disposing mind, and capable of executing a valid deed or contract?
4. Were the contents of the paper writing, dated the 26th day of February, in the year nineteen hundred and twelve, purporting to be the last will and testament of Lucy B. Townsend, read to or by her, or known or understood by her at or before the time of the alleged execution thereof?
5. What parts, if any, of the said paper writing were unknown to, or misunderstood by, the said Lucy B. Townsend, at the time of the alleged execution thereof?
The modal execution of the will was admitted by the caveators at the trial, and the caveatees were relieved of the necessity of proving the same. At the conclusion of the whole case the defendants submitted two prayers by which the Court was asked to direct a verdict for the defendants: First, because there was no legally sufficient evidence in the case to show that at the time of the execution of the will the testatrix was of unsound mind and incapable of executing a valid deed or an ordinary contract; and, secondly, because the evidence was legally insufficient to sustain a verdict on the fourth and fifth issues. These prayers were rejected. The evidence offered by the plaintiff, if believed by the jury (and it was the sole tribunal to pass upon the weight of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses), was legally sufficient to have carried the case to the jury upon each issue submitted.
The mental capacity required by the law for the making of a will, and the character and scope of the evidence which may be resorted to upon the issue of testamentary capacity have been the subject of many adjudications of this Court and elsewhere. The law is so definitely settled upon these subjects that a brief quotation from two cases will be sufficient *Page 175 in the consideration of the questions raised under the second issues.
In Davis v. Calvert et al., 5 G. J. 269, it was said: "The written law of this State furnishes the rule, by which the capacity of a testator is to be measured; and the inquiry must always be, whether at the time of executing or acknowledging the will or testament, he was capable of executing a valid deed or contract; that is here, the standard by which the mental capacity of a testator is to be ascertained, and no inferior grade of intellect will suffice. That state of mental capacity is to be determined by the condition of the testator's mind, at the time of his executing or acknowledging the will or testament. For, notwithstanding his incapacity at a prior or subsequent time should be proved, it does not necessarily follow that he was incompetent when the will or testament was made, as his incapacity before or after that time might have been the effect of a temporary cause. But for the purpose of shedding light upon the state of his mind, at the time the will or testament was made, evidence of his condition, and of his bodily imbecility, both before and after that period may be produced. And the jury may, upon the whole evidence, infer incompetency at the time of executing or acknowledging the will or testament, according to the character and cause of the entire incapacity proved; which may be established by proof of the conversations or actions, or declarations of the testator inconsistent with sanity, or of all of them taken together. The general maxim is, semel furibundussemper furibundus praesumitur. It is not of itself sufficient to avoid a will or a testament, that its dispositions are imprudent, and not to be accounted for. But a will or testament may, by its provisions, furnish intrinsic evidence, involving it in suspicion, and tending to show the incapacity of the testator to make a disposition of his estate, with judgment and understanding, in reference to the amount and situation of his property, and the relative claims of the different persons who should have been the object of his *Page 176 bounty — such as a disposition of his whole estate, to the exclusion of near and dear relations, having the strongest natural claim upon his affections; a wife and children for instance, or other near relations, without any apparent or known cause, which alone would be a suspicious circumstance, although not furnishing per se sufficient grounds for setting aside the instrument."
JUDGE SCHMUCKER, in Davis v. Denny,
"Sanity and mental capacity are presumed by the law to exist in reference to making wills as well as to other transactions, and the burden of proof is upon those who alleged their non-existence. Brown v. Ward, supra; Higgins v. Carlton,supra; Tyson v. Tyson,
A brief statement of the more important and essential parts of the evidence produced by the appellants will now be made. It is not, however, the province of this Court to determine whether the testatrix possessed the required capacity, as defined in the cases cited, to make a valid will; but whether the jury might have reasonably concluded from the evidence offered by the plaintiff that she was mentally incompetent to do so. *Page 177
We state the question in this way for the reason that it was earnestly contended by the counsel for the appellees that the Court ought not to reverse the case for any errors that might be found in the exceptions, because there was no legally sufficient evidence in the case to support a finding for the plaintiffs upon any of the issues, and, therefore, whatever the error the Court may have committed in its rulings, was not reversible error.
The testatrix in 1889, being then Miss Lucy B. Lyon of Richmond, Virginia, and about thirty-four years of age, married Samuel Townsend of Baltimore, who was much her senior, and who died in 1904. Notwithstanding the great disparity in their ages, their married life appears to have been a happy one. Mrs. Townsend survived her husband about eight years, and died in the Hospital for Women of Maryland, in the City of Baltimore, a few days after a surgical operation had been performed upon her for appendicitis.
This operation was performed between the hours of twelve and one o'clock on February 26th, 1912. The will in controversy was executed in the anesthesia room of the hospital a short time before the operation was performed. This room adjoins the operating room, and at the time Mrs. Townsend signed the will she was sitting upon what is called a "carrier," — a conveyance used to transport patients into the operating room. Mrs. Townsend had been taken to the hospital on the previous night, Sunday, February 25th, from the house of Mrs. Smyser. Mrs. Townsend never had any children, and at the time of her death there were no lineal descendants of her husband living. The testatrix was the third wife of Samuel Townsend. By a former marriage he had issue, and at the time of his death he left surviving him one grandchild, — the only son of a pre-deceased son. This grandson was dead at the date of the will. There were certain nephews and nieces of Samuel Townsend living in Baltimore, and the relations between them and the testatrix appear to have been of a uniformly cordial and friendly character. *Page 178 She spoke of them at times as her nephews and nieces, and they addressed her as aunt.
At the time of her death, Mrs. Townsend's only surviving brother and sister were the caveators. The sister was unmarried. The brother was married, but had no issue. She had no nephews and nieces of her own blood. On her mother's side she had some first cousins and one aunt living. On her father's side there were some first, second and third cousins living in Pittsburgh, who appear to be people of wealth and social importance. There was no intimacy between them and her. They met occasionally, but did not correspond, and really knew very little about each other.
Mrs. Townsend's father died when she was a young girl, leaving a widow and five children surviving: George, John, Lucy B. (Mrs. Townsend), Grace and Harry. They appear to have been in poor financial circumstances, and the burden of supporting the family devolved upon John and George. These two brothers supported Mrs. Townsend up to the time of her marriage, and the relations between her and them were close and affectionate.
Mrs. Dickinson, the aunt of Mrs. Townsend, testified that Mrs. Townsend was very fond of her brother John; that she admired him and he used to write her the most beautiful letters; that she thought him a man with a high sense of honor; a man of great capacity, and a man that anyone could love and depend on, and that he was a good, consistent Christian; that John commenced to participate in the care of the family upon the death of his father, which occurred when he was but eleven years of age; that he left home and went to Pittsburgh where he was successful and continued to assist in the support of the family.
Mrs. Townsend, at the time of her marriage was described as ``a very intelligent woman, a very sensible woman, a woman that was not easily influenced; she was well sustained and a person who had a great deal of executive ability, and was competent to do anything that was to be done." She lived at *Page 179 home until her marriage. She was the eldest daughter, and took charge of the house when her mother was in bad health. Shortly after the death of her husband in 1904, it is shown by the evidence of the caveators that her health began to fail, and that after the death of her brother Harry, who died in 1909, she "began to go back very materially, both mentally and physically." Her brother George died in 1911. She was very much attached to her brothers, and their deaths were a great shock to her. The death of her brother Harry appears to have greatly affected her nervous system. She developed serious Bright's disease. We quote from the testimony of Mrs. Dickinson, as it appears in the record: "Mrs. Townsend was greatly disappointed by Harry's death; she bought a place thinking she would have her brother to live there with her, but as he died she felt that she had no one and she would have to go through life alone, and witness thought it affected her health very materially, both physically and mentally, because she never got any better but grew worse andworse every year. Witness also said she was very capricious at times, but witness thought she was perfectly able and competent to attend to her affairs, for she never called upon any one to assist her in that; that she was always anticipating evil; that she thought something dreadful was going to happen every day and that seemed to be on her mind all the time. She could not sleep at nights; she said if she opened her eyes at night she would always see her deceased brother sitting there in the corner looking at her. She said she could not sleep; that rats were running over her all night and that spooks were walking around her bed; she seemed to have hallucinations to a great degree. Witness drove with her every day, and she would go to sleep just as soon as they entered the surrey and sleep all the time until they got home; it was impossible to keep her awake."
Claude M. Dean, testifying to a conversation he had with Mrs. Townsend in June, 1911, immediately following the death of her brother George, said that during the talk: "She *Page 180 fell off in a kind of a stupor, or kind of semi-consciousness, and remained that way possibly a second or two, and that other times possibly a minute or two, while as she came too she started to tell the same thing over again, and when she started to tell it the third time I began to take notice and I found that when she got through she told the same thing over six different times * * * she repeated herself so often, over and over again, during the conversation; she would kind of fall off in a sleep, stupor, or appearing to be asleep for a second or two, sometimes lasting longer, possibly a minute or two."
Mrs. Mary B. Todd, testified that she visited Mrs. Townsend in August, 1911, and went driving with her frequently; that "Mrs. Towsend would nearly always drop off asleep during the drive; she seemed very drowsy and slow and not very active; she was always willing and anxious to go, but seemed to go beyond her strength always; witness noticed how slowly she came and went up and down the steps of her house. She asked witness to look at her limbs and she saw great big purple spots on them. During this same visit witness observed that she would constantly repeat herself; she seemed to forget that she had told things and would tell them over." Mrs. Todd saw Mrs. Townsend in October, 1911. She testified that at that time Mrs. Townsend looked so wretched that she would not have been surprised at her death, and was thoroughly alarmed at her condition. She saw her again in November, 1911, and said that "she seemed to witness to be gradually growing worse each time witness saw her, and she seemed less alert, less cheerful, less mentally active, or physically and mentally."
Mrs. Sarah J. Lyon, the wife of John L. Lyon, one of the caveators, testified that in October, 1911, Mrs. Townsend visited her at her home in New York City. She said that Mrs. Townsend looked so bad that witness would not have been surprised if she had died any minute. She was all swollen under the eyes and she did not seem to realize what she was doing half the time. She went with witness to the *Page 181 theatre four times inside of forty-eight hours, and during the intermissions she would sleep, sleep all the time. Then she would wake up and hold the program and seemed to know what was going on at that time; the next day she would say to witness, ``Why Jane, what was all that about last night, I don't remember a thing about it.' Witness would say so and so, and she would say she did not know it."
In February, 1912, Mrs. Townsend was in Baltimore stopping at the home of Mrs. Smyser. She was taken ill there, and Doctor Robert T. Wilson, a physician and surgeon who had previously been her attending physician, was called to see her. He considered her a very sick woman, and tried to induce her to go to the hospital, but she would not consent to do so. On Sunday night, February 25th, 1912, she informed Doctor Wilson that on the preceding Thursday she had fallen in the bath room. He was of the opinion that the fall had ruptured the appendix sac and that she had peritonitis. He told her she must go to the hospital. We quote from his testimony as it appears in the record: "She did not want to go, and it made her very excited; she did not want to go but witness talked to her about her ill condition and told her she must go. She then made up her mind to go. The approaching operation made her more apprehensive. On the 26th she was just as ill as the night before. She was so ill that witness considered an operation should be done just the first moment possible. Witness considered her then to be in a dying condition, and it was urgent an operation should be done to give her the only chance that might be any chance for her."
Doctor Robert W.B. Mayo, the chief resident surgeon of the Woman's Hospital, testified that when he saw Mrs. Townsend on Sunday night she was an extremely ill woman. She was quite restless and anxious and apprehensive because of being brought to the hospital and because of the pending operation; that the next morning she was just the reverse of the night before. "She was depressed and sleepy. Of course *Page 182 when spoken to she would awaken and answer a few words and lapse into a period of sleepiness again, what we call a semi-comatose condition." He further said: "The operation was performed upon the abodmen and a cut or incision was made through the abdominal wall down to this lining I mentioned, the peritoneum, and as soon as that was nicked with the knife, the puss gushed out to a height of six or eight inches, so much was in there, and it was under pressure and it gushed out with the nick in the lining, the membrane." The operation was not completed because of Mrs. Townsend's serious condition, but drains were inserted to relieve her of the puss. She had uraemia and septicaemia, — both blood poisoning, — the first caused by diseased kidneys and the second by the puss in the abdomen. The immediate cause of her death was uraemic poisoning, hastened by the septicaemia and the shock of the operation.
It was admitted that a dose of one-fourth of a grain of codeine was administered to Mrs. Townsend at about ten-thirty P.M., Sunday, February 25th, 1912, and another dose of one-fourth of a grain of codeine was administered to her about nine-fifteen A.M. on Monday, February 26th, 1912, and a dose of one-eighth of a grain of morphine and one-150th grain of atropin was administered to her hypodermically about twelve o'clock noon on Monday, February 26th, 1912.
We now state what we understand to be the substance and effect of the evidence produced by the plaintiffs as to the circumstances attending the preparation and execution of the will:
Twelve o'clock was the time fixed for the operation. On the morning of February 26th, 1912, Mr. George R. Willis received a call over the telephone from William S. Townsend telling him that Mrs. Townsend was about to be operated upon, and that she wished to make some changes in her will. The will referred to was one which had been prepared in December, 1909, after the death of Harry Lyon. It was in *Page 183 the possession of Mr. Willis. The pecuniary bequests in this will, with three exceptions, were identical with those contained in the will in controversy. By the will of 1909 the whole residuary estate was given equally to George, John and Anne Grace Lyon, with a limitation over to the survivors in the event of the death of either.
Mr. Willis went at once to the hospital, and saw Mrs. Townsend in her room, and was with her not longer than fifteen minutes, — possibly not that long. He went from the hospital to his office and hurriedly prepared the will which was taken by Mr. Luther M.R. Willis to the hospital for execution. Mr. George R. Willis testified that Mrs. Townsend told him she wanted the residuum of her estate left to her nieces and nephews. Testifying as to his visit to the hospital, his conversation with Mrs. Townsend, and the preparation of the will, Mr. Willis said: "I remember I was very busy that morning and received a telephone message from the hospital, sent by Mr. William S. Townsend, that Mrs. Townsend wanted to see me, and that she was going to be operated on that morning by Doctor Finney, and that I should hurry; I got up there as fast as I could; I dropped everything I was doing and went up; I was shown into her room by Doctor Wilson; there was a nurse in her room, but they all went out, and Mrs. Townsend and myself were alone in that room; she was lying in bed and told me that they were going to operate on her; they thought it best; I asked her who advised it, and she said Doctor Finney; I told her that she ought to be entirely satisfied; she then said that she wanted to make an alteration in her will; my recollection is she asked me where the will was and I told her it was in my strong box; she said Maria is dead — that was Mr. Townsend's grandson's widow — I want to eliminate, I want to take out the legacy I had given her, and I want to give a legacy to a little girl, whose name I had not heard before; I took the name down to give her a legacy — *Page 184
"Q. What name was that? A. Bloom, I think the name of Juanita Bloom. Q. Did you know how to spell Juanita? A. No; I asked her how to spell it and she spelled it for me, and I wrote it down and then she said she did not want Grace to have but the income on $50,000; and she did not want her brother John to have any more than the income on $50,000; she said that was enough for them. I took that down; I asked her, Where do you want the rest to go? She said, I want it to go to my nieces and nephews, — is that all you want? — she said, yes.
"I took Mr. Townsend's automobile at the hospital and hurried back to my office and got out the old will and had the first page of it copied, because the legacies in the new one were the same as in the old one with the exception of eliminating one and increasing another and adding another; then I dictated as rapidly as I could in a way I would not have dictated it had I had the time, but making it clear and certain that $50,000 out of her fortune was set aside for her brother and sister respectively, and using language such as I have used in wills which would, in my judgment, carry it over to her nieces and nephews had she any; I did not know that she had no nieces and nephews, but the language that I employed in the will would have taken it, in my opinion, to her nieces and nephews had she had nieces and nephews."
When Mr. Luther Willis visited the hospital he found Mrs. Townsend in the anesthesia room resting upon the carrier referred to. The dose of morphia and atropin, above mentioned, had been administered to her hypodermically after Mr. George R. Willis had left the hospital. Doctor Wilson, Miss Keen, a nurse, and Doctor Buckler were in the room when Mr Willis entered. He handed Mrs. Townsend the will, and asked if she could read it, or whether she wanted him to read it. She said she could read it. She sat upon the carrier, asked for her glasses and some water, and began to read the will aloud. When she came to the bequest to Mrs. Smyser she stopped, saying: "I thought I told your father, *Page 185 I intended to tell him, to raise that the same as Edith's." She said, "You know Mrs. Smyser is Edith's and Clint's sister and I wanted her to have the same as Edith has." That Doctor Wilson spoke up and said "We can change that and we will witness it." The witness, at her direction, took a pen and struck out the $500 and made it $1000."
After this correction had been made, she continued reading the will, and when she reached the residuary clauses, or as Mr. Luther Willis stated, he "supposes half way down the residuaryclause" an incident happened which plays a most important part in this case. Doctor Wilson, after testifying to the increase made in the bequest of Mrs. Smyser, testified as follows:
"Q. Then what happened? A. Then she started to read again, and in a little while she came to a stop. Q. What part of the will was that? A. Around the rest and residue; around that portion. Q. Around the rest and residue? A. She stopped. Q. Is that the fourteenth item, the rest and residue? A. It was about there. Q. What happened there? A. It was very quickly after her reading the other; she came very quickly to this part. Q. She came quickly down to the rest and residue? A. Yes. Q. When she got to the rest and residue what happened? A. Just at that time she stopped and her eyes closed and she went backwards into a semi-conscious condition; it did not last long, but the nurse was behind her. Q. What nurse was that? A. Miss Keen. She was behind her; so she supported her; as I say, she came forward and started to read again. Q. How did she read? A. In a mechanical way. Q. Go ahead! A. She kept on reading; her voice, I think, got slower. Q. What? A. I think her voice got slower, and she finished reading, and then she signed her name. Q. Was anything said by Mrs. Townsend about the number of witnesses? A. She said in Virginia she thought it required three witnesses. Q. When was it she said that? A. When she got to the end; when she had finished reading it." *Page 186
Miss Keen, a trained nurse, said that Mrs. Townsend towards the last fell back as if under the influence of morphia. "Well, she simply just fell just in that way (illustrating) and I caught her. You see I had my arms around her and lifted her up again and she went on and finished reading the will. It indicated to me that she was going under the influence of morphia."
Doctor Wilson and Miss Keen were subscribing witnesses to the will, and each testified that Mrs. Townsend at the time of its execution was not competent to make a will, and both were of opinion that the anodynes which had been administered had caused the incident mentioned. The residuary clause was not explained to her. It is admitted that a grave mistake was made, and it is evident that the persons who would take the larger portion of the estate under that clause are not the ones she intended to have it. If that clause be sustained the real will and intention of Mrs. Townsend would be thwarted.
To what extent, if any, the mental faculties of Mrs. Townsend were affected by the administration of the drugs mentioned was one of the most material inquiries in the case, and we do not see why the offers of proof embraced in the first second and third exceptions were excluded. The witness, Doctor Mayo, was qualified to testify, and the testimony sought to be elicited bore upon the issue of mental capacity, and tended to support the evidence of Doctor Wilson and Miss Keen as to the cause of the incident which occurred during the execution of the will. While we would not reverse upon the first exception, because the evidence objected to was in substance introduced afterwards, we think there was serious error in the rulings on the second and third exceptions.
For the determination of the legal questions which arise upon the ruling upon the prayers, we are not required to review the evidence produced by the appellee. Suffice it to say that upon the material questions involved — mental capacity *Page 187 and the circumstances attending the execution of the will — there is great conflict, but with that we have nothing to do. It is not the office of this Court to weigh or balance conflicting evidence. That is exclusively the duty of the jury.
We come now to the consideration of the rulings of the Court on the prayers submitted by each party at the close of the whole case. The plaintiffs offered ten prayers. The second, fourth and fifth were granted, and the others refused. The plaintiffs' first and third prayers, which the reporter is requested to set out in the report of the case, were upon the subject of testatmentary capacity. They announce correct principles of law, lay down the proper rules for the guidance of the jury in considering the second issue, and should have been granted. The sixth prayer related to knowledge by the testatrix of the contents of thewhole will, and the seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth to knowledge of the contents of the fourteenth, or residuary clause of the will.
Assuming for the moment that the question of the knowledge of the contents of the whole will, or of the residuary clause was open, under the facts, for the finding of the jury, the sixth, seventh and eighth prayers were defective, under the facts and circumstances of this case, in shifting the burden of proof to the defendant. The presumption of knowledge of the contents of a will which arises from due execution and the reading of a will by a competent testator is not overcome by the mere fact that this presumption may be rebutted. In the form in which the issue was submitted, the answer of the jury, in case they found for the plaintiffs on the fourth issue, should have been: "Were not known and understood." The eighth prayer required the jury to find whether the testatrix "failed to know and understand that said item did not give said rest and residue to the persons for whom she intended it." This was tantamount to requiring the jury to find whether she knew the legal effect and operation of the words used in the fourteenth clause, and in this respect the prayer was also defective. It was said in Munnikuysen v. *Page 188 Magraw,
The ninth and tenth prayers, upon the assumption previously made, were free from objection.
The defendants' third prayer, as modified by the Court, was granted, and their fourth and fifth prayers were also granted. These prayers are here inserted:
Third Prayer. — The Court instructs the jury at the request of the defendants:
(1) That legal capacity to make a valid will is the degree of intelligence sufficient to make a valid deed or an ordinary contract.
(2) The question whether the bodily diseases of Lucy B. Townsend and the opiates administered to her had deprived her of sufficient intelligence to make a valid will, as above defined, must be determined by the external acts and appearances and the speech and conduct of the said Lucy B. Townsend during the entire testamentary transaction, in connection with testimony as to her condition.
(3) And if the jury shall find that the said Lucy B. Townsend had sufficient intelligence, as above defined, then their answer to the second issue must be, Yes; — even although the jury shall further find that the residuary clause of the will fails to carry out her intention with regard to the residue of her estate."
Fourth Prayer. — "The Court instructs the jury at the request of the defendants: *Page 189
(1) The jury cannot infer mental incapacity merely and alone from the failure of Lucy B. Townsend, while she was reading the will in controversy, to discover that the legal effect of the language used in the residuary clause was to give the residue of her estate to persons to whom she did not intend it to go.
(2) And unless the jury shall find from the facts in this case, other than such mistake in said residuary clause, some evidence satisfying them that the said Lucy B. Townsend, at the time of the execution of said will, was of unsound mind and not capable of making a valid deed or an ordinary contract, — then the answer to the second issue should be, Yes; the answer to the fourth issue should be, Yes; and the answer to the fifth issue should be, No parts."
Fifth Prayer. — "The Court instructs the jury at the request of the defendants:
(1) That in answering the fourth and fifth issues, the jury must determine: Whether Lucy B. Townsend knew and understood what the contents of her will were, and not: Whether she understood the legal operation and effect of all or any part of the language used.
(2) And if the jury shall find that the said Lucy B. Townsend at the time of the execution of the will in controversy, was possessed of sufficient intelligence to make a valid deed or an ordinary contract; and shall further find that she read aloud the whole of her will, — then knowledge and understanding of its contents must, under the facts of this case, be conclusively presumed. And the answer of the jury to the fourth issue should be, Yes; and the answer to the fifth issue should be, No parts."
The third prayer gave the jury no satisfactory rule by which to measure the testatrix's testamentary capacity, — to guide them in determining from all the facts and circumstances of the case whether she had sufficient capacity to make the will. To say "that legal capacity to make a valid will is the degree of intelligence sufficient to make a valid deed or an ordinary contract" is to announce a general legal proposition; *Page 190 but such a statement does not furnish the jury any sufficient guide in their deliberations, and, as the prayers of the plaintiffs which defined the meaning of testamentary capacity were refused, the case went to the jury without any plain and definite instruction upon that question. The second clause of the prayer shuts out from the consideration of the jury the provisions of the will, especially the fourteenth clause, and places restrictions upon the jury which were well calculated to fetter them unduly in their deliberations and to mislead them as to the scope of their inquiries. The correctness of the third clause of the prayer will be considered later.
The conflicting contentions of the parties — presenting the most material and important legal question in the case — are manifest upon the prayers which relate to the knowledge of the contents of the will.
The position of the plaintiffs is that, notwithstanding the fact that Mrs. Townsend was competent to make the will and that she did in fact read it before she signed it, they have a right, under the facts and circumstances in evidence, to have the jury pass upon her knowledge of the contents of the whole will and of the fourteenth clause as distinct and independent issues of fact.
The position of the defendants is, that assuming the capacity of the testatrix and that she read the will, the presumption of knowledge of contents, under the facts of this case, is conclusive. This proposition is embodied in the defendants' fourth and fifth granted prayers.
There is in this State no invariable and unyielding rule of law upon this subject. The general rule undoubtedly is that knowledge of contents is conclusively presumed in the circumstances stated in the defendants' fourth and fifth prayers. That rule was applied in Taylor v. Creswell,
In Diffenderffer v. Griffith, supra, the will and codicil assailed were read to the testatrix "line by line, just as they were written" and she being in full possession of all her faculties, the Court found that there was nothing to except the case from the operation of the general rule. But this rule is not of universal application, and cases may occur where the rule ought not to be applied.
In Taylor's case, supra, the Court said that: "It is essential of course to the validity of every will, that the party making it should know and understand its contents, otherwise it is not his will. But where a person of sound mind executes a will, and the same is his free and voluntary act, the law presumes knowledge, on his part, of its contents. This presumption, it is true, may be rebutted by the facts and circumstances surrounding its execution, and cases may arise in which it is proper to submit to the jury the distinct question, whether the testator understood its contents. Where, for instance, there are suspicious circumstances surrounding the execution of a will, made by a person suffering from extreme debility arising from old age or sickness, especially if he could neither read nor write; or where the will is prepared by a person standing in a confidential relation, or who is largely benefited by it, or even where the testator is of sound mind, if there is proof to show that he did not understand its contents, an extreme case, however, in these and other like instances, it may be proper for the jury to find affirmatively, that the testator understood the contents of the will." *Page 192
The case we are dealing with is a most unusual and exceptional one. The will does not express the real intention of the testatrix, and under the fourteenth item the greater part of her estate goes to persons who have no claim upon her bounty and to whom she never intended to give it. Assuming the testimony of the plaintiffs as to the circumstances attending the execution of the will to be true, the case in our judgment falls clearly within the exception to the general rule. It would be strange, indeed, if the mere fact of reading the will, under such circumstances, should be held conclusive of her knowledge of its contents. The fourteenth item of the will was open to attack under the fourth issue. Munnikuysen v. Magraw, supra; Fisher v. Boyce,
Rulings reversed, and a new trial awarded. *Page 193