DocketNumber: No. 31770.
Judges: RILEY, J.
Filed Date: 4/24/1945
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 4/14/2017
This proceeding originated in the county court of Pawnee county, where an order was made admitting the will, together with codicil, of Gordon W. Lillie to probate and appointing Frank Lyon executor. Albert Lillie, a brother of decedent, appealed to the district court. There the cause was tried de novo, resulting in findings of fact and conclusions of law and a judgment and decree establishing the will and codicil, dismissing the contest, and affirming the order of the county court. Contestant appeals.
Gordon W. Lillie died February 3, 1942, at the age of 82 years, a widower without issue, leaving surviving him as heirs at law, Albert Lillie, Lena Green, and Effie Judy, brother and sisters. The estate was valued at $200,000. Gordon W. Lillie, under the name of "Pawnee Bill," had gained a national reputation as a plainsman and showman.
On May 27, 1940, deceased executed a will in due form, devising and bequeathing his property as follows:
To Joe Barrera, known as "Mexican Joe," $1,000.00;
To Nellie Ruffner "faithful employee," $800.00 and an automobile;
To Mary Barrera "faithful employee" $500.00 and a horse named Billy;
To Lucy Davis, cousin, $500.00;
To Ella Bronde, sister-in-law, $500.00
To Albert Lillie, brother, $1,000.00.
Improved and described real estate known as Blue Hawk Peak, the home of testator, was devised and personal property, consisting of livestock, including a herd of buffalo, farm machinery, and household furnishings, were bequeathed to the Boy Scouts of America on condition of acceptance and maintenance, otherwise the said real estate and personal property to become general assets of the estate, the residue of which was devised and bequeathed to "beloved sisters," Mrs. Lena Green and Mrs. Effie Judy, share and share *Page 599 alike. By the will, Glenn Lyon was appointed sole executor. The codicil, dated February 21, 1941, appointed Frank Lyon vice-executor.
An attorney for contestant, who had been consulted by testator regarding the devise and bequest to the Boy Scouts of America, made inquiry whether such devise and bequest would be acceptable. The attorney received a letter from New York, dated May 25, 1940, of nonacceptance. The letter of nonacceptance and information relative thereto were transmitted to testator.
It is the contention of appellant that at the time of execution of the will and codicil, the testator lacked testamentary capacity, and that fraud and undue influence such as to vitiate the will were practiced by beneficiaries named in the will, Nellie Ruffner and Mary Barrera, who occupied positions of trust and confidence with testator. It was alleged that fraud practiced by the named beneficiaries extended to a conspiracy in which Glenn Lyon, executor named in the will, participated.
Under such circumstances, this court will examine the entire record and weigh the evidence. In re Creger's Estate,
The evidence discloses that the testator had been a resident of Pawnee for more than 50 years. Prior to 1913, he was actively engaged in the show business. In 1936 testator and his wife were injured in an automobile accident, as a result of which his wife, Mary Lillie, died and testator suffered a traumatic psychosis from which he showed a considerable degree of recovery but retained some disability attributable to age and the accident. Mary Barrera and Nellie Ruffner, beneficiaries under the will, and Glenn Lyon, named executor, were present at Cleveland, Okla., when the will was executed. Mary Barrera, from 1939, acted as testator's secretary and bookkeeper. She had authority to write checks and collect accounts. She is shown to have made notes of testator's will in May, 1940. She and Nellie Ruffner were present at the reading of drafts of the will. Nellie Ruffner served testator from 1937 as chauffeur and maid.
For the purposes of our decision, we consider that these beneficiaries occupied confidential relations with testator. Likewise, as a matter of law, we consider that "Inferences of undue influence which arise from the fact that testator and beneficiaries are in relations of trust and confidence, are inferences *Page 600 of fact; and may be rebutted by any competent evidence." Page on Wills, vol. 2, p. 612.
It is not every act that constitutes undue influence, but if a beneficiary writes or prepares a will, that fact should inhibit pronouncement of the instrument as testator's will until the court is satisfied from evidence that testator instructed the preparation of the will and knew its contents at the time of its execution. Welch v. Barnett,
"It is the generally accepted view that the mere existence of a confidential relation between testator and a beneficiary under his will does not raise a presumption that the beneficiary has exercised undue influence over the testator, and does not cast upon the beneficiary the burden of proving undue influence. These consequences follow only when the beneficiary has been actively concerned in some way with the preparation or execution of the will." 28 R.C.L. 146, § 100; McClure v. Kerchner,
As stated in Re Estate of Llewellyn,
The situation as disclosed by the evidence in the case at bar is comparable to that in the case of Councill v. Mayhew,
"It was her duty in that capacity to write for him whatever he dictated; and in thus merely responding to his commands, it cannot be plausibly urged that she was active in procuring the execution of the will."
And, as in that case, no one of the beneficiaries was "the principal nor even an important or considerable beneficiary under the will." Therein, a legacy of $500 out of an estate of $8,000 or $10,000 was said not to be an undue or unusual amount to bestow upon a private secretary who had served long and faithfully. Much more then is a comparable amount less to be considered undue influence where the estate is approximately 20 times the value. Canfield v. Canfield,
There are other acts and conduct relied upon as to activity of Mary Barrera and Nellie Ruffner. These are urged as showing a hostility toward Albert Lillie and as having a tendency to alienate the affections of testator from his brother, the contestant. In consideration of this evidence, we are of the opinion that the trial court was justified in the view that such activity was not sufficient to defeat the testamentary act, particularly in view of the evidence as to the manner of executing the will.
The contestant relies upon a rule of law stated in Schouler on Wills, vol. I, Sec. 297, p. 364, that fraud together with an unequal distribution of decedent's estate may be considered as a circumstance in determining undue influence. The record evidence fails to disclose fraud, but the provisions of the will, however unequal, do not establish the existence of undue influence. In *Page 601
re Sporn's Estate, Sporn v. Herndon,
Affirmed.
GIBSON, C.J., and OSBORN, BAYLESS, WELCH, and DAVISON, JJ., concur.