58 Mo. 307 | Mo. | 1874
delivered the opinio'n of the court.
This was a proceeding on the part of the plaintiffs to contest the will of Louis A. Benoist, on the ground that at the time he executed it he was laboring under an insane delusion, and that undue influence v-as exercised over him. The will is dated on the 7th of August 1866, at St. Louis, Mo., and about the 1st of December, 1866, the testator left that city for Cuba, and died in the city of Havanna, during the month of January, 1867. The will w'as admitted to probate on the 4th of February, 1867, and letters testamentary wrere granted to two of the executors therein named. It seems that Mr. Benoist was thrice married. By his first wife he left no children. By his second wife, who died in 1848, he had two sons and three daughters. In 1849 he again married and his last wife survived him. By her he left five sons and four daughters. By a deed dated November, 1849, he conveyed to trustees real property considered to be worth $500,000, for the use of himself for life, and then to the usé of his five children by his second marriage and their heirs, in fee. To the daughters a life estate was given, with remainder to their heirs.
By his will Mr. Benoist gave to his wife certain property for life, which he declared should be in addition to dower and not in lien thereof. The second clause of his will was in the
He left an estate valued at $1,500,000, and his alleged insanity consisted in his believing himself poor, that the failure of his son had ruined him and that he was impoverished financially. In 1869, this proceeding was instituted to set the will aside, and two grounds therefor were alleged ; first, that when he executed it, Mr. Benoist was not of sound mind ; second, that he executed it under undue influence, exercised by the defendants and other persons, and under a delusion and mistake as to the value of the property he had given to the children of his two marriages. The answer denied every allegation in the petition; denied that the testator was of unsound mind, or that he was unduly influenced, or that he was under delusion ; and averred that the will was executed understandingly and deliberately, after full consideration, without undue influence from any source, free from all delusions ; and that he was of sound and disposing mind, memory and understanding.
When the case was called for trial, the plaintiffs filed a paper by which the}' admitted that the signature of the will by Louis A. Benoist and the subscribing witness was genuine, and that the will must stand, unless'the plaintiffs should satisfy the jury, either that the will w'as procured by undue influence, or that the testator was of unsound mind when he executed it, or that he executed it under mistake and delusion ; and thereupon they moved the court to award to them the opening and the close of the evidence and argument. This motion the court overruled and the plaintiffs excepted.
On the part of the defendants witnesses were then examined, who testified to the sound judgment, memory and busi
The plaintiffs asked certain instructions which the court-refused to give, but made some alteration in the following-two, and then gave them of its own motion : 1st. “If the jury believe from the evidence, that on the 7th day of August. 1866, Louis A. Benoist was erroneously of the' opinion that he was in danger of insolvency, or erroneously believed that he was financially ruined, or erroneously believed that-lie had already made more ample provision for his older children than he was able to make for the children of his last wife, and, by reason of such erroneous belief, made the instrument in dispute; or if the jury believe from the evidene'e that said Benoist, on the 7th day of August, had no definite or accurate knowledge of the amount or value of his property, and, by reason of said want of knowledge, executed the instrument in question ; or if the jury believe from the evidence that at said 'time he was in such a bodily and mental condition as not fully to understand and comprehend with reasonable certainty the state and condition of his property, and the true state and condition of his children, any and all of these facts may be considered by the jury as indicative of bis mental condition, and from them it may be inferred that Benoist was not of sound and disposing mind on said day.”
2nd. “If the jury believe from the evidence, that at the time Louis A. Benoist signed the paper, purporting to be his 'will, he was possessed with a false and exaggerated opinion and estimate <jf 'the value of the property he had previously settled upon the children of his second wife ; and was also laboring under a false and mistaken opinion of the nature and character of sneh settlement, and of the estates thereby created and vested in said children; and if they also find that at the same time lie was possessed of a false and exaggerated opinion and belief of the smallness of the amount, and value of the property which lie then possessed, and of
At the request of the defendants, the court declared the law as follows : 1st. ‘‘The jury is further instructed that testamentary capacity, or possession of sufficient mind to enable a man to make a will, is like the capacity to attend to his own affairs, if his bodily health permitted his attention to them. No man who is competent, mentally, to transact his ordinary business can be pronounced incapable of making a will, and unless the jury believe from the evidence, that Louis A. Benoist at the time of making^liis will (Tth August, 1866), was of unsound mind and incapable of managing his affairs, they must find that the paper produced is his will, provided always that they believe that his signature and the signatures of the subscribing witnesses are genuine ; and that the matters stated by the witnesses in the certificate of attestation are true. 2nd. The court instructs the jury that by the deed of L. A. Benoist, dated November 20th, 1819, to trustees for his five children, read in evidence, an estate for life was vested in each of his daughters therein mentioned, and it was competent for each of his daughters to sell her interest in the , property named in said deed if she chose to do so, there being no prohibition in the deed against such sale.”
The instructions in reference to undue influence, I pass by, as there is in fact no such question in the case, there being no evidence to sustain the allegation, and it is not seriously contended for here. It is strongly insisted, however, that the court erred in rejecting the third-instruction offered by the plaintiff, defining what constitutes a sound and dispos
No farther notice of the instructions need be taken, as these already given show the theory on which the court tried-the case, and the others, which were refused, either stated the-same propositions in different language, or they were'entire? ly unnecessary. •• ■ >
As to the action of the court in awarding the opening and’ close of the evidence and argument to defendants, who were' the proponents of the will, there was no error. It must now' be considered as finally settled in this court, that where the issues are made up, and the defendants are endeavoring to establish or "hold under a will, they' affirm that- the pa-' per writing is the last will of the testator, and they have' the affirmation of the issue to be tried, and they' are eii-' titled to the opening and conclusion. (See Harvey vs. Sullen’s Heirs, 56 Mo., 372.)
A disposing mind and memory maybe said to he one which is capable of presenting to the testator all his property, and all tbe persons who come reasonably Avithin the range of his bounty, and if a person has sufficient understanding and intelligence, to understand his ordinary business, and to understand what disposition he is making of his property, then he has sufficient capacity to make a will. (Harvey vs. Sullen’s Heirs, supra) In McClintock vs. Curd, (32 Mo., 411,) the most satisfactory tost was declared tobe, whether the mind and memory of the testator were sufficiently sound to enable him to know and understand the business in which he was engaged at tlie time he executed the will. The Supreme Court of Vermont in the case of Converse vs. Converse, (21 Vt., 168) lays down-the doctrine that if the deceased was, at the time, capable of understanding the nature of the business and the elements of the will, that is, the nature and extent of his property and the persons to whom he meant to convey it, and the mode of distribution, it is sufficient; and in Horne vs. Horne, (9 Ired.,
In 1 Redf. Wills, (p. 125, pl. 9,) it is declared that if one be able to transact the ordinary affairs of life, he may of course execute a valid will; and in Harvey vs. Sullen’s Heirs substantially the same rule was announced in this court.
The definition, as to what constitutes a sound and disposing mind and memory, contained in the third instruction of the defendants, which was refused, was copied almost literally from the charge of the chief justice in Den vs. Johnson, (2 South., 454).
There after explaining to the jury the meaning and import of the word “ sound” by itself, he went on and said, that a disposing mind and memory was a mind and memory which had the capacity of recollecting, discerning and feeling the relations, connections and obligations of family and blood. The whole charge, taken together, was approved in the Supreme Court, but it was intimated, that, in describing the force of the word “ sound ” itself, too strong language was used.
In the present ease, it is not pretended that the deceased was affected with general insanity, but that he was a monomaniac, and laboring under a particular delusion. He seems to have had excellent business capacity, and managed his estate with skill and vigilance, and we see no objection to the courts confining the instructions tó the special trait in issue.
It is, moreover, urged, that the court erred in declaring, that, in order to render the will invalid, it was necessary to-find that the false and exaggerated opinions entertained by the deceased, in reference to the amount and smallness of the value of his property, and the losses he had sustained by his son, solely determined the disposition that he made of his property in that instrument. The correct principle is. that whenever a person imagines something extravagant to exist, which really has no existence whatever, and he is incapable of being reasoned out of his false belief, he is in that respect insane; and it his delusion relates to his property, he is then incapable of making a will.
In the case of Boyd vs. Eby, (8 Watts., 71,) the court say : “If the erroneous and groundless impressions, received during the time of this delirium, shall retain their hold, whether by some physical derangement of the brain, or by some indelible stamp on the thinking faculties, that person must be-considered still under delirium — the effect continues, and it is only by effects that we can judge of the existence of the exciting cause — and if he is under a delusion, though there be but a partial insanity, yet if it be in relation to the act in question, it will invalidate contracts generally, and will defeat a will which is the direct offspring of that partial insanity.”
A learned writer on Medical Jurisprudence, thus states the rule in regard.to pronouncing an instrument void by reason oí delusion. .“The validity of deeds executed by persons affected with monomania, often becomes a subject of dispute. The practice, of the law here indicates, that the mere existence of a delusion in the mind of a person does not necessarily vitiate a deed, unless the delusion form the ground work of it, or.unless the most decisive evidence be given, that at the time of executing the deed, the testator’s mind was influenced by it. Strong evidence is often derivable from the act itself, more especially where a testator has drawn it up of his own accord. . In the ease of Barton, (July, 1810,) the Ecclesiastical. Court-was chiefly guided in its decision by the nature of the instrument. The testator, it appeared, labored under, the extraordinary delusion that he could dispose of his own property to himself and make himself his own legatee and executor. This he had accordingly. done. The instrument was pronounced to be invalid. But a will may be manifestly unjust to-the surviving relatives of a testator, and it may display some of the extraordinary opinions of the individual, yet it will hot necessarily be void, unless the testamentary dispositions clearly indicate that they have been formed under a delusion. Some injustice may possibly, be done by the rig
Lord Brougham, in an important case before the Privy Council, (Waring vs. Waring, 6 Moore, P. C. Cas., 349,) advanced the remarkable position, that any person laboring under delusion or monomania, to any extent or upon any subject, was not to be regarded as competent to execute a valid will. But this singular and extraordinary ground has not been followed in England, and has received no countenance in the American Courts.
The main question in the case here was whether the testator’s mind was affected, and in consequence of a monomania or delusion, he was therefore incapable of executing a valid will. That he. possessed good business habits and was able intelligently to transact his ordinary affairs, the testimony •leaves no doubt. If, then, any incapacity existed, it resulted from the delusion, which it is alleged he was laboring under. But the two instructions given by the_ court on its own motion, covered this whole question, and were entirely unexceptionable, and as favorable as the plaintiffs had any right to demand. It is evident that under these instructions, the jury must have been fully convinced from the evidence, that the testator was entirely sane, and not affected with either delusion or monomania. The remaining instructions were not only unnecessaiy, but some of them asserted incorrect propositions of law. The 5th instruction which told the jury that the deed made by Mr. Benoist in 1849, by which he settled a half a million of property on his children, then living, was no advancement, was rightly refused. It had nothing to do with the duty with which the jury were charged, namely, to ascertain the sanity or insanity of the deceased. It was not one of the functions of the jury to make a ratable or equal distribution of the property. Besides, in some of the refused instructions, the language of the will is misapplied.
Whether he had any idea of equality in reference to the distribution, was immaterial. He was not bound to distribute equally among the heirs. The civil law which prohibited parents from disinheriting their children, unless for good cause, does not obtain under our system of jurisprudence ; under the common law, disinheritance or discrimination may take place without assigning any reason.
The will certainly does not bear any internal evidence that the testator considered himself ruined, or that he had forgotten any one who had claims on his bounty. His valuable, country seat he expressly names and gives to his widow for her life, and then sets apart $30,000 to keeping it in good order. He declares that he has already adequately provided for a part of his children, and that he gives the remaining portion of his property to the rest. To invalidate the will it was necessary to show something extraneous, and the only pretense was, that the testator was affected with delusion, but after hearing evidence on the question, and acting uuderfair instructions, the jury have found that no delusion existed. That verdict is final. Upon a full review of the whole case, we can find no reason for interfering with the judgment.