142 Ga. 855 | Ga. | 1914
A will was propounded and a caveat filed by the heirs of the decedent. The case was carried from the court of ordinary to the superior court by appeal. The grounds of the caveat as amended, which set up monomania and mistake of fact on the part of the testatrix, were stricken on demurrer, and a verdict for the propounder was directed. The case turns on the striking of the grounds of the caveat.
One who investigated the subject of spiritualism and became convinced and believed in it, though apparently on spurious or insufficient evidence, was held not to be a monomaniac for that reason. Middleditch v. Williams, 45 N. J. Eq. 726 (17 Atl. 826, 4 L. R. A. 138). Mete jealous suspicions, though groundless, are not enough. The test to distinguish between a delusion used in the sense of a mistake of fact, and a delusion which is the offspring of a deranged mind, is thus stated by Mr.' Justice Evans in Bohler v. Hicks, supra: “The latter springs spontaneously from disordered intellect, while the former is the result of an erroneous conclusion based upon either a mistake of fact or an illogical deduction drawn
We think that the averments of the caveat measured up to the requirements laid down in Bolder v. Hicks, supra. The allegations that the mind of the testatrix became unbalanced and incapable of reasoning with reference to her marriage and the events associated with or arising from it, that she became imbued with the hallucination that her heirs, who refused to comply with her insane desires, were not of her blood or family, were not related to her, and were not entitled to her affection or treatment as kinsmen, go beyond allegations of prejudice, passion, illogical reasoning, unfounded suspicion or the like, and set up an actually diseased condition of the mind, and delusions arising therefrom,—in other words, partial insanity or monomania. These allegations are of course to be treated as true for the purpose of the demurrer; and so treating them, it was error to sustain the demurrer as against them. Whether in fact there were insane delusions springing spontaneously from a disordered intellect, or merely erroneous conclusions based upon a mistake of fact, or illogical deductions from actual facts, groundless suspicion, or unjust dislikes or prejudices, will be for determination of the jury, under the evidence adduced at the trial. All that is now held is that the allegations in regard to monomania should not have been stricken on demurrer.
These allegations were insufficient to show a mistake of fact. They set out, in effect, that the testatrix had been deserted by her husband; that she sought to have her relatives wreak vengeance upon him by killing or maiming him; and that, because they did not comply with her request on that subject, she drew the erroneous conclusion that they did not sympathize with her but with her husband, and that this conduct on their part disgraced her before the community. It was not a case of failure to know the basal facts, or of a mistake in regard to any act or conduct. Her conclusion, from the refusal of her relatives to commit violence at her request, that their sentiments were hostile to her, may have been illogical or unsound. But this did not amount to a mistake of fact in a legal sense. It is an every-day occurrence that some person asks a favor of another, and, if refused, declares that the latter person is not his friend. This may be a mistake in reasoning from facts, but does not itself constitute a mistake of fact in the legal acceptation of the term. As was declared in Young v. Mallory, 110 Ga. 12 (35 S. E. 278): “There is a difference between a ‘mistake' arising from mere ignorance and one which results from 'an error of judgment after investigation or from negligence or wilful failure to make a proper investigation by means of which the truth could be readily and surely ascertained. It is to such a mistake as that first indicated that section 3262 [now § 3836] applies." That section .declares that “A will executed under a mistake of fact as to the existence or conduct of the heirs at law of the testator is inoperative, so far Us.such heir at law is concerned, but the testator shall be deemed to have died intestate as to him." In the case just cited,
Judgment affirmed in part, and reversed in part.