159 P. 603 | Cal. | 1916
Appellants instituted a contest to revoke the probate of the will of their deceased father, upon the ground that at the time of the execution of the will he was incompetent and was not of sound and disposing mind and memory. They introduced evidence, and when they rested their case the court granted a motion for a nonsuit upon the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence.
Opposing counsel do not agree upon the principles governing trial courts in granting or refusing to grant nonsuits for insufficiency of the evidence. So often and so clearly has this court spoken upon the subject that it had reason to hope that the guiding principles could not be misunderstood either by judges or attorneys, for the rule is not difficult of comprehension. As said in Estate of Ricks,
With this unquestioned law before us, we may proceed to a consideration of the facts in this case, as shown by the evidence of contestants and appellants. What constitutes the mental capacity to make a will has been declared by this court in Estate of Motz,
It was shown that the testator was eighty-six years and six months of age at the time of his death. The will was executed upon the 31st of October and he died upon the ninth day of November following. For some time before his death he had been bedridden, afflicted with bedsores, totally unable to control his physical functions, and so little able to aid himself that he could not raise his hand to brush away the flies that lit on his face. The contestants are his two sons and only heirs at law. One son, W.J. Ross, is sixty-three years of age; the other son, T.F. Ross, fifty-eight years of age. They had been and were to the time of their father's death devoted sons. They had helped by their own labors during their minority and thereafter to earn the property which their father possessed at the time of his death. They were in attendance upon him during his last sickness, and performed many of the trying but necessary services occasioned by that sickness. They were carpenters by trade, were advancing in years, were dependent upon their manual labor for their support, and had as property no more than home places to the value each of about ten thousand dollars, which their father had given them. By his will he disposed of approximately twenty thousand dollars, a small part of which he left to a grandson, Elmer Ross, in trust for the education of Elmer's children — the testator's great grandchildren — the major portion of it being disposed of in the form of legacies to collateral relatives, to charitable institutions, and to friends. He expressly excluded his two sons — his sole heirs — "for the reason that I have already provided for them by deeding to them certain real property in the town of San Leandro, the portion of each aggregating approximately the value of $10,000. It is my express desire and intention that the above mentioned W.J. Ross and T.F. Ross shall take nothing more of my property of any nature or description." It appears that he died intestate as to certain property, and *182
that by the terms of the will his sons were excluded from any share even in that. Coming more specifically to the details of the mental and physical condition of the testator at the time of the making of the will in question, the evidence of the sons concerning his physical condition has already been sufficiently outlined. Further they bear witness that his enfeebled physical condition was accompanied by a corresponding enfeebled mental condition. He could not remember. He frequently could not understand. He had to be carried, and when carried and placed on the bed he "screamed and kicked" and "raved and wanted to know what I was going to do with him." He did not recognize the witness' wife, whom he knew perfectly well, and pushed her away and protested against her presence in the room. He would "sleep a little while and then would holler again." "Often there was nothing wrong with him." "The nurse would come running in to see what was the matter. There would not be anything wrong, only that he was flighty." "He was very often in a stupor. Sometimes he would be in a stupor for two or three hours and in talking his mind wandered. He got so bad two months before he passed out, so bad we had to deny people coming in. He would hold up for a few minutes before them and then go to pieces and talk at random. He was getting weaker and weaker. I think he was of unsound mind because of his actions that we saw every day there. He was getting weaker and worse and worse. He finally got so, when he got so he could not write his own name, he was what you might say paralyzed — just lay there like a dead man." (The testator was able to write, but the will was signed for him, he making his mark.) The nurse in attendance testified to the care and devotion which the sons showed to their father, and his apparent gratitude at having them there in attendance upon him. She corroborated all of the testimony touching the physical condition of the testator, and with the statement of the law before her, as above given (Estate ofMotz,
It does not seem to us that a discussion of this evidence is necessary. The cross-examination of these witnesses, while it may have impaired the weight to be given to their expressed opinion of the unsoundness of the mind of the testator, did no more than this. One and all the witnesses maintained their opinions and those opinions, taken with the other facts outlined, and with the inferences which might legitimately be drawn from those facts, demanded the submission of the case to the jury, for in ruling upon a nonsuit "all the evidence in favor of the contestant must be taken as true, and if contradictory evidence has been given it must be disregarded." (Estate of Arnold,
In contemplation of the new trial two of the court's rulings upon the matter of evidence require attention. The first of these is the court's ruling sustaining an objection to a purported hypothetical question addressed to Dr. Michael, the testator's family physician. Aside from all objections to the form of the hypothetical question, it cannot be disputed but that if the hypothetical question correctly stated the truth, it was a direct effort to elicit from the testator's family physician in violation of the confidential relationship a statement which of necessity would be based, not upon the facts stated in the question, but on the facts as known to and believed by the physician himself — facts which the law forbade him to disclose. In other words, under the thinnest of disguises the question was an effort to have the witness declare that which the law has said that he should not declare. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1881.) The ruling excluding the inquiry was proper.
A witness who had had a single transaction with the testator years before the making of the will, which transaction, as he describes it, was "simply a real estate transaction," was asked to tell the story. Objection was made and sustained. The objection was that the period was too remote for the purpose of showing the mentality of the testator at the time of the execution of the will. There was nothing to show, nor did contestants offer to show, that the conduct of the testator at that time was any different from the conduct of normal men under like circumstances. The ruling rejecting the evidence was therefore proper.
For the reasons already given the court erred in granting the nonsuit. Wherefore the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
*185Melvin, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.