99 Cal. 661 | Cal. | 1893
This action was brought by the public administrator, acting as the administrator of the estate of Daniel J. Harris, deceased; and in form it purports to be an
The complaint seems to go upon three theories: 1. That the check and certificate were obtained from the deceased by the defendants (the Sliorbs) by means of a conspiracy through which they were obtained by undue influence exerted upon the deceased; 2. That they were delivered to Mrs. Shorb merely for safekeeping, and always remained the property of the deceased; and 3. That at the time they were delivered on July 3, 1890, the deceased was of unsound mind and incapable of giving the said certificate and check for any purpose.
About seven or eight pages of the complaint, as it appears on
With respect to the second theory of the complaint above noticed, we suppose that the findings of the court are to be taken to mean that the said check and the said certificate were given to Mrs. Shorb on the third day of July, 1890, merely for safe-keeping, and not as a gift. But we find no evidence sufficient to sustain such a finding—that is, leaving out of view for the present the question of the mental unsoundness of the deceased at the time. The check was drawn payable to Mrs. Shorb, and was immediately collected by Her and the proceeds deposited in bank to her account, and it does not appear that the deceased ever called upon her afterwards for said proceeds, or made any question about it; and there is no evidence tending to show that the check was not given to her as her own property, while her own testimony is directly to the point that it was a gift. With respect to the certificate, there is the testimony of three witnesses that he had expressed his intention before the 3d of July to give said certificate to Mrs. Shorb as a gift; and there is the direct testimony of Mrs. Shorb that he did so give it to her on that day, and there is no testimony to
With respect to the mental soundness of the deceased on said 3d of July, the question propounded to the jury, and the answer thereto, are as follows: “Was the mind of Daniel J. Harris during his last illness weak, and if it was, for about how long was it in such condition? Yes; from about July 1st until his death.” Upon this subject the court first found as follows: “The mind of Daniel J. Harris during his last illness, from about July 1st until his death, was weak and unsound”; and then as follows: “Prior to the 1st of July, 1890, Daniel J. Harris was not of unsound mind, but then, and at all times
We are adverse to holding that a finding by a jury or trial court on an issue of fact is not warranted by the evidence, whatever we might think as to its preponderance, where there is presented a fair, reasonable ground for a difference of opinion, and where a conclusion either way could not be considered as the necessary result of the exercise of an unsound judgment. But where the great current of the evidence is against the verdict, and we cannot escape the conviction that it is wrong, we should not be deterred from setting it aside by the contention that one or two general statements or assertions of one or two witnesses bring the case within the rule which governs in cases where there is a material “conflict of evidence.” And in the case at bar we cannot resist the conclusion that the evidence is insufficient to support the finding of the uusoundness of the mind of the deceased on July 3, 1890.
The facts upon which the mental weakness or unsoundness —insanity not being claimed — are based are certain characteristics and conduct of the deceased. As to those characteristics themselves, there is a great conflict of testimony — some of the witnesses making them very extravagant, and others describing them as little, if any, out of the normal. We assume, however, that the jury had the right to take the most highly-colored picture. Those characteristics were mainly these: That the deceased was very close and penurious in money matters, or, as some witnesses said, niggardly and miserly; that although a man of means, he worried over the expenses of his last sickness, and said he would become a pauper; that he was loath to buy proper food; that he was untidy and uncleanly in his habits, did not like to be washed, and could with difficulty be induced to make necessary changes of clothing; that he was subject to crying spells, and sometimes without apparent cause; that he frequently grumbled to himself; that he would get mad and swear terribly; that he feared people were friendly to him because they wanted his money; that he talked about women in an obscene way; that he occasionally beat upon the keys of a
If the jury had found that the foregoing characteristics and acts of deceased were, during the time when they were shown to have existed, and to have been committed, sufficient to warrant the conclusion that he was of unsound mind, we might not, perhaps, have felt called upon to set aside the finding—although we would not have looked upon the evidence supporting it as very strong. But the jury, in the face of these characteristics and acts, which were the same for as long a period before the 1st of July as after that date, found that the deceased was of unsound mind only “from about July 1st until his death”; aud the court, following, no doubt, the judgment of the jury, found that “prior to the first day of July, 1890, Daniel Jo Harris, was not of unsound mind”—but that then and after-wards he was. The evidence discloses the deceased afflicted as early as April, 1890, with the last illness—heart disease and dropsy — which caused his death on the 18th of August following ; aud his characteristics upon which the finding of mental
! It was found, however, that the mind of the deceased was not unsound until the 1st of July; and that being so, was there any evidence reasonably sufficient to support the finding that his mind became unsound within the three days between the 30th of June and the 3d of July — the important day on which the alleged gifts were made? There was no such evidence. We are not called upon to determine whether the evidence of the condition of the deceased during the months of May and June would have been sufficient to warrant a finding that during those months he was of unsound mind ; for the finding: is that it was not sufficient for the purpose. And there was no different evidence—'and therefore no evidence — to support a finding that he was mentally unsound on July 1st.
It is proper to say that respondent makes some little contention that deceased had a paralytic stroke that might help out the finding under discussion. But there was no evidence of a paralytic stroke which a sensible jury could have attached the slightest importance to. One of the witnesses for the respondent, a nurse, did make the naked assertion that one morning
Indeed, it is quite probable that the finding was the result of a notion frequently entertained by jurors (and sometimes by courts) that a man should dispose of his property in contemplation of death in such manner as to suit the tastes and ideas of propriety of the jurors. It was probably thought that deceased should not have given so much to one not of 1ns blood, when he had collateral kin; and that the $500 check, which they found him sound-minded enough in May to give, was enough for Mrs. Shorb. But, as we said in the Estate of Spencer, 96 Cal. 448, a person in thus disposing of property
He was worth in round numbers $100,000, and the gifts amounted to only about one fourth of that sum.
It is difficult to know what value to attach to the findings (27 and 28) that the Shorbs, by reason of their previous acquaint
Under the foregoing views, we do not deem it necessary to discuss the other questions presented in the record.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed, and the cause remanded.
De Haven, J., and Fitzgerald, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.