7 Or. 42 | Or. | 1879
By the Court,
The proceeding was originally commenced in the county court of Marion county, for the purposes of contesting the validity of the will of Joseph B. Hubbard, deceased. It is based on the ground of want of testamentary capacity in the testator, and also of undue influence exercised over him by his brother, Thomas H. Hubbard.
The following facts are developed by the pleadings and evidence produced at the trial: On March 8, 1877, Joseph B. Hubbard died in Marion county possessed of personal property of about the value of three thousand dollars. Mary Jane Hubbard is his widow, and Bertha Helen his infant daughter, aged eleven months at the time of her father’s death, are the only heirs-of said decedent.
Respondent, who is the brother of said decedent, filed in the county court of said county, a document bearing date of October 16, 1876, purporting to b.e the last will and testament of said Joseph B. Hubbard, and asked to have the same probated as such. That on April 5, 1877, said will was admitted to probate by said court ex parte and without notice to appellants. The respondent was thereupon appointed executor of the same, and immediately qualified and entered upon the duties of his trust.
By the provisions of said will there were demised to said Mary Jane Hubbard her wearing apparel and one bed and bedding, and unto said Bertha only one fourth of said decedent’s estate, to be paid to her on arriving at the age of eighteen years, and the remaining three fourths of said estate unto the said Thomas H. Hubbard. Said Thomas was nominated as the executor thereof, and exonerated from giving any bond as such. He was also nominated as guardian of said Bertha Helen, and exonerated from giving any bond for the faithful performance of that trust.
Under the English practice there were two modes of proving a will of personal property. The “common form” in
It is provided in this state that county courts shall be invested with exclusive jurisdiction in tbe first instance to take tbe proof of wills. (Code, sec. 969.) And tlieir judgments and decrees are held to be conclusive in collateral proceedings, and in every other instance until they are vacated by proceedings on appeal, or successfully impeached in some known and recognized legal method. (Jones v. Dove, 6 Or. 188.)
It is claimed by counsel for appellants that where a will has been probated “ in common form ” or by proceedings wholly ex parte, as in this case, and the validity of the will is attacked by a direct proceeding, it is incumbent upon the person seeking to maintain the validity of the will to reprobate the same de novo, by original proof, in the same manner as if no probate thereof bad been bad. This proposition, Ave think, is correct, if the allegations are sufficiently broad to question the validity of the Avill, and the competency of the proof as to its execution. In every such proceeding the onus probandi lies upon the party propounding the will; and be must prove every fact, wbicb is not Avaived or admitted by the pleadings, necessary to authorize its probate in the county court. Whatever may be the form of the issue as to every essential and controverted fact be bolds the affirmative. (1 Bradford’s Surrogate 94; 1 B. Monroe, 394; 46 Mis. 147.)
But it is alleged by appellants that, at the time of making said will, Joseph B. Hubbard was not of sound and disposing mind or memory; and, further, the will was the result of and caused by the fraudulent acts, imposition, and undue influence and constraint exercised upon and over him by respondent.
Each of these allegations being specifically denied by the answer of respondent, constitute, in our opinion, the only material issues of fact in the case. If either of these facts should be fully established by the evidence, it may be well said it is in no respect the will of Joseph B. Hubbard.
Under our statute no one can dispose of his property by “ last will” unless he is of sound mind at the time when he executes it. (Misc. Laws, 787.)
A sound mind, or ‘ ‘ testamentary capacity, implies that the testator fully understands what he is doing and how he is doing it; he must know his property and how he wishes to dispose of it among those entitled to his bounty. If he understands in detail what he is doing, and chooses with understanding and reason between one disposition and another, it is sufficient.” (Daniel v. Daniel, 39 Penn. State, 191.)
Testing the capacity of the testator by this standard we think it very clearly appeal's from the evidence that he was endowed with sufficient mental capacity to execute the will in question. In the opinion of all of his intimate acquaintances he was of sound mind and ordinary intelligence.
It is admitted by counsel for appellants in their brief that
But it is urged on behalf of appellants, with great earnestness, that the document presented here as the last will and testament of Joseph B. Hubbard shows upon its face, by its unjust and unnatural disposition of the testator’s property, that it could not have been the production of a rational mind unswerved by improper influences. While we agree with counsel that the provisions of this will when viewed from our standpoint appear to be unjust, it is not for us to judge of their justice, or the reasons which induced the testator to discriminate as he did in favor of his brother against his wife and infant child. While the character of those provisions may be considered in connection with any other evidence tending to show undue influence, it cannot of itself be considered evidence of such influence. (68 N. Y. 148.)
It appears from the evidence that Thomas H. Hubbard, the principal beneficiary under this will, was the brother of decedent, and that they were partners in business and on intimate terms; that about the time the will was executed, or shortly thereafter, decedent and his wife separated, and that he went to his brother's house and remained there until he went east of the mountains for his health. His brother also went east of the mountains with him, to take care of him — he being in very feeble health at that time. This will, however, was executed a few days prior to that time. It also appears that he and his wife did not live agreeably together; that several quarrels had taken place between them, and that the wife had commenced a suit for divorce.
But, “to invalidate a will on the ground of undue influence there must be affirmative evidence of the facts from which such influence is to be inferred. It is not sufficient
“ It must be made to appear that it was obtained by means of influence amounting to moral coercion destroying free agency, or by importunity which could not be resisted, so that the testator was constrained to do that which was against his actual will, but which he' was unable to refuse or too weak to resist.” (Brick v. Brick, 66 N. Y. 144; 1 Jarman on Wills, 36, 39; Redfield on Wills, 529, 530.)
. The evidence in this case fails to show that it comes within these rules. It is also claimed that the county court committed error in refusing to allow John Hamilton, a witness for appellants, to testify, on the ground that he was present in the court-room, in violation of the order of the court excluding the witnesses from the court-room during the trial. This was error in the court unless appellants were in complicity with the witness. The witness might have been punished for contempt in disobeying the order of the court, but an innocent party should not be deprived of the evidence on that account.
But we think it sufficiently appears that appellants were not injured by the ruling of the court. The evidence was in relation to a collateral matter and not material. The decree of the court below should be affirmed.