48 Wis. 294 | Wis. | 1880
The sole question in this case relates to the testamentary capacity of Mrs. Blakely to make the .will executed by her on the seventh of April, 1876. The validity of the will is contested by her surviving husband, David Blakely, heir-at-law. The county court admitted the will to probate; but on appeal the circuit court decided that the testatrix was incompetent, by reason of mental unsoundness and insanity, to make a valid will, and reversed the order. The circuit court found from the evidence that Mrs. Blakely had been of unsound mind and chronically insane for a long time prior to the making of the will; that such insanity was of the type known as dementia, accompanied by insane delusions; and that the provisions of the will were influenced by and were
We may say at the outset, that it appears the testatrix was formerly the wife of one Mr. Pratt, a farmer, and resided in Corning, Hew York. In the latter part of the year 1869, she, then being a widow without children, married the contestant, a widower having several children ánd residing in the township of Heenah, in this state. Of her early history or former married life we know but little. One of her brothers, who was a witness for the proponent of the will, testified that when she was a school girl she used to laugh and cry easily; and this peculiarity in her character seems to have increased as she grew older. In the latter part of her life, she • became large and gross. In the summer of 1873, she was ill from a protracted fever. After her recovery, she visited her relatives in Iowa, and returned to her husband’s home in October. Some time previous to this visit, she had a large rupture — “ umbilical hernia,” as her physician, Dr. Barnett, says, who wras called to treat her in the summer of 1874; and from this rupture she suffered at times severely. She was obliged to wear a truss, or supporter, which it was extremely difficult to keep in position on account of her weight. She had a stroke of
The various provisions were dictated by herself to the magistrate who wrote it. She was not ill at the time, but could walk about the house, though lame. She talked with difficulty, but could generally make herself understood. Soon after making her will, she went to Iowa again to visit her relatives, where she had another paralytic stroke. She returned home about the 11th of September. On the 26th of that month, she was sent to the Northern Hospital for the Insane, and died there March 10, 1877. Up to the time she last returned from Iowa, her memory seemed good. During the year 1875, and certainly as late as February, 1876, she wrote clear, sensible and perfectly coherent letters to her relatives in- Iowa about business matters and in regard to the management of some loans she had made in that state. To our minds, these letters are entitled to considerable weight as bearing upon the question of her mental condition and testamentary capacity -prior to, and shortly before, making the will. They may not be conclusive upon the question whether she was sane when they were written; but it is not easy to believe they were the productions of a person stricken with chronic dementia- — a type of insanity, according to the medical testimony, usually of slow progress, marked in its early stages by general impairment and enfeeblement of the intellectual faculties, and ending.in mental decay and idiocy. It may be true, as claimed by the learned counsel for the contestant, that mental perver
It is said by contestant’s counsel, that the testimony overwhelmingly shows that her mind then was, and had been for a long time, full of insane delusions, not only upon particular subjects and in reference to a particular person, but upon all subjects. The facts relied on to prove unsoundness of mind and insane delusions on the part of the testatrix, before and at the time she made her will, are these: She was subject, the witnesses say, while she lived in Neenah, to frequent fits of crying and laughing without any apparent cause. Her conduct oftentimes was strange and unnatural. She was easily excited into passion and frenzy. At an early period she conceived a great dislike or antipathy for her husband, and every one connected with him, which continued to the end of her life. She was constantly complaining of him, and about his character, house and surroundings. She was very suspicious of him; accused him of stealing from her. She also accused others of taking her papers, opening her letters, and other things of - like character. She believed her husband was meditating some fraud upon her rights, or intended leaving her or procuring a divorce. She took up the strange notion, on one or two occasions, that he had committed suicide, or was about to be murdered. Most of these suspicious apprehensions and fancies were doubtless groundless — -the offspring of her peculiar temperament and nervous organization; for it is perfectly manifest, from all of the testimony in the case, that Mrs. Blakely was a very eccentric and peculiar person. She was excitable, nervous, flighty
In its leading features and the facts relied on to prove insane delusion and chronic unsoundness of mind, the case is
What constitutes a sound mind, within the meaning of the ptatute, or what degree of mental power the testator should possess in order to make a valid will, was a question incidentally considered or directly passed upon in Holden v. Meadows, 31 Wis., 284; the Chafin case, supra; and Burnham v. Mitchell, 34 Wis., 117; and need not be dwelt upon now. It is sufficient to say that the rule laid down on this subject by Judge Davies in Delafield v. Parish, 25 N. Y., 29, was adopted; which is, in substance, that it is essential the testator should have sufficient capacity to comprehend the nature of the act and its effects, and should perfectly understand the extent of his property of which he is disposing, and his relation to all persons who have claims upon his bounty.
The testatrix seems to have possessed this degree of mental power and understanding, and the evidence does not justify the conclusion that her mind was under the influence of any insane delusion which would pervert or disturb its faculties in making a testamentary disposition of her estate. The evidence further satisfactorily shows that the disposition which
There is one, and it seems to us very unimportant matter, which was considerably commented on by the counsel for the contestant, and which perhaps requires a passing word. Mr. Conlan, whq drew the will as dictated by Mrs. Blakely, testified that she asked him on that occasion a good many questions, and wanted to know whether he did not think “ it would be a good thing to give her money to the Bible Society, because there were a good many people who had no Bibles, saying she
Much reliance is placed upon the medical testimony offered on the trial by the counsel for contestant. Hr. Barnett was sworn on the part of the proponent, and testified that he attended professionally on Mrs. Blakely in 1873, 1874 and 1875, and that in these visits he discovered nothing in her which would incapacitate her for business; that he saw no signs of insanity, nor any evidence of delusion. After the paralytic stroke in December, 1875, he discovered very great mental enfeeblement, so much so as to be unsoundness or insanity of the peculiar type called dementia, in some degree. He saw her in February, 1876, but recollects no particulars of that visit, and says nothing about her mental condition at that time. He closed his testimony by-saying that he should not consider her as being in a proper condition of mind to attend to business in the spring of 1876. Dr. Hunt, a witness on the same side, saw Mrs. Blakely several times in the summer of 1876, when she was with her friends in Iowa, three times professionally. He says she acted like an old person who had become weak and childish, but showed no indications of insanity, and that he did not have a suspicion that she was insane. Dr. Russell, also a witness for the proponent as a medical expert, gave a description of the characteristics of dementia. He says that from its commencement it diminishes and grad-
Dr. Kempster is certainly a high authority on the nature of the disease of insanity. He has made the disease a special study for years, and has been largely engaged for a long time in the treatment of the insane. Yet the rule he lays down in
Judge Cooley makes some very sensible and discriminating remarks as to the value of medical expert testimony, and the weight to be given to it in this class of cases, in Fraser v. Jennison, a case recently decided hy the supreme court of Michigan. (See The Northwestern Beporter, January 10, 1880, p. 595.) He says: “But it would be in a high degree dangerous, as well as unjust, to deprive a man of the control of his property as soon as the indications of mental disease appear, notwithstanding he may still be managing it with propriety and judgment. Eor legal purposes, incapacity, either criminal or civil,'must be judged of by manifestations in conduct, and language. The circumstances and symptoms of mental disorder may aid in understanding the manifestations subsequently appearing, but they can have little further value. The expert can never be put in the place of the jury, and be allowed to decide the case on his opinion of what was naturally to be looked for in the mental history of a person shown to have had peculiar surroundings and a peculiar experience.” And the learned judge adds this pertinent and -weighty observation, which it is well to bear in mind, namely, that “ there is no doubt that the law of insanity is in danger of falling into contempt in testamentary cases as well as in criminal, and very largely because the examination of experts is conducted under an apparent belief that the slightest taint of mental disorder destroys capacity, even though the conduct has apparently never been affected by it.” The Fraser case is instructive, and has a direct bearing upon some of the questions we qre considering. There the testator was 83 years of age when he made his will, dated May 17, 1877, and, as we infer from the question put to a medical expert, became a raving maniac in a few weeks after, dying August 2d following. The medical witness .had stated, on a supposed case,
Now Dr. Kempster testified that in his opinion there was no such thing as partial insanity; that a man was either sane or insane. This may be true considered in the light of medical science, but it is not true in the law, as is apparent from the decisions of some of the most eminent and distinguished jurists who have adorned the bench in this country and in England. Eor the testamentary dispositions of monomaniacs have often been sustained in spite of their mental disorder, where the insane delusion did not influence the mind of the testator in disposing of his property, or in bringing about such a disposition as would not have been made if his mind had been sound.
We have not time to notice all the items of evidence relied on by the counsel for the contestant to show that the testatrix was of unsound mind when she made her will. We have alluded to so much of the evidence as we deemed most important and material, bearing on the question of insanity; and, as already indicated, our conclusion upon the evidence is, that the testatrix was laboring under’ no insane delusion when she executed the will, nor were her mental powers so feeble that she was then wanting in testamentary capacity, within the statute.
It follows from these views, that the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, and the cause be remanded to that court with directions to affirm the order of the county court admitting the will to probate.
By the Court. — So ordered.