195 P.2d 725 | Colo. | 1948
THIS is a will contest case. Thomas Piercen, to whom we hereinafter refer as testator, died on February 22, 1945, leaving a last will and testament dated September 17, 1938, which was filed for probate in the county court of Routt county. Caveat and objections to its probate were sustained, and on appeal the district court held that the will had been properly executed and withdrew that question from the consideration of the jury. The court then submitted the questions of testamentary capacity and undue influence to the jury in two interrogatories. The jury found testator was of sound mind and memory when he made his will and that it was not executed under, or as the result of, undue influence. The court then entered judgment, admitting the will to probate. We will herein refer to Mary Schuettig, defendant in error, as proponent, and Serene Johansen, Thelma Peterson Hare, Mrs. Calvin Martin and Mrs. Ted Rickman, contestants and caveators, plaintiffs in error, will be designated as caveators.
Caveators bring the case here alleging twenty-nine points of error, with thirteen subdivisions, which we group and consider under: (1) Execution of the will; (2) burden of proof; and (3) mental capacity and undue influence.
[1] (1) Execution of the Will. While on a trip to mining properties owned by him, testator stopped overnight at a hotel in Idaho Springs conducted by Mrs. Oralyn Taylor, a woman who knew him only as an occasional guest. The evening before, September 17, 1938, testator, Bert Sloas and Dave Rankin, two of his employees, and proponent, who conducted a hotel for testator at Oak Creek where he also made his home, registered at Mrs. Taylor's hotel. Testator and the two men occupied one room in which were two beds, and proponent had a room by herself. Mrs. Taylor, a witness *266
to the will, testified that the following forenoon, she, at testator's request, went with him to his room to witness his signature, and that Dave Rankin, Bert Sloas and proponent were in the room at the time; that testator immediately signed his name to a paper, and she signed her name below the attestation clause; that he then told her she had witnessed his will; that in her opinion, he was at that time of sound and disposing mind and memory. She further testified that she did not see the other witnesses sign the will. Bert Sloas testified that he signed the will as a witness in the presence, and at the request, of testator and in the presence of the other subscribing witness; that the other witnesses signed said will in his presence, in the presence of testator, and in the presence of each other; that testator acknowledged his signature attached to the will before them; that he declared it to be his last will and testament, and that in his opinion testator was at the time of sound and disposing mind and memory. The third witness, Dave Rankin, was not available. He removed from Colorado to Ohio years before, and a death certificate was introduced in evidence showing that he had passed away. His signature was fully identified by two competent witnesses as provided in such cases by the state Session Laws of 1945, page 746, chapter 262, section 1. All three witnesses signed the attestation clause. While its wording is criticized, nevertheless, it is prima facie evidence of the matters expressed therein. Gumon EvangelicalBethel Church v. Reith,
Louise Piercen, former wife of testator, testified as a witness for contestants. Clearly she was biased and prejudiced against proponent, who was her sister. She was shown the purported will and asked: "Q. Can you identify that [testator's] signature? A. I wouldn't say it wasn't his signature. He hasn't wrote like that but I have a signature here that is more perfect. Q. Do you, in your opinion, say that is the genuine signature of Tom Piercen? A. No." Against this testimony is the evidence of Mrs. Taylor that testator signed the will in her presence; the testimony of Sloas that testator's signature was on the will when he signed it; the testimony of two witnesses familiar with testator's signature that the name attached to the will as the maker thereof was testator's; the genuineness of Dave Rankin's signature, the third witness to the will, evidenced by two competent witnesses; together with the attestation clause. In view of the foregoing facts we are clearly of the opinion that the question of the validity of testator's signature was one which the court properly resolved in proponent's favor. If there had been a verdict to the contrary, it "ought to be set aside." Weston v. Livezey,
[2] (2) Burden of Proof. On this subject the court instructed the jury: "Instruction No. 3. On the issue as to whether or not Thomas Piercen, at the time of the execution of the purported will, was of sound mind and memory and had testamentary capacity, the burden of proof is on the proponent, Mary Schuettig to establish *269
such facts by a preponderance of evidence. On the issue of undue influence the burden of proof is upon the contestants to prove the alleged undue influence by a preponderance of the evidence." This is a correct statement of the law. As we said in Snodgrass v. Smith,
[3] (3) Mental Capacity and Undue Influence. The court left it to the jury under proper instructions to determine both questions which were resolved, and we think properly, in support of the validity of the will. There is evidence tending to show that testator was a drinking man, that he at times became intoxicated, but there is no evidence to indicate that this had the slightest effect on the making of his will. On the other hand, the evidence is undisputed that he had not been drinking when the will was made, and the jury properly found that he was of sound mind when he executed it.
As to the charge of undue influence, the jurors had before them undisputed evidence that proponent at the time testator's will was signed, made a will leaving her property to him in case he survived her, and it is in evidence that after testator made his will he stated regarding his property: "I willed mine to my friend and good housekeeper, Mary Schuettig," proponent, and later, "she has reared a son whom she lost and who left her a good deal of insurance and she has been good enough to use some of this money to help me pay my back taxes, which was better than $5,000." Another witness testified that he asked testator what he was going to do with his property when he died, and he replied that he had made a will giving his property to proponent. Testator died more than six and one-half years after he executed his will. The evidence clearly shows that he knew he *270
had made a will, to whom he had left his property, and the reasons why he had done so. There was no testimony of any undue influence exercised upon or over testator when his will was made, and the lapse of years negatives any inference that there was any such influence. As we said in Brantner v. Papish,
[4] It was not error for the court to submit the case to the jury on special interrogatives. Rule 49 (a), R. C. P. Colo.
We find no reversible error in the case, and accordingly the judgment is affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, MR. JUSTICE STONE and MR. JUSTICE ALTER, dissent. *271