280 Pa. 533 | Pa. | 1924
Opinion by
Testator died March 31, 1923, leaving a formal testamentary paper, executed on October 31, 1922, by which he gave his entire estate, valued at $5,041, “to my friend,
The assignments of error raise but two questions: (1) Was there error in refusing to admit evidence “that sometime in May, 1921, this decedent made a last will and testament in which he gave his property to his children?” and (2) Was there error in dismissing the caveat and directing the probate of the will? The reason given for rejecting the evidence, regarding the alleged prior will, was that it ivas too remote in point of time. It is not necessary to review this conclusion, however, since the result would be the same if it had been admitted.
None of the other actions of the court below are assigned as error, except the final decree refusing an issue; from this it necessarily follows that we must accept the findings of fact as complete and accurate. In order that we may properly understand appellant’s contention that an issue should have been awarded, it is wise to first set forth, as we now do in the language of the trial judge, the situation and condition of testator about the time he executed his will:
“Decedent, who was about 76 years old, resided with [appellee] at the time of his death. His wife preceded him in death a few years, after which he lived in the Brethren Home near Lititz......and finally secured a home [with appellee] where he died. He was physically in a very wretched condition, helpless from the waist downwards, requiring assistance when necessary to be removed from the wheel chair in which he constantly sat; he was ruptured so badly that he could not attend*536 unassisted to his personal needs; and he was a great care to those who ministered to his wants and provided him with the many things which gave him comfort in his declining days. The Johns people [appellee and her husband] took him into their family, and treated him with kindness and nursed him patiently and faithfully.”
With this background in view, we approach the consideration of appellant’s evidence. So far as relates to the alleged incapacity, it is stated by the chancellor substantially as follows: Decedent’s talk was not bright nor coherent; he talked from one thing to the other; he did not know what he was talking about; his mind was almost a blank; his conversation was not always intelligible ; on one occasion he did not remember having lately seen his daughter, and on another the death of his granddaughter had passed out of his memory, although he had attended her funeral; he was profane and untidy; he talked foolishly about young women; he was unable to manage his estate or take care of himself; he wanted one witness to get a job for him when he was unable to leave his chair; he untruthfully said he had given each of his children $50,000 and had $50,000 left, although his estate was only $5,041; he became confused about roads; and, on one occasion, when in great pain and physical distress, he asked his nurse to take a revolver and shoot him.
None of the witnesses, who thus testified, saw decedent the day the will was executed, or shortly before or thereafter, and although, as is usual in such cases, they are free enough in their expression of opinion as to lack of memory, inattention to conversation, etc., etc., they give but few facts tending to bear out those opinions, and it is significant that the only one of those who saw decedent reasonably near the time the will was made, and who had the best opportunity of any of them to judge of his capacity, was his attorney in fact, who does not assert that decedent was so devoid of memory and understanding as to be unable to make a valid will.
The pitiable showing outlined above, proves that the chancellor was not lightly weighing contestants’ case, when he said he did not think that their testimony, if “ looked at separately,’ would support a verdict against the will.” We are clear it would not; but when it is viewed as a whole, the evidence for as well as that against the will, as must be done (Fleming’s Est., 265 Pa. 399), all possibility of an adverse verdict is swept aside. We shall limit our review of proponent’s case to stating, in the language of the chancellor, the testimony of the scrivener, the other subscribing witness and the attending physician; because, where, as here, their testimony
“Jonathan Swope, the scrivener of the will, a justice of the peace for 37 years, and one of the best known residents of the section of the county where these parties reside, testified with great particularity as to the circumstances surrounding the execution of the alleged will. He stated that he went to see decedent at Johns’ house in response to a request of Mr. Johns, who told him that decedent desired to see him; that he did not know what decedent wanted him to do until he arrived at the house, where he found him sitting in a wheel-chair in the kitchen, which was very large and apparently the living-room of the Johns, who were farmers; that he then asked decedent what he could do for him, and, after talking with him for some time at the far end of the room and 'privately,’ decedent told the squire that the Johns family were very kind to him and were taking good care of him, and that he wanted to give all his property to Mrs. Johns. After receiving these instructions from decedent, the squire prepared the writing, read it and explained it to decedent, after which he signed it in the presence of the squire and declared it as his will in the presence of Adam Brown, the other subscribing witness, who was called in after decedent had executed it. The squire said he had known decedent for at least thirty years, that he noticed no change in mentality when the writing was executed, that his conversation was rational, and that he comprehended the meaning of the act he was engaged in. The squire also testified that he did not tell Mrs. Johns, or anyone, what the will contained, and that after it was prepared and executed, at the direction of decedent, he took it along and kept it in his safe until the death of Mr. Leisey.
“The other subscribing witness, Adam K. Brown, who knew decedent for about twenty years and visited him
“Both subscribing witnesses, therefore, who had known the decedent for years, testified that he was mentally all right and that he understood full well what he was doing when he made the writing......
“The proponent also submitted the testimony of Dr. H. S. Gingrich, the attending physician of decedent, who had visited him at least thirteen times and who said that while decedent was a physical wreck, he was, nevertheless, mentally sound and ‘rational in every respect.’ ”
Appellants seem to think this mass of sustaining testimony is of little or no moment because the scrivener, and the other subscribing witness, did not hear testator speak of his family or property at the time the will was drawn and executed. But why should he have spoken of either? “If a testator designs to give the whole of his estate to a stranger, to the exclusion of his......relations, it is not necessary that he should have a recollection of the property he intends to dispose of, or of the persons who are thus related to him. Distribution not being the thing attempted, a competency to distribute is not the test of mental capacity”: Stevenson v. Stevenson, 33 Pa. 469. What he was doing was probably one of the simplest things of even his plain and unobtrusive life, and hence the only applicable test was: Did he know and understand the business in which he was engaged at the time he executed this easily understood gift to the person who had been and was being kind and helpful to him in his hour of need? Wilson v. Mitchell, 101 Pa. 495.
The decree of the court below is affirmed and the appeal is dismissed at the cost of appellants.