124 Minn. 27 | Minn. | 1913
April 12, 1912, Margaret Bullard, then a widow 76 years of age,, made her will. She died June 9, 1912. On June 24 the will was;, filed for probate in Lyon county. Four granddaughters of the testatrix, the respondents here, contested the will on the ground that, the testatrix was of unsound mind at the time the will was made,, and on the ground of undue influence. The probate court admitted the will, and the contestants appealed to the district court of Lyon county. The issues were there tried and submitted to a jury, which,, in answer to special questions, found that the testatrix was of sound and disposing mind at the time she made the will, and that there was. no undue influence. The contestants made a motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was not justified by the evidence, and on the further ground that the court erred in excluding certain.evidence. The trial court granted the motion, upon the ground, as. expressly stated in its order, of “error occurring at the trial, as. mentioned in the attached memorandum, and not on acount of any insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict.” The executor appealed from this order.
On the trial contestants called Bichard Bowland for cross-examination under the statute. Testatrix, who at the time of making the will, resided in Fairmont, on that day or the following went to live with her brother, Bichard Bowland, in Tracy, where she continued to live until her death. The contestants offered to prove by the witness that on May 16, 1912, he made an application to the probate court of Lyon county for the appointment of a guardian of testatrix, and offered in evidence the petition. They also offered to show that in pursuance of the petition a guardian was appointed. These offers were objected to, and the evidence was excluded. The petition was signed and sworn to by Bichard Bowland, the witness, and stated that Margaret Bullard “is very deaf, and is almost totally blind, and her mental faculties and ability to attend to or manage her own affairs are greatly impaired, and that by reason of the said facts she is incompetent to have the charge and management of her property or business affairs.” This petition was filed May 22, 1912. It does not appear when the order appointing the guardian was made, or what was its language, but we may presume that it was made before the death of Mrs. Bullard, and that it was based on the grounds alleged in the petition. The offers were objected to, and the evidence excluded. On the motion for a new trial the court concluded that the record of the proceedings for the appointment of a guardian and the adjudication making such appointment should have been received in evidence, as throwing light upon the mental condition of the testatrix at the time the will was made. Whether or not the court was correct in this conclusion is the main question on this appeal.
The will was executed April 12, 1912. The petition for. the appointment of a guardian was made by Bichard Bowland on May 16,
A finding of incompetency in guardianship proceedings, or in proceedings upon a writ of de lunático inquirendo, for which the guardianship proceedings are the modern equivalent, is admissible as evidence of the mental condition of the person at the time covered by such finding, notwithstanding that the parties to the litigation are different, and notwithstanding the hearsay rule.
In the Pinney case, Chief Justice Gilfillan, after announcing that
In Knox v. Haug, 48 Minn. 58, 50 N. W. 934, it was held that proceedings under G. S. 1878, p. 455, c. 35, § 21, to commit a person to the hospital for insane, are not evidence of his mental incapacity to malee contracts. The distinction is made between such proceedings, and the common-law writ de lunático inquirendo, which is stated to be not materially different from the statutory proceedings for the appointment of a guardian. The case is not in point. The soundness of the distinction is denied by Wigmore and the authorities cited by him. 3 Wigmore, Evidence, § 1671, note 4.
In the section of Wigmore just referred to, the author says that whether the person’s mental capacity at the time of the inquisition is evidence of his condition at the time in issue is merely a question of the relevancy of the fact evidenced by the inquisition. In section 233, note 1, he says: “The question whether an inquisition.or adjudication of insanity is admissible at all raises a question of an exception to the hearsay rule.” “Supposing it admissible, then it evidences insanity at the time of the inquisition, and the present question — of the relevancy of insanity at the time — is then the same as in cases where the insanity is otherwise evidenced by conduct or the like.”
In Giles v. Hodge, 74 Wis. 360, 43 N. W. 163, it was held that the record of a subsequent adjudication of incapacity is admissible, in connection with evidence that there had been no change in the conditions. In Small v. Champeny, 102 Wis. 61, 78 N. W. 407, the court holds that an adjudication of mental unsoundness is evidence only of the mental condition of the subject at the time of such adjudication, an unquestioned proposition, and upholds the rule of
The Iowa court considered the question in the case of In re Van Houten’s Will, 147 Iowa, 125, 124 N. W. 886, 10 Am. St. 340. Two years after the will was executed, proceedings for the appointment of a guardian were instituted, and resulted in a judgment that the testator was then mentally competent. It was held that the record of this adjudication should have been admitted in evidence. The decision is based upon the rule that such an adjudication is evidence of the mental condition of the testator at the time of the judgment, and upon the conclusion that this has a probative value on the question of the mental condition at the time of the will.
We hold, notwithstanding the Pinney case, that the judgment or finding in the guardianship proceedings was competent evidence. Its admissibility depended upon whether the want of mental capacity of the testatrix in Hay or June had any probative value on the question of her mental capacity in April, when the will was made. If witnesses who had observed the actions of and conversed with the testatrix in June, would have been permitted to testify as to her sanity or insanity at that time, because such evidence was of probative value on the question of her mental state two months before, then the judgment or finding was admissible. In either case it is purely a question of the tendency of the evidence to prove the fact in issue. This was largely for the trial court to determine. On the motion for a new trial, it decided that the excluded evidence would have thrown some light upon the issue decided by the jury, and that the ruling was prejudicial error. The incapacity that the evidence tended to show in Mrs. Bullard was not a sudden attack, or a temporary condition. It was rather in the nature of mental decay. We are unable to say that the excluded evidence had no revelancy to the issue, and cannot disturb the trial court’s decision that the ruling was prejudicial.
It is urged by the appellant that the evidence overwhelmingly sustains the verdict, and by the respondent that the contrary is true. It is sufficient to say that the evidence was conflicting. It is not so clear that Mrs. Bullard was of sound mind that we can say that the excluded evidence might not affect the result.
Order affirmed.