186 Ky. 829 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
The last will of Vitula McFarland, who died July 10, 1917, at Owensboro, Kentucky, at the age of eighty years, was probated in the county court, from which order an appeal was prosecuted to the circuit court, where a trial was had before a jury and the paper in question found not to be the will of Miss McFarland on the ground that the testatrix did not possess mental capacity sufficient to dispose of her property by will. From the judgment entered in the circuit court rejecting the will, the propounders have appealed to this court. The will is very brief and simple, and while executed according to the forms required by the statutes, is assailed on two grounds:
(1) Mental incapacity of the testatrix.
(2) Undue influence exerted over her by the beneficiaries named in the will, and their friends.
As the beneficiaries were not present at the time of the making of the will, and there was no evidence tending to establish undue influence, this question was not submitted to the jury. On the question of mental capacity of the testatrix the evidence takes a wide range and covers more than two hundred typewritten pages. For the propounders sixteen witnesses were called who testified concernina’ the mental condition of Miss McFarland at the time and for some years before the making of the will in question. Among these sixteen witnesses were the three who witnessed the will. The only physician testifying in the case was Dr. J. B. Lacer. He had been the family physician of Miss McFarland for a number of years. In November before her death in July,
*832 “I, Vitula McFarland of Owensboro, Daviess county, Ky., hereby make this my last will and testament revoking all former wills. ■
“I hereby give, devise and bequeath all the property,, personal and real, of which I may die possessed, unto my nephew, Watkins S. McFarland, and my niece, Vitula McFarland, children of my brother, Walter McFarland, share and share alike.
her
“Vitula McFarland. x
mark."
All three of the witnesses who were present at the' time the will was made testified that they had known Miss Vitula for a number of years and that they talked with her frequently and that on the day the will was made they conversed with her for some time before the instrument was prepared and that she was in the full possession of her mental powers and capable of making a survey of her property, knowing the objects of her bounty, and her duty to them, and had mental capacity to dispose of her property according to a fixed purpose' of her own. No one of them doubted her ability to do' each of these things. In addition to these three men thepropounders called two bankers who had transacted, business with her who thought that Miss Vitula’s mental grasp was sufficient to enable her to make a will. A number of her neighbors, including some ladies, were-called and allowed to detail many of the everyday occurrences about her home which were strong circumstances, to prove her mental capacity to make a will. In fact all of the sixteen witnesses called by the propounders were entirely .satisfied that the testatrix disposed of her property in a rational way according to a fixed purpose of her own.
For the contestants, sixteen witnesses testified,, among them, Mrs. Emma Poindexter, Mrs. Mary Lou Owens, Mrs. Bettie Alexander, Mrs. Elmira Davis, Mrs. Lee Anna Harsh, Mrs. Lutitia Lewis, Mrs. W. W. Lewis, Bunk Miller, and Mercer Talbot, each of whom was related to the testatrix, and therefore more or less interested in the result. These witnesses were the only ones for contestants who gave relative evidence of a decidedly probative nature; the balance was rather indistinct and
Appellants insist that the trial court committed reversible error in excluding from the jury a letter from Stanford McFarland, addressed to testatrix and her sister, bearing date August 17, 1901. It reads as follows:
“Owensboro, Ky., Aug. 17th, 1901.
“Dear Tula and Tira:
"There Is one thing I wanted to speak to you about before I left but Sam Lancaster was there, this is the-last favor I will ever ask. I want it granted. If you have told any one here that I asked you to endorce for me I want you to correct it immediately another party done the same thing for me no relation in the world they did it cherfully and willing, so I have the proof to uphold me if necessary, and will do it if I hear it. What you have done for me I appreciate it to the fullest extent. I have spoken of it time and time again. You intimated you had some awful things you could tell against me. I suppose all I have to say is crack your whip and see if I don’t tell a heap of things you never dreamed that I knew crack you whip.
“Good bye Stanford.”
The propounders of the will were attempting to prove not only that the testatrix was of sound mind and disposing memory, but that she gave her property to Vitula and Watkins McFarland because she had a grievance against her other nieces and nephews, children of her brother Stanford McFarland. In other words, that she was controlled in her devises in part by a very natural resentment against her brother and his family on account of ill-treatment. In will cases where the mental capacity of the testatrix is in question, the evidence is necessarily allowed to take wide range and every fact and circumstance that throws light upon the mental qualifications of the testatrix is admissible. This
If the evidence for the contestants materially preponderated we would not attach so much importance to this letter, but in this case where we regard the great preponderance of the evidence as on the side of the propounders, we think this letter, if admitted as evidence before the jury, might have exerted a controlling influence.
Appellees not only insist that the letter was not competent in any event, but they especially insist that had the letter been otherwise competent no sufficient ground was laid for its introduction as it was not shown by any one acquainted with the handwriting of Stanford McFarland from having seen him write that the letter was his handwriting or that he wrote the letter which is signed by his first name only. We do not regard this as important, for whether he wrote the letter or not his sisters who received the letter with his name signed to it, threatening them if they did not keep secret a certain transaction which they had undergone with him, had the same effect upon their minds as if the letter had been
The court in excluding the letter from the considera■tion of the jury, committed error for which the judgment must be reversed for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.