Ryalls v. Sayles

254 Mass. 63 | Mass. | 1925

Carroll, J.

The will of James H. Ryalls was executed May 20, 1924; he died four days later. In this will, the petitioner, who is the testator’s son, was not mentioned. All of the estate was left to a niece of the testator residing in England. The petition alleges that because the testator “omitted to provide for your petitioner” there should be *64assigned to him the share of the estate to which he would be entitled if his father had died intestate. The respondent contends that the omission to provide for the petitioner was intentional and not occasioned by accident or mistake.

The evidence is not reported. The report of the judge recites that the petitioner lived with his parents until he was twenty-five years of age, when he married. Before his marriage the father made presents to him, paid his tuition at a commercial school, and upon the marriage gave him some money. The petitioner was always on good terms with his father and they met occasionally. The father did not recognize people readily. For a year before his death he lost ground physically and mentally, but was able to conduct his own affairs, and when the will was executed was competent to transact business. In 1922 he made a will; the lawyer who drew this will asked the testator “if he had any issue and the testator replied that he had none. He then made no mention of his son in this will, and left his property mostly to a church.” The same lawyer also made the will executed May 20,1924, “and having in mind that the testator had formerly stated to him that he had no issue, when he drew the last will did not ask him again if he had children or issue.”

It was found by the judge that the petitioner saw his father three weeks before he died; that they conversed, and there was nothing in the conversation indicating any mental weakness on the part of the father. It was also found that the testator’s estate amounted to about $6,000; that the testator had not forgotten his son when the will was made; and that his omission to mention him in the will was intentional.

So far as material, G. L. c. 191, § 20, provides that “If a testator omits to provide in his will for any of his children . . . they shall take the same share of his estate which they would have taken if he had died intestate . . . unless it appears that the omission was intentional and not occasioned by accident or mistake.” The findings of the judge that the omission of the son from the will was intentional will not be set aside unless clearly wrong. Hayes v. Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co. 222 Mass. 382, 386. Fenelon v. Fenelon, 244 Mass. *6514, 17. See Drew v. Drew, 250 Mass. 41, 44. The testator saw his son and conversed with him a few weeks before the will was signed. Their relations were friendly. The testator was competent to make a will, he was able to transact business, he talked rationally, and must be presumed to have understood what he was doing. It cannot be assumed that he forgot that he had a son or that he unintentionally omitted to provide for him, and we cannot say that the findings of the judge were plainly wrong. Buckley v. Gerard, 123 Mass. 8. Howard v. Smith, 249 Mass. 522.

Decree affirmed.