308 Mass. 50 | Mass. | 1941
This is a petition to the Probate Court to vacate a decree of that court allowing the will of Maria Alice Stephens, late of Somerville. Several respondents appeared and demurred. The petitioners now appeal from decrees sustaining the demurrers and dismissing the petition. The question is whether the allegations of the petition are sufficient as a basis for vacating the original decree admitting the will to probate.
These allegations are in substance as follows: The present petitioners contested the allowance of the will on the grounds of lack of proper execution, want of mental capacity of the testatrix, and undue influence of the petitioners’ sister, Bertha Stephens Lampron, the executrix and principal beneficiary under the will. At the hearing on the probate of the will Bertha Stephens Lampron falsely and fraudulently testified that she did not know the whereabouts of one Nellie Cash and could not help the petitioners to find Cash; that she had not communicated with Cash; and that Cash was not residing at the home of one Rae in Plymouth. In fact Bertha Stephens Lampron did know the whereabouts^ of Nellie Cash and had written to her and knew that she “was secreted” at the residence of Rae. Nellie Cash had been the companion, nurse, and housekeeper of the testatrix and would have been an important witness and “would have testified to facts which would have established” that the said alleged will was invalid and fraudulent. Some of the testimony of Bertha Stephens Lampron was false and fraudulent. “Bertha Stephens Lampron, her husband one John Lampron, one Lucy C. Rae, and others, . . . combined and conspired together to commit a contempt” of court and “to interfere with the administration of justice” and pursuant to this conspiracy “they did conceal and secrete the said Nellie Cash and they consciously practised an imposition on the court and by false representations and pretences and by the false testimony aforesaid, did prevent your petitioners from summonsing [sic] her and from'” having her appear as a witness, and
Upon close examination of the petition it is apparent that it contains clear allegations of false testimony by Bertha Stephens Lampron as to her lack of knowledge of the whereabouts of the potential witness Cash, and that it further contains a series of more or less indefinite allegations of “fraud,” “combination,” and “conspiracy” by the respondents named, as a result of which it is alleged that the witness was “secreted,” so that the petitioners lost the benefit of important and decisive testimony. Nothing more of substance can be spelled out of the petition. It may well be doubted whether the allegations of the series last mentioned are not too general in their terms, and whether they contain sufficient statements of particular facts to withstand a demurrer. But for the purposes of this decision we assume that the petition is adequate in form.
It is well settled that for reasons of public policy a final decree will not be vacated on the ground that incorrect findings of fact as to matters in issue were brought about by perjured testimony given by one of the parties at the hearing, or knowingly procured by him. The reasons for this rule have been fully stated and need not-be repeated. Zeitlin v. Zeitlin, 202 Mass. 205. Boyd v. Boyd, 226 Mass. 542. Renwick v. Macomber, 233 Mass. 530.
If the giving of perjured testimony leading to incorrect findings will not suffice as a ground of revocation, it is
The fraud here alleged was not “extrinsic or collateral to the matter tried” in the sense in which that expression has been used in cases of this kind. Zeitlin v. Zeitlin, 202 Mass. 205, 207. It entered directly into issues that have been fully tried. The gist of the petitioners' complaint is simply that those issues were wrongly determined because some of the evidence was kept away. The case is, we think, to be classed with those already cited rather than with Sampson v. Sampson, 223 Mass. 451, 462, or with Parsekian v. Oynoian, 299 Mass. 543. See Greene v. Greene, 2 Gray, 361; Edson v. Edson, 108 Mass. 590; Gale v. Nickerson, 144 Mass. 415, 419; Tucker v. Fisk, 154 Mass. 574; Keyes v. Brackett, 187 Mass. 306.
This case does not come within any of the exceptions to the general rule enumerated in McLaughlin v. Feerick, 276 Mass. 180, 183. It is to be observed that the petition con
Decrees affirmed.