22 F.2d 588 | D.C. Cir. | 1927
This is an appeal from an order of the lower court denying probate to a contested will. The instrument in question purported to be the last will and testament of Mary Elizabeth Young Thomas, deceased. The testatrix died seized of an undivided one-half interest in a residence property on Eighteenth street in the District of Columbia, and a small quantity of personal property of doubtful value. Her surviving relatives were her mother, her husband, Ernest Charles Thomas, and her brother, Walter Owen Young. She had no children.
By the terms of the will she devised all her property to her husband; the real estate thus devised was ancestral property, which in the absence of a will would have descended to her surviving brother as her sole heir at law. Section 945, D. C. Code. When the will was presented for probate, her surviving brother as caveator contested it, alleging mental incapacity of the testatrix and undue influence; these charges were both sustained by the verdict of the jury, and the will was denied probate. The eaveatee, now appellant, contends that the lower court erred at the trial (a) in not sustaining his motion for a directed verdict at the close of caveator’s evidence in chief; (b) in the admission of certain evidence over eaveatee’s objection; and (e) in the charge to the jury. The motion for a directed verdict was based upon the contention that the caveator had failed to introduce any evidence tending to prove the alleged mental incapacity of the testatrix or the charge of undue influence. The court overruled the motion, and this ruling requires a brief statement of the purport of caveator’s evidence in chief.
It was testified in chief that the testatrix was married to the eaveatee in the year 1907; that after the marriage they went to live at the Eighteenth street property which at the time was owned by the grandmother of the testatrix; that the house was then occupied as a residence by the testatrix and her husband, together with her grandmother, her mother, and her brother and his family; that later.the testatrix and her husband left the Eighteenth street home and lived elsewhere until in January, 1923, when she was taken sick and brought to the - Eighteenth street home again, where she remained until the time of her death; that in the year 1912 the grandmother of the testatrix died, leaving the Eighteenth street property by her last
Wo may say without further discussion that in our opinion the evidence in chief was sufficient to go to tho jury in support of the caveat. Wo are not concerned at this time with the weight of the evidence, our province being simply to determine whether there was evidence sufficient to be submitted by the trial court to the jury. Barbour v. Moore, 10 App. D. C. 48; Morgan v. Adams, 29 App. D. C. 198.
We are of tho opinion that the evidence concerning tho conversations between testatrix and her brother relative to the disposition of the Eighteenth street property was competent as reflecting upon the issue of mental capacity and undue influence at the date of the will. This conclusion is sustained by Throckmorton v. Holt, 180 U. S. 552, 572, 21 S. Ct. 474, 482 (45 L. Ed. 663) wherein it is said:
“In the eases contained in class A, it is held that declarations, either oral or written, made by a testator, either before or after the date of the alleged will, unless made near enough to tho time of its execution to become a part of the res gestse, are not admissible as evidence in favor of or against the validity of the will.
“The exception to the rule as admitted by these cases is that where the issue involves the testamentary capacity of the testator, and also when questions of undue influence over a weakened mind are the subject of inquiry, declarations of the testator made before or after, and yet so near to the time of the execution of the will as to permit of the inference that the same state of mind existed when the will was made, are admissible for the purpose of supporting or disproving the mental capacity of the testator to make a will at the time of the execution of the instrument propounded as such. These declarations are to be admitted, not in any manner as proof of the truth of the statements declared, but only for the purpose of showing thereby what in fact was the mental condition, or, in other words, the mental capacity, of the testator at the time when the instrument in question was executed. * * * ”
It is quite apparent therefore that declarations of the deceased are properly received upon the question of his state of mind, whether mentally strong and capable or weak and incapable, and that from all the testimony,
The requirement that the declarations of the decedent must be near to the time of the execution of the will is satisfied in the present ease by testimony to the effect that the declarations were repeated at various times from the year 1912 up to the date of the will.
We have examined the charge of the court, and are satisfied that the instructions given to the jury were full and correct. The court charged, among other things, “that evidence of any use of opiates or drugs by the testatrix creates no presumption of lack of testamentary capacity, or of undue influence by any person, at the time of making her will, unless a preponderance of evidence shows testatrix was under the influence of said opiates or drugs at the time when said will was made, to the extent that testatrix was not of sound mind and disposing memory.”
The court also charged “as a matter of law that the expression ‘sound and disposing mind capable of exercising a valid deed or contract/ when used with respect to an attempt to dispose of property by a last will and testament, means that the decedent must have had, at the time of the execution of the instrument, sufficient mental capacity to dispose of her property or estate with judgment and understanding, considering the nature and character of the estate as well as the relative claims of the different persons, who would be the natural objects of her bounty.
The appellant contends that it was error for the court to instruct the jury that a sound and disposing mind implied the ability to dispose of property by will with “judgment and understanding.” We think that this instruction was not erroneous, for it is manifest that the terms “judgment and understanding” were not used as synonymous with learning and wisdom, but with the sense of knowledge sufficient to comprehend the nature of the transaction.
In Berry v. Safe Deposit Co., 96 Md. 45, 49, 53 A. 720, 721, the court said: “Now, what is the degree of mental capacity which the law requires in such a ease? * * * By the legal standard he who is possessed of sufficient capacity at the time of executing his will to make a disposition of his estate with judgment and understanding in reference to the amount and situation of his property and the relative claims of the different persons who should have been the objects of his bounty, is mentally competent to make a valid will.”
Moreover the trial justice also instructed the jury as follows: “To make a valid will it is not necessary that the testatrix should be endowed with a high order of intellect, measuring up to the ordinary standard of mankind ; nor is it necessary to the making of a valid will that the party should have a perfect memory, and that her mind should be wholly unimpaired by age, sickness, or other infirmities. If the party possesses memory and mind enough to know what property she owns and desires to dispose of, and the person or persons to whom she intends to give it, and the manner in which she wishes it applied by such person, and, generally, fully understands her purpose and the business she is engaged in, in so disposing of her property, she is, in contemplation of law, of sound and disposing mind.”
In our opinion the record does not disclose error to the prejudice of appellant; the judgment below is therefore affirmed, with coste.