259 Mass. 409 | Mass. | 1927
Hannah L. Barry, late of Springfield, in our county of Hampden, died on April 27,1925. An instrument purporting to be her last will dated August 8, 1923, and a codicil thereto dated April 16, 1925, were filed in the Probate Court. The respondent, a niece and sole next of kin of the decedent, filed a motion that three issues be framed for a trial by a jury. The first, relating to the execution of the will and codicil, has been waived; the second related to the testatrix’s testamentary capacity, and the third, to fraud and undue influence of certain persons named. None of the evidence presented would justify a finding of fraud or undue
The decedent was about eighty years old when the will was executed, and less than two years thereafter she signed the codicil. The estate amounted to nearly $400,000. The contestant offered evidence tending to show that the deceased was close and penurious, and was slovenly and dirty in her dress and personal appearance; that she complained of being poor and did not provide herself with proper food or clothing; that she was forgetful, and at times did not recognize persons whom she had known for many years; that ¡she had hallucinations and complained'of noises in the upper part of her house when there was no reason for so doing; that she complained that she had been robbed by bank officials where she did business, and by others. There was other evidence tending to show that while she was miserly and peculiar she was of sound mind when the instruments in question were executed.
Motions for jury issues may be heard by the judge of probate either upon statements made by counsel as to evidence which the parties expect to be able to offer, or, as in the present case, upon a hearing with the presentation of oral and other evidence, although the judge is not required to receive testimony in a formal way. When, however, the latter course is pursued, this court examines the evidence and reaches its own conclusion as to the facts, but will not reverse the decision of the judge unless plainly wrong. As he has seen the witnesses and heard their testimony, he is better qualified to judge of their credibility and the weight to be attached to their testimony than is an appellate court upon the printed record. Cook v. Mosher, 243 Mass. 149. Clark v. McNeil, 246 Mass. 250, 254, 255.
Where there is evidence of facts which present a real question for judicial inquiry, and the judge is satisfied that there is a genuine and doubtful question of fact to be decided that is supported by evidence of a substantial nature, the
Whether a real and genuine question of fact on the issue of soundness of mind was made out in the present case is close. Whatever may have been the mental condition of the testatrix before and after the date of the execution of the will and codicil, it cannot quite be said that the judge was plainly wrong as matter of law in denying the issue upon that question. Fuller v. Sylvia, supra. Clark v. McNeil, supra. Burroughs v. White, 246 Mass. 258. Johnson v. Talbot, 255 Mass. 155. Johnson v. Harris, 258 Mass. 201.
We do not mean to intimate that the question, whether jury issues are to be allowed in a will case, is a matter wholly within the absolute discretion of the judge of probate. He must exercise a judicial discretion, and if his decision is plainly wrong, it will be reversed. As was said in Clark v. McNeil, supra, at page 256, “The weight to be given to the decision of the probate judge is that to which it seems entitled in the light of the whole record.”
We are of opinion, with hesitation, that the decision of the Probate Court was not erroneous as matter of law.
Decree denying motion for jury issues affirmed.