Wheeler v. Rockett

100 A. 13 | Conn. | 1917

The jury gave the plaintiffs a verdict setting aside an alleged will of Mrs. Keppy which had been approved by the Court of Probate. The defendant *390 alleges error in the court's refusal to set aside the verdict, and in several rulings upon questions of evidence, in the charge as given, and in refusing to charge as requested.

Upon interrogatories submitted to the jury, they found that the testatrix was not of sound mind when she executed the will in question, and that its execution was brought about by the undue influence of her daughter, Mrs. Walters, and the defendant Rockett. He claims that there was no evidence to support the first proposition, and that that finding by the jury must have largely influenced them in their second finding, which is claimed to have been made upon evidence insufficient to support it.

We think that there was evidence sufficient to support both findings of the jury. As a reason for cutting off her daughter Maude with a bequest of $1, the testatrix stated in her will that Maude had allowed her husband to turn the testatrix out of her house. There was evidence tending to show that this was untrue, that she had not been turned out, and that this statement, and the repeated statements of a similar character by the testatrix during the last year of her life, after she had had a first shock, indicated a delusion on this subject by the testatrix. There was evidence of facts showing opportunity and a disposition on the part of the other daughter, Mrs. Walters, and Rockett, to encourage the testatrix in the delusion, and to induce her to make the attempted disposition of her property which is here contested.

The questions referred to in assignments of error four, five, six and seven, asked of the defendants when called as witnesses by the plaintiffs, and which were admitted against their objection, related to acts and conduct by them subsequent to the making of the will, and tended to show concerted action between them to *391 get the property of Mrs. Keppy into the possession of Mrs. Walters, and that Mrs. Keppy had been induced to make an assignment and conveyance of all her property to Mrs. Walters a few months after the will was executed, and that Rockett was proceeding to turn over the property to Mrs. Walters under the conveyance without filing an inventory of the estate as executor under the will. The plaintiffs' claim was that these parties had combined to obtain Mrs. Keppy's property by unduly influencing her to make a will in favor of her eldest daughter. The obtaining of the will was one step in accomplishing the purpose of the conspiracy. The evidence objected to tended to show other steps taken by the conspirators to make the success of their conspiracy more sure. It tended to connect the parties as fellow workers in obtaining the property throughout the entire transaction, and was properly admitted for that purpose.

The eighth error claimed relates to the admission of the probate records showing the appointment of Mrs. Walters as the administratrix of her father's estate, and her final account as administratrix. This was offered as preliminary to showing, as claimed by the plaintiffs, that as administratrix she failed to pay over a balance shown by her administration account, and that strained relations between her and her mother resulted. It was competent to show that the relations between her and her mother were such that the latter would not be likely, if competent to make a will and not improperly influenced, to disinherit her other children and give substantially all her property to Mrs. Walters. The defendants were not harmed by the admission of the probate records.

The ninth assignment of error has not been pressed and requires no consideration.

The tenth assigns error in the court's failure to charge, *392 as requested by the defendant, that the law presumes every person sane and capable of making a will until the contrary is shown. The request was not adapted to the circumstances of the case before the jury, and if given would have tended to mislead them as to the party on whom the burden of proof lay upon the question of the testatrix's soundness of mind. The burden of proving that the testatrix was of sound mind was upon the proponents of the will. They might in the first instance prove the execution of it in due form, and if nothing in the circumstances at the time of its execution tended to show the contrary, the proponents might rely upon the prima facie presumption that the testatrix was of sound mind. The presumption of sanity would be sufficient until evidence tending to show the contrary was introduced by the contestants. The proponents would, after the introduction of such evidence, be required to rebut this by preponderating evidence, and the presumption of sanity would have no probative force. Knox's Appeal, 26 Conn. 20, 22; Livingston'sAppeal, 63 Conn. 68, 72, 26 A. 470; Barber's Appeal,63 Conn. 393, 402, 27 A. 973; Vincent v. MutualReserve Fund Life Asso., 77 Conn. 281, 290, 291,58 A. 963. There was evidence in this case, as we have said before, tending to show that the testatrix harbored a delusion which might lead her to cut off her younger daughter with a pittance as she did. The court, therefore, properly refused the request in question.

The eleventh and seventeenth assignments of error are that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury, as requested, as to the weight to be given to the fact that the will in question and its provisions were written by the testatrix herself. How far the court should comment upon the weight to be given to facts in evidence, is a matter in its discretion so long as that discretion is not abused. The court told the jury that *393 the fact that the testatrix personally wrote the will was prima facie of very substantial weight, and called their attention to the claims of the counsel as to circumstances which supported or opposed the view that the fact should be given substantial weight. We find no error of omission or commission relating to this subject which is open to complaint by the defendant.

The twelfth, thirteenth, sixteenth and eighteenth assignments relate to refusals to charge relative to want of evidence and weight of evidence, and the refusals afford no ground for appeal. The request referred to in the fourteenth and fifteenth assignments of error were sufficiently covered by the charge as given.

In the nineteenth assignment a portion of the charge is criticised and claimed to have been harmful to the defendant. The language referred to seems to state that the question of undue influence is to be determined by the relative positions of the person for whose benefit the undue influence is claimed to have been exercised, and other persons who prima facie would be presumed to be equally entitled to testamentary remembrance in the will. The language used is involved, and, standing alone, is not clear. But considered in connection with the rest of the charge it was harmless. The court had just instructed the jury that upon the question of undue influence the will might be considered, that the jury were to consider it both for the purpose of seeing if it gave them any light upon the question of the testatrix's soundness of mind and also upon the question of undue influence. This was correct. In what followed the court was explaining in what way the will itself might tend to show undue influence or absence of it. An apparent preference for the person in whose behalf the undue influence was claimed to be exercised, over others equally entitled, would tend to support the contestants' claim of undue *394 influence, in the absence of explanation. If no preference was shown, the will would tend to support the claim of no undue influence. In an earlier part of the charge the court had explained to the jury that preferences and unjust provisions in a will were not conclusive, because a testator had the right to make such a distribution of his property as he pleased. It had also very fully stated in what manner undue influence was to be established, and in the language complained of, in connection with what had previously been said, the jury could not have understood that the question of undue influence was to be determined from the fact that a preference had been shown by the testatrix for one of her three children. The language is to be taken as a part of the entire charge and construed in connection with the rest of the charge. So considered, it could not have harmed the defendant.

The language of the charge complained of in the twentieth assignment is not open to the objection made against it. The court in its discretion might well, in view of the argument that there was no proof of undue influence, ask the jury's special attention to the portion of the charge explaining that direct and positive evidence was not necessary, but that undue influence might be proved by facts and circumstances sufficient to convince.

There is no error.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.

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