220 Wis. 134 | Wis. | 1936
The trial court, in a very carefully prepared opinion, points out the difficulties experienced in deciding the case, and said: “The problem therefore is not easy to decide, but there are certain outstanding facts which, when examined in the light of the law, determine certain results to which this court has reluctantly come,” and announced his conclusion that the burden which the circumstances placed upon the proponents of overcoming suspicions had not been met, because:
“(1) The evidence shows that there was every opportunity to exercise undue influence.
“(2) The result fully indicates its exercise.
“(3) The testator was susceptible of undue influence, being old, feeble, mentally weak, and suffering physically with an incurable disease that would lead him to be suspicious and have delusions, as is evidenced by the hospital record and the witnesses.
“(4) A disposition on the part of the beneficiaries to exercise such influence, while not positive, direct, or evidenced by overt act, except the insistence of Mrs. Hazel Rodebush to have the will drawn, yet with the Raemisch family being unable to overcome all the presumptions against them, the court must conclude that Robert Truehl, at the time of executing said will, and for some days previous thereto, was not mentally competent to draw a will, and that the same was procured by what is sometimes designated as ‘insidious influence,’ which is not positive, overt or definite at any particular period, and yet has its influence over a weak and trusting mind that has been laboring under misinformation and delusions in his last sickness.”
It is established that Truehl, after reaching the hospital, determined to make his will. It appears that Dr. Blake visited-Truehl at the hospital October 3d, and Truehl told
Where one, competent to do so, has determined to make a will, and has definitely decided upon the provisions he intends to incorporate in it, and another, at the testator’s request, assists in procuring the execution of the will, such other person is not exercising undue influence, there being no suggestion coming from the one so acting, as to the terms the will is to contain. At the request of the testator, the nurse first attempted to summon a banker, who had been an adviser to Truehl, and with whom Truehl had done business for many years. When this friend of Truehl’s failed to appear, she telephone her father and inquired why the man had not responded to the call. When informed by her father that the banker would not come, because he felt he could not, with propriety, “go out and draw a will,” upon the suggestion of her father, she sought to secure the services of one who had been an attorney in years past for Truehl. The attorney visited Truehl at the hospital. He did not draw a will because at the time of his two visits it was his opinion that Truehl was not sufficiently clear mentally to make a valid will. When the attorney left, it was with the understanding that if Truehl brightened up, the attorney should be notified, and that he would return. On Sunday, October 7, 1934, the day before leaving the hospital, the nurse, being of the opinion that Truehl was capable of attending to the matter, attempted to reach the attorney, but was unsuccessful in doing so. The following day the testator, with his nurse,
When we come to examine in detail the testimony offered in support of the contestants’ proposition that Truehl was mentálly incompetent to execute a will, we find that the evidence does no more than show that at the time Truehl was visited by his former attorney he was, either as a result of medicine which had been administered, or the effects of his illness, temporarily incapable of executing a will. There is no evidence of lack of capacity at the time of the execution of the will, October 10th. The condition of the testator, as observed by the attorney when he called at the hospital in the morning of the 5th and 6th, was not a continuing one, and its existence does not establish such infirmity of mind as would preclude the possibility of the recurrence of mental
The notations on the hospital chart, and the testimony of the attorney and others who visited Truehl in the hospital October 5th and 6th, do not refute the testimony of Dr. Blake, a friend, neighbor, and attending physician, that the testator was normal October 10th, the date of the execution of the will; that his mentality was such that he could comprehend what property he had, and who were the natural objects of his bounty. The scrivener who prepared the will, and the witnesses to it,- saw nothing in the actions or conduct of the testator which aroused suspicions, or caused them to doubt the ability of the testator to make a will.
We have reached the conclusion that the findings as to undue influence, and as to the existence of delusions, are against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence. The will must be admitted to probate.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
The following memorandum was filed February 4, 1936:
The mandate hereto fore entered is amended by adding thereto:
Costs of appellants when taxed to be paid out of the estate.