American National Red Cross v. Gumberts

1952 OK 226, 247 P.2d 735, 207 Okla. 96, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 707
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 3, 1952
Docket34925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1952 OK 226 (American National Red Cross v. Gumberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American National Red Cross v. Gumberts, 1952 OK 226, 247 P.2d 735, 207 Okla. 96, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 707 (Okla. 1952).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

Following an appeal from county court and on trial de novo in district court, it was decreed that a certain instrument dated January 24, 1945, and presented for probate as the last will and testament of Lillian Carrie Lamphear, deceased, be denied probate. The judgment rests on a finding that “on January 24, 1945, Lillian Carrie Lamphear was of unsound mind, and did not understand the effect and consequences of her act and did not possess testamentary capacity to make a will.”

The American Red Cross, a Federal Corporation, claimant of interest under *97 terms of the instrument, brings this appeal, and here contends the trial court’s findings and judgment are against the clear weight of the evidence.

According to the record the instrument presented for probate was in the handwriting of Lillian Carrie Lam-phear. It read as follows:

“Los Angeles California January 24, 1945 I want all I have also in Safty deposit box to go to Red Cross and other societies nothing to my brother in Chicago or to his daughter and son or my sister in Evansville, Indiana.
“Carrie Lamphear
“My bank accounts are signed Lillian Lamphear.”

Lillian Carrie Lamphear was of the age of 84 years in January, 1945. She became a widow in 1917 and never remarried. She lived in California and alone in her own home from 1917 to 1942. Her relatives all lived in distant states and she seldom visited with any of them. During the years from 1917 through 1939, she at various times bought and sold stocks and securities and during the time accumulated a sizable fortune in cash and certain stocks and securities of great value. She had three sisters, one of whom died at Mt. Vernon, Indiana, in 1895, one died at St. Louis, Missouri, in 1931, and one died at Evansville, Indiana, in 1940. For several years prior to 1940 and for the year 1940, Mrs. Lamphear listed the latter mentioned sister as a dependent on her income tax returns, but not after 1940. In 1943 she sold her home and shortly thereafter removed to a rental property, where she remained until August, 1945.

There was evidence to the effect that Mrs. Lamphear was a very miserly person and had never exhibited a particular interest in the Red Cross, and had never made any significant contribution to any charitable society or institution. It was shown that beginning about 1940 Mrs. Lamphear became careless and neglectful of her personal appearance and cleanliness and allowed her living quarters to become cluttered with rubbish and to remain unclean and untidy; that she often had no memory of very recent events, though she often spoke of events of the distant past with seeming clarity; that she often accused visitors, relatives or neighbors of the theft of inconsequential articles which she herself had mislaid. It was shown that in the period from December, 1943, to August, 1945, when she occupied a rental property, she lived as if she were in circumstances of extreme poverty, though she had cash and liquid assets of over $100,000. In this time she kept her house curtains down at all times and lived in an attitude of suspicion of all acquaintances and of strangers; her clothes were usually greasy and soiled; she kept spoiled and dirty food in the house and left garbage exposed and scattered about the premises; rats ran about the house and premises. In this time she wrote letters wherein she spoke of a rat as staying in the springs of her bed and as going to bed when she retired.

In October, 1945, Mrs. Lamphear arrived in Oklahoma City and at the home of her nephew. At the time, she was in a shocking state of personal uncleanliness and carried with her a package of stale food which she had carried with her from California. She remained in the home of her nephew until December, when she was removed to a rental apartment. There she spoke of seeing covered wagons encamped on adjacent lots and of her fear of them, and otherwise exhibited such delusions as created disturbances. In January, 1946, on order of county court, she was removed to a state hospital for insane where she remained until her death in 1949.

Upon entry into the state hospital Mrs. Lamphear was examined by physicians, specialists in the field of psychiatry. According to the testimony of an examining physician Mrs. Lam-phear was then afflicted with senile psychosis, paranoid type, and in such advanced stage as to indicate the con *98 dition had existed for a number of years. Senile psychosis was described as a degenerative disease, cumulative and progressive, caused from the age-ing of the body organs, whose functions relate to reasoning power and emotional stability. Paranoid type was described as being associated with irritability, resentments and hostility arising from persecutory delusion. This physician witness, in addition to examination of Mrs. Lamphear on her entrance into the institution, had occasion to observe Mrs. Lamphear over a period of months while she was in the institution. The witness, given a history of prior acts and conduct of Mrs. Lamphear, in substance as we have above set forth, expressed his opinion that in January, 1945, and for several months prior, Mrs. Lamphear was incapable of intelligent action and had not the mental capacity to understand and appreciate the effect and results of any written disposition she might make of her property; that she was psychotic, mentally ill, and of unsound mind from the 1941, 1942 period onward. The witness expressed the view that in the instrument itself an advanced psychosis is manifested; that confusion is displayed in the terms of the instrument wherein she disperses her life’s savings to “other societies,” a vague group of organizations; that under the hypothesis that in 1940 she knew her sister at Evansville, Indiana, had died, confusion of mind is further manifested in the instrument by the manner of her reference to a sister in Evansville.

Another physician who had examined and observed Mrs. Lamphear during the time she was in the state hospital, and being given a history of her earlier acts and conduct, testified in substance that she was without sound mind and memory in 1945 sufficient to enable her to know and understand the business of making a disposition of her property as by will or otherwise.

Two physicians, psychiatrists, who had never seen Mrs. Lamphear, given a history as is generally set forth above, expressed opinion that Mrs. Lamphear, in January, 1945, was capable of knbw-ing the nature and extent of her property, and capable of calling to mind the natural objects of her bounty and was capable of understanding the nature and consequences of her acts at the time of her execution of the instrument here involved.

Lay witnesses who testified Concerning acts and conduct of Mrs. Lam-phear observed at a time shortly after she had sold her home, and from August, 1943, and over a period of months thereafter, stated they considered her mentally unsound and incompetent to transact business.

Lay witnesses who participated . in the transactions involved in the negotiation and sale of Mrs. Lamphear’s house in July, 1943, testified that Mrs. Lamphear appeared to understand what she was doing at all times in the discussion of terms of the sale and at the time she executed conveyance of her property.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Estate of Bennight
1972 OK 136 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1972)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1952 OK 226, 247 P.2d 735, 207 Okla. 96, 1952 Okla. LEXIS 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-national-red-cross-v-gumberts-okla-1952.