Barber v. Boatright

2 P.2d 398, 115 Cal. App. 656, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 757
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 27, 1931
DocketDocket No. 4389.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2 P.2d 398 (Barber v. Boatright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber v. Boatright, 2 P.2d 398, 115 Cal. App. 656, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 757 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

JAMISON, J., pro tem.

On November 2, 1928, Mary B. Ehle made an olographic will as follows:

“November 2, 1928
“My Will
“I leave to Phoebe Boatright everything I have at my death and I appoint her Executrix without bonds.
“Mart B. Ehle
“Arietta Estelle Coffin
“Ora Lee Boatright”

*658 Contestants, who are nieces and nephews and the heirs at law of testatrix,. filed a contest against the probate of said will, alleging therein as grounds for said contest: 1. Testamentary incapacity; 2. Undue influence of Phoebe Boatright; 3. Deceit and fraud of Phoebe Boatright.

The proponent answered denying the alleged grounds of contest and the issues thus formed were submitted to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of contestants upon all of said alleged grounds. Appellant moved for a new trial 'and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which motions were denied. Prom the order denying the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict' and from the judgment proponent prosecutes this appeal.

The facts surrounding the execution of this will are substantially as follows: The testatrix, at the date of the execution of this will, was ninety-one years of age and was feeble in mind and body. Dr. Hiram Ehle was her only child and for many years had provided for her care and support. He was a practicing physician of Susanville, California, and was sixty-eight years of age at the date of his death, which occurred on the twenty-eighth day of October, 1928. Some eight years before his death he had placed the testatrix with appellant, who lived in Susanville, paying her for the care and support of his mother $60 per month during all of that time. Testatrix had no means of her own and was entirely dependent upon her said son for her means of subsistence.

Dr. Ehle had a cousin named Alice Barber, who was a niece of the testatrix, who died in San Jose, California, on. October 16, 1928, and who had left a will devising to Dr. Ehle 75 acres of orchard land of the value of about $45,000. Dr. Ehle left Susanville to attend the funeral of his said cousin but, becoming ill on his way, was forced to stop in San Jose, where he died on the twenty-eighth day of October, 1928. He also, some years prior to his death, had made a will in favor of his said cousin, leaving all of his property, amounting to several thousand dollars in value, to her, with a proviso that if his death preceded that of his mother, that from the funds bequeathed his mother should be kept and cared for in like manner in which she was then being cared for.

The evidence as to the testamentary capacity of the testatrix at the date of the execution of the will is conflicting. *659 Respondents produced several witnesses who testified that the mind of the testatrix was unsound. Among them was Dr. Martin, who testified that he had known the testatrix for about eight years and that during that time he on several occasions had been called to attend her professionally, that he last saw her about February 8, 1929. At this time she was in bed, was very feeble, practically blind, living in the past, and that she was of unsound mind, totally incompetent to form any opinion as to the value of property; that she would not know the nature and extent of property if it were told to her and that this condition of her mind had existed for more than a year before that time. Another witness produced by respondent was Dr. Coll, who testified that he went to see the testatrix about the 8th of February, 1929, for the purpose of ascertaining her state of mind. He found her in bed, that she was old, senile, and very weak mentally, with no co-ordinating mentality, lying lost in the past, with no thought of the future; that she did not have sufficient mental capacity to know the value of any property that she might possess, and that this condition had existed for a year and maybe longer.

Respondents also produced three witnesses, intimate acquaintances of the testatrix, who testified that the mind of the testatrix was unsound. On the other hand, appellant produced four or five witnesses, who were intimate acquaintances of the testatrix, who testified that the mind of the testatrix at the date of the execution of the will was sound, and among these witnesses was Dr. Collings, who attended her professionally from October 10, 1928, until July 21, 1929, and whose testimony was to the effect that during all that time her mind was sound.

There was received in evidence, without objection, the record of the Superior Court of Lassen County, showing that on February 8, 1929, the superior court of that county appointed a guardian for the person and estate of testatrix upon the ground that she was mentally incompetent to care for herself and her property. The judgment in this incompetency proceeding was evidence of the mental condition of the testatrix on the date of its rendition. (Estate of Johnson, 200 Cal. 299 [252 Pac. 1049].) And while of itself it may not establish the want of capacity sufficient for making a will, it is certainly evidence proper *660 to be considered on" the issue of testamentary capacity at the time of the appointment of a guardian. And where there is testimony tending to show that the mental condition of the person has not changed between the date of the act in question and the appointment of a guardian, although ' later in time, the testimony is admissible on the issue of capacity when the act was done. (Estate of Loveland, 162 Cal. 595 [123 Pac. 801].) It is the settled law of California that an adjudication of the incompetency of a testator is evidence of his incapacity to make a valid will. (Hellman Commercial T. & S. Bank v. Holden, 206 Cal. 592 [275 Pac. 794].)

The testimony of the two doctors produced by respondents tended to show that the mental condition of the testatrix, as it existed at the date of the judgment declaring her incompetency, had not changed between that time and the date of the execution of the will, something over three months before.

Testatrix was not informed of the death of her son, Dr. Ehle, and died without knowledge of that fact. At the time she executed her will to appellant she was ignorant of the fact that she had inherited through her said son his estate, including that which had been willed to him by her said niece, aggregating $55,000. These facts, according to the evidence of appellant, were known to her at the date of the execution of the will and yet she admits that she did not disclose them to the testatrix, knowing that the testatrix was entirely ignorant of their existence, although appellant claims that prior to the execution of the will she informed the testatrix, immediately after the said niece’s death that she, the testatrix, had fallen heir, through the death of said niece, to a lot of money, but that the testatrix made no inquiry as to the amount or value of the money or property to which she had fallen heir.

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Bluebook (online)
2 P.2d 398, 115 Cal. App. 656, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-v-boatright-calctapp-1931.