Boland v. Aycock

12 S.E.2d 319, 191 Ga. 327, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 644
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 5, 1940
Docket13418.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 12 S.E.2d 319 (Boland v. Aycock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boland v. Aycock, 12 S.E.2d 319, 191 Ga. 327, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 644 (Ga. 1940).

Opinion

Reid, Chief Justice.

This ease arose on a caveat to the probate of a will, on the grounds of (1) mental incapacity, and (2) undue influence. The verdict was in favor of the caveators. The exception is to the overruling of demurrers to the caveat, and to the overruling of a motion for new trial. The demurrers were directed to that part of the caveat which set up undue influence. Taking up first the question of undue influence, we look to the Code, § 113-208 (which is merely a codification of a general legal proposition), declaring: “The very nature of a will requires that it should be freely and voluntarily executed; hence, anything which destroys this freedom of volition invalidates a will; such as fraudulent practices upon testator’s fears, affections, or sympathies, duress or any undue influence, whereby the will of another is substituted for the wishes of the testator.” It is sometimes said that “undue influence” is a subtle something that defies definition; and in a sense this is true, but from our Code and precedents we can at least state some of the things which do not constitute undue influence. The association of the phrase “undue influence” in the same context with the words, “fraudulent practices upon the testator’s fears, affections, or sympathies, duress,” shows that the influence spoken of, in order to be “undue,” must be in the nature of fraud or duress. Hence the recognized rule is that the “undue influence which operates to invalidate a will is such influence as amounts either to deception or to force and coercion, destroying free agency.” Bohler v. Hicks, 120 Ga. 800 (5) (48 S. E. 306); Burroughs v. Reed, 150 Ga. 724, 726 (105 S. E. 290). Of course, if the persuasion or importunity consists of or is accompanied by fraud or mis *329 representation of material facts, the ease falls under the Code, § 113-209, which avoids a will so procured.

We recognize that what would not be such undue influence as to avoid a will in the case of a person of sound mind, good health, and intelligence may be such when exercised upon a person of failing mind, poor health, and other mental and bodily enfeeblements; but this is not so much because the things actually said or done would not constitute undue influence in the one case and would in the other, but because before acts of undue influence are sufficient to avoid a will it must appear that these acts were effective to the extent of making the testator execute a will contrary to his better judgment and desires. Therefore, since honest persuasion and argument, even to the extent of importunity, is not undue influence, it is not to be. so considered in the ease of a testator of enfeebled mind or body, any more than it would be if the testator were sound and well, provided of course the testator still has the mental capacity to make a will. To illustrate, an old man, who is childish and petulant, but not yet at that state of imbecility denounced in the Code, § 113-202, is about to make his will, and proposes to disinherit a son with whom he has become offended; it would not be undue influence for that son to apologize to his father, to beg him to forgive him, to importune him not to cut him off, even to shed tears and so affect his father’s heart and mind as to make him repent and include the son in his will; and this is true even though one of the things influencing the father should be a desire to rid himself of his son’s importunities. Nor would the case be different if it were the child’s mother begging her husband not to cut off their son, even though one of the chief factors influencing the father to include the son in the will is to keep peace in the family or to retain the respect and affection of his wife. It is entirely proper that husbands and wives should consult each other and endeavor to meet each other’s wishes in the making of their wills; and in the absence of fraud or duress, a wife’s will is still her will, notwithstanding she comes to the state of mind where she decides to let him dictate its terms, provided of course she executes it as her will. In the ease of an attack on a will for undue influence, as well as in the case of an attack for mental incapacity, it must appear that the alleged avoiding cause was operative and effective at the time of the execution of the will. While evidence of mental condition or acts *330 of undue influence at other times, not too remote, may be received to illustrate conditions existing at the time the will was executed, still after all the question is, was the testator in condition to make a will at the time he made it? Brown v. Kendrick, 163 Ga. 149 (135 S. E. 721); Cook v. Washington, 166 Ga. 339, 348 (143 S. E. 409). On the general subject of undue influence see Walters v. Walters, 151 Ga. 527 (107 S. E. 492); Field v. Brantley, 139 Ga. 437 (3) (77 S. E. 559); Burroughs v. Reed, 150 Ga. 724 (105 S. E. 390); Ricketson v. Ricketson, 151 Ga. 540 (107 S. E. 522). Though it is said in Field v. Brantley, supra, that “undue influence is the handmaiden of fraud, and good pleading requires an averment of the facts relied on to constitute it,” still the distinction must be kept in mind between alleging the facts and alleging the evidence by which the facts are to be proved. See Penniston v. Kerrigan, 159 Ga. 345 (125 S. E. 795).

The substance of the allegation in the caveat to which the demurrer is directed is that “the undue influence and persuasion exerted over the testatrix by John E. Boland, her husband, and John Kenneth Boland, her stepson, consisted of importunities throughout the married life of the testatrix and John E. Boland, deceased, and representations by the said John E. Boland and Kenneth Boland that each of them was devoting his life to the interests of the testatrix and that they were entitled to have the testatrix leave all her property to them by will, to the exclusion of her blood relatives, as her blood relatives cared nothing for her and were not devoting themselves in any way to the furtherance of her health, happiness, and financial interests.” It is not alleged that any of these representations were fraudulent or untrue. This is followed by the allegation that as a result of these importunities the testatrix was persuaded to destroy a will she had drawn in 1933, in which she made substantial gifts to her kin. As the caveat relates to a will executed in 1936, and not to the alleged destroyed will of 1933, these allegations are surplusage. It is then alleged that “through his constant importunities and persuasions as to what he (John E. Boland) and her stepson, John Kenneth Boland, were doing toward her health, happiness, and financial interests, and by said John E. Boland’s resorting to tears and crying, tearful pleas, and the use of strong language to such a degree that the free play of testatrix’s judgment, discretion, and wishes were over *331 come, the will of said John E.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.E.2d 319, 191 Ga. 327, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boland-v-aycock-ga-1940.