Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Blaisdell

127 N.E.2d 796, 333 Mass. 51, 1955 Mass. LEXIS 521
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 127 N.E.2d 796 (Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Blaisdell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Blaisdell, 127 N.E.2d 796, 333 Mass. 51, 1955 Mass. LEXIS 521 (Mass. 1955).

Opinion

Williams, J.

This is an appeal by the proponent for probate of the will of Harriet Blaisdell from an order of the Probate Court allowing a motion for the framing of the following issue for a jury, “Was the said Harriet Blaisdell at the time of the execution of the said alleged will of sound mind?” The motion was heard on statements by counsel of evidence which they expected to produce.

The decedent died on May 29, 1954, leaving an instrument purporting to be her will which was executed on July 8, 1949. Therein a piece of jewelry was bequeathed to her niece Olive B. Freeman, and her bedroom furniture to her housekeeper, Ella J. MacSweeney. Her real estate in Nantucket was devised to one Charles A. Blanchard “in grateful recognition of . . . [¡his] most helpful cooperation in making a success of our long association in the business of the Sunshine Laundry.” The residue of her estate was left to the proponent in trust upon the terms and conditions stated in an indenture executed on July 7, 1949. Her attorney, William Harold Hitchcock, was appointed executor.

The petition for the probate of this instrument named as heirs at law and next of kin: Nathaniel Blaisdell of San Francisco, California — brother; Sidney B. Blaisdell of East Greenwich, Rhode Island — nephew; Helen Drew of Tyron, North Carolina — niece; Olive B. Freeman of Providence, Rhode Island — niece; and George B. Whitmarsh of Walpole, New Hampshire — nephew.

Nathaniel Blaisdell, Sidney B. Blaisdell, and Olive B. Freeman are contesting the will.

Counsel for the contestants stated that Miss Blaisdell had been in business and sold out her interest in 1941. From then on her health began to decline. On July 8, 1949, she was seventy-nine years old. She was hospitalized in 1946 and since then had been in frail health. In the fall of 1949 Dr. Parkins, her family physician, advised hospitalization. *53 For a long time she had suffered from arteriosclerosis and arteriosclerosis of the brain. At the funeral of her brother Bertram in January, 1949, she showed signs of very frail physical condition, complained of being extremely tired, “and in general was confused and had instances of contradicting herself and was inconsistent in certain statements. From January to July of 1949 “there were many instances of physical and mental confusion . . . her physical condition was extremely bad.” She had repeatedly said to the contestants Sidney, Nathaniel, and Olive that she intended to leave her property to them. “They were the natural objects of her bounty,” and there was no reason for a change in her attitude. The legatee Blanchard had requested that she should not leave the Nantucket property to him — that he did not want it. She had told her housekeeper (Ella J. MacSweeney) that she intended to remember her in her will. From January 4 to July, 1949, although worth at least $200,000 or $300,000, “she became penurious, ate nothing and developed a serious malnutrition and vitamin deficiency . . . she expressed fear that individuals close to her would try to confine her in an institution.” Her relations to her relatives continued friendly and affectionate. From January to July, 1949, she developed a habit, of which specific instances will be shown, of not wanting visitors. On many occasions she showed a loss of memory. A handbag containing some $2,000 which was mislaid was found hanging behind a shower curtain. She went to a hospital in February, 1950. While there she was unable to walk to any extent. Its records will show that she had been suffering from confusion and periods of amnesia and the summer before was unsteady of gait. Upon admission her condition was diagnosed as “chronic cardiac disease, malnutrition, and vitamin deficiency, arteriosclerosis of the brain and generalized arteriosclerosis.” She remained in the hospital six weeks and after treatment was not completely oriented. There will be medical testimony that arteriosclerosis develops gradually and that her penuriousness before the execution of her will indicated mental weakness. A “prominent *54 psychiatrist” will testify that based upon the hospital records and the expected testimony here mentioned “in his opinion the testatrix was not competent to execute a will on July 7, 1949; he will base his opinion on the progressive nature of the disease that she had, the periods of amnesia that the witnesses will testify to, the periods of confusion and loss of strength and the fear that she possessed before the execution of the will.”

The statement by counsel for the proponent was as follows. Miss Blaisdell conducted the Sunshine Laundry for twenty years with two partners to whom she sold her interest in the business in 1941, with payments to be made from the profits of the business over a period of years. The partners, Susan L. Whitcomb and Carl Tinglof, will testify that from 1941 to 1944 she visited the laundry daily and thereafter about six times a year. She talked over ‘ ‘ myriads ’ ’ of laundry problems and talked with the employees right up to the time she went to the hospital. She “was never disoriented as to time and place, nor was she confused and she had the mental capacity to discuss various business problems.” Her attorney since 1921 had been William Harold Hitchcock, now deceased. He advised her on various problems connected with the laundry, drew wills for her, and made out her income tax returns. He drew the present will and with Charlotte E. Snyder, his secretary, and Dorothy L. Johnson, a secretary in a neighboring law office, signed it as a witness. Before his death Mr. Hitchcock stated that he had no doubt of Miss Blaisdell’s soundness of mind. Miss Snyder will testify that she observed the decedent on frequent occasions from 1944 to 1952 when she visited Mr. Hitchcock’s office. She was an alert, coherent, intelligent, kindly woman. At the . time of the execution of the will, Miss Snyder specifically recalls that there was lucid conversation. Miss Blaisdell sat opposite Mr. Hitchcock and read the will. Miss Johnson was then secured, and Miss Blaisdell and the three witnesses signed in the presence of each other. Miss Snyder will answer in the negative a question “whether or not there was anything at any time, including the day of *55 the execution of the will, anything in the testatrix’s mannerisms, conduct, speech or anything else, including physical appearance, to indicate she wasn’t of sound mind or disoriented in any way with respect to persons, business, time or place.” While Miss Johnson has no specific recollection of the execution of this will, from 1939 to 1950 she witnessed wills for Mr. Hitchcock two or three times a year and can testify that in no instance did the person executing the will appear to be of unsound mind. The personal physician of the decedent for over thirty years was Dr. Parkins, a graduate of the Harvard Medical School and a member for over twenty years of the senior staffs of the New England Deaconess Hospital and the New England Baptist Hospital. She visited his office on May 7, 1949, for a pain in her shoulder in the region of the heart and on June 27, 1949, for a sprained hand. On both occasions she was normal mentally and discussed a trip to Europe which she was planning. She was in frail physical condition and he advised her to postpone consideration of the trip but to spend the rest of the summer at Nantucket.

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Bluebook (online)
127 N.E.2d 796, 333 Mass. 51, 1955 Mass. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-safe-deposit-trust-co-v-blaisdell-mass-1955.