Branson v. Roelofsz

70 P.2d 589, 52 Wyo. 101, 1937 Wyo. LEXIS 42
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1937
Docket2017
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 70 P.2d 589 (Branson v. Roelofsz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Branson v. Roelofsz, 70 P.2d 589, 52 Wyo. 101, 1937 Wyo. LEXIS 42 (Wyo. 1937).

Opinion

*106 Blume, Chief Justice.

This is a case involving the contest of a will. There was a verdict and judgment setting aside the will, and the contestee has appealed. The will in question was executed on November 16, 1934, and in its form complied with the statutes. It was set aside on the ground that the testatrix was of unsound mind. She left surviving her only brothers and sisters and nephews and nieces. The will left these relatives $1.00 each, and aside from that and aside from certain books left to Wilbert Henry Campbell, and certain provisions for funeral expenses and a tombstone for her deceased husband David Davis, testatrix left her estate to a certain “Foundation” to be created for the benefit of the blind.

1. At the conclusion of the testimony, the contestee moved for a directed verdict. The motion was overruled. A motion for a new trial was filed on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict. That too was overruled. Thereupon a motion was filed for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The court also overruled that. Error is assigned in these rulings of the court. They involve a review of the testimony and inasmuch as that will give a general view *107 of the facts of the case, we shall discuss them first, stating in detail, however, only the testimony in favor of the prevailing parties, the contestants, and only the salient facts thereof.

The decedent was born in August, 1873. Her father was confined in the Topeka State Hospital, an institution for the insane, and was allowed to go home at times. On one of these visits he bought some morphine and after returning to the hospital he committed suicide. He had delusions and melancholia. One of the brothers of the decedent, too, Was confined during several periods, commencing with January, 1921, in the same institution. He was of the maniac type. He died in 1931 while on parole. The decedent during her young womanhood taught school. She came to Wyoming in the early part of this century and was married to one David Davis, who died about 1923, leaving all of his property to his widow, consisting of personal property of the value of $54,000 or more and of a ranch of several thousand acres on Bad Water Creek, to which a small acreage of land was added subsequently, and which, at the time of the death of her husband was, perhaps, of the value of about $20,000. Davis and his wife lived on the ranch. The decedent continued to live on the ranch until about 1927 or 1928, when she moved into a home which she apparently purchased at Casper, Wyoming. It seems that, after the death of her first husband, she married one Robinson. What became of their relationship is not definitely shown, but judging from incidental testimony it may be gathered that, perhaps, it ended in a divorce. Decedent died in April, 1935, leaving an estate of approximately $38,000-$43,000.

During the year 1924, decedent attempted to commit suicide with a revolver in a fit of despondency. .She did not succeed, but lost her eye-balls and became blind. *108 In 1926, she learned the so-called Braille system — a system enabling the blind to read.

A number of incidents were shown by the testimony, commencing with 1923 and ending shortly previous to the time of the execution of the last will and testament in question, which were intended to show that decedent had delusions and was generally of unsound mind. In 1923, before she became blind, her husband, Davis, told her that one of the line fences would be fixed at the joint expense of themselves and Davis’s brother. She immediately flew into a violent rage and temper. Her husband “tried his best to calm her down. The more he tried, the more violent she became. Her eyes bulged out, and her face became almost livid.” A good deal of testimony was given in connection with such temperament. After decedent became blind, she was induced to visit her mother and other relatives in Kansas. Donald Roelofsz, her brother, testified: “A. One night, about midnight, the neighbors came and told me Jozie (the decedent) had a spell and attacked my mother. Q. Did you go to Jozie’s place? A. Yes. Q. What did you find? A. Went and knocked on the door. Mother said ‘Don, come in quick, Jozie had a spell; I am scared to death.’ She rolled up her arm. I could see where it was black and blue where Jozie had took hold of her. Jozie was. still in the other room in an uncontrolled mad spell. * * * Q. How long would the depressed spells last? A. Sometimes a day; sometimes two or three weeks. Q. Did you ever see her when she was angry? A. Several times, uncontrollably crazy. A. When angry, how would she act? A. There wasn’t any reason to her madness — would just rave around— you wouldn’t reason with her.” So the witness Scherk testified that her angry spells would last 30 to 40 minutes and until he simply had to go away. She mistreated her sister’s children; at one time picked up a child about five years of age and threw him around *109 with such force that she split his lip open on the edge of a table. Decedent later denied her act, asserted that the child’s mother got some blood somewhere else and smeared it on the child’s lips. At one time a man was shooting chickens about two hundred yards from decedent’s ranch, on the county road. Decedent got a gun and was going to shoot the man, stating that he could not shoot chickens in her door yard. The gun was taken away from her. Not being able to get along with her brother, and telling him to get off the place, she intended to enforce the order by a gun. Witnesses found her in an angry mood on the 16th of November, when the will in question was executed.

Decedent was unable to get along with her help, both at the farm and at Casper. After she became blind, she had some of her relatives come to the farm to help her, but they were able to stay but a comparatively short time. She was inconsistent in her conduct. For instance, she asked her brother to ride out and bring in all the cattle. He worked about two days and brought in some cattle and put them in the pasture. The next morning when he started to get some more, she directed him not to bring in any more and to turn out those which he had gathered. She told him to count the cattle on the range, and then told him to quit counting. She asked him to work on an irrigation ditch and later changed her mind and directed him to get wood. She would be lavish and again very miserly. She gave Ed Keenan two thousand dollars, when, according to some testimony, she did not owe him anything. When the Pentons visited her at Casper she would at times serve them with food which had been cooked three or four days previously, potatoes and bread which would be mouldy. At other times the food would be fresh. While still on the ranch she cooked nothing for the help but oatmeal for a period of ten days and stated that “if it is good enough for me, it is good enough for *110 them.” She kept a small child with her at Casper at one time. The child’s health was delicate; it needed a proper diet. A neighbor suggested that decedent get some one for twenty-five cents a day to take care of the child, but decedent claimed that she could not afford it.

Decedent was of a suspicious nature. One Ed Keenan worked for her at the ranch; perhaps had been on the ranch while decedent’s husband was still alive.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 P.2d 589, 52 Wyo. 101, 1937 Wyo. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branson-v-roelofsz-wyo-1937.