Canfield v. Canfield

1934 OK 43, 31 P.2d 152, 167 Okla. 590, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 30, 1934
Docket23266
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1934 OK 43 (Canfield v. Canfield) 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
Canfield v. Canfield, 1934 OK 43, 31 P.2d 152, 167 Okla. 590, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 628 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

OSBORN, J.

This appeal involves two actions, one to set aside a will and the other to cancel a warranty deed. Both were commenced in the district court of Woodward county by Lester Canfield, Myrtle Canfield Brandt, C. V. Canfield, Bess Canfield, Ida May Canfield Van Dali and Marguerite Can-field Brucher, against Laura Canfield. The defendant is the wife of C. N. Canfield, who died testate in Woodward county May 14, 1929. The plaintiffs are the children of C. N. Canfield by two former marriages. A petition for the probate of the will of the deceased was filed in the county court of Woodward county by Laura Canfield and *591 a contest thereof was filed by the plaintiffs in which it was alleged that the will was invalid on account of undue influence, fraud, menace, and duress exercised by Laura Canfield upon the deceased and that deceased was mentally incompetent to mate a will on April 17, 1928, the date of the execution thereof. A hearing was had in the county court, and the evidence analyzed by the court! a^d found to be wholly insufficient to sustain the contentions of the contestants, and it was ordered that the will be admitted to probate. From said order, plaintiffs appealed to the district court.

On June 4, 1929, plaintiffs filed an action in the district court to cancel a certain warranty deed from Lydia Canfield to Laura Canfield to 160 acres of land in Woodward county. It was alleged that Lydia Can-field was a trustee for C. N. Canfield, the deceased, of said land, and the deed was executed under the direction of C. N. Can-field, and the validity of this transaction ■was attacked on the same grounds as alleged in the action to contest the will, that is, mental ineompetency, fraud, duress, and undue influence. The two actions were consolidated in the district court and tried as one action. A great array of evidence was introduced, the record containing more than 2,000 pages, and at the conclusion thereof the trial court found in favor of the plaintiffs on the issue of undue influence and denied probate to the will and canceled the warranty deed. From said judgment, the defendant has appealed. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The will in question devised to Laura Can-field all personal property and a life estate in 360 acres of land in Woodward county, with the remainder to the heirs of testator to be divided by them by agreement or by law. Laura Canfield was appointed executrix without bond. It is admitted that testator owned 320 acres of land in Missouri, which is not mentioned in the will and which descends to his heirs under the law of descent and distribution.

Since the issue involved in this appeal is somewhat unusual, we deem it advisable (o set out in detail various excerpts from the findings of the trial court which are as follows:

'"As I understand, there are three grounds of protest in this case, one of them being paranoia. That is, the testator at the time of making the will was laboring under delusions and suffering of what medical men call the disease of paranoia. The second ground is that he was a morphine addict and thereby mentally incapable of executing a will. The third ground is that he was under the undue influence of Laura Can-field at the time of the execution of the will. * * *
•‘I-Iis first wife died. Two children wore born of that first marriage. Myrtle Brandt and Lester Canfield. Subsequently he married Belle Canfield. I think that the marriage occurred in Kansas and of that marriage four children were born. They were subsequently divorced. I have forgotten the year of that divorce, but in June, 1920, he was married to Laura Button, now Laura Canfield — it was in 1919. * * *
“But now, gentlemen, when be moved to Woodward county, and I believe the testimony will show, he moved here in 1906, he possessed those characteristics that were peculiar — he was temperamental, stingy, frugal, a man of strong passions, capable of intense hate, and I am making those characteristics of his as are justified by the evidence here, and at the' time he met Mrs. Laura Canfield he had arrived- at the age when he was breaking down — he was then 69 years old. He lived out on a farm southeast of Woodward — batched there. I believe the testimony shows that during those days that Myrtle, his oldest daughter, -and Lester, his oldest son, had come down into this country and lfved near there; that they gave him some assistance. Mrs. Brandt would clean up his house and look after his clothes, and sometimes Lester would help with some of the farm work. But those were his characteristics, that the environment under which he lived at the time he got in touch with Laura Button. * * *
“Gentlemen, the pivot in this case, as I view it, was that of marriage, and what I mean to say now about that is that if I had not come to the conclusion that the marriage on her part was mercenary and purely so — if I had not come to that conclusion, the evidence would of necessity cause me to have a different conclusion.
“I think the circumstances would lead an unbiased mind to an irresistible conclusion that a marriage upon her part was purely mercenary. Now, I will tell you why I think that. The evidence here does not show that she made any study whatever of this man’s characteristics — the traits of character of Mr. Canfield. I say it does not show it. In fact, when the Littrells invited her to stay with tbe object in view of studying him, she stated she had just as well ■marry now and not wait. There was nothing about Mr. Canfield in those days to make any woman in the world have affection for him. Nothing in the world. The characteristics here shown were such as would drive any woman away from him. He cared nothing for dress, society, lived in *592 isolation, was high tempered, cruel, frugal, stingy, suspicious, lived the life of a hermit, wa,s t>9 years of age and had gone through two marriage experiences, had hatred in his heart and carried it around with him, and was then 69 years old and breaking in health. So I am saying now that, right on the start, right in the beginning, I can reach no other .conclusion in this case — there could be no justification for any other conclusion.
“As I say, concluding that Mrs. Canfield did have the plan in mind to get the property, about 1920 she got the property in Oklahoma county, and in 1924 they went together and he had his deed made from Lydia Canfield, to her. Now, here is another thing we see in the case. This sense of domination — this idea of a dominating will that he showed in Kansas — if that fellow had the kind that some of the witnesses portray here — if a train was in his way when he was walking home with a sack of flour on his back; he would expect the train to get off: the track. He had that determination of having his own way. But, gentlemen, after he married Laura Canfield, that thing became submissive, so far as the evidence is concerned. Outside of two or three minor instances after he married Laura, we do not see him exercising that personal desire, force or a.nger that he did before.
“Now, he never owned a car before he was married. Did not know how to drive one, and subsequent to the marriage, whenever you saw C. N. Canfield, you saw her. They were inseparable companions. She was with him constantly.

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Bluebook (online)
1934 OK 43, 31 P.2d 152, 167 Okla. 590, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canfield-v-canfield-okla-1934.