Citizens National Bank v. McCafferty

119 A.2d 297, 383 Pa. 588
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 4, 1956
DocketAppeals, 191 and 198
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 119 A.2d 297 (Citizens National Bank v. McCafferty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens National Bank v. McCafferty, 119 A.2d 297, 383 Pa. 588 (Pa. 1956).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Bell,

An issue devisavit vel non was tried by a Judge and jury in the Court below. The jury found that at the time of execution of the will dated July 3, 1951, Minnie S. McCafferty, the testatrix, was a person of sound and disposing mind and that the said will was not procured by undue influence, duress or constraint. Delevan Mc-Cafferty, a stepson, filed (1) a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, which was dismissed by the Court below, and (2) a motion for a new trial, which was granted by the Court below. Thereafter each side took an appeal.

*590 Mrs. McCafferty by her will dated July 3, 1951, * left one-half of her estate to her stepson, Delevan A. McCafferty, who lived in San Diego, California, and whom she had not seen since her husband’s death in 19]$, and the remaining one-half of her estate to her nephew, Matthew F. Slattery, Jr., and Yiolet L. Slattery, his wife, who nursed her through her long last illness. Although testatrix had executed a will on April 3, 1939, in which she left all of her estate to her stepson, Delevan A. McCafferty, her 1951 will could not be said to be (as the stepson contends) an unnatural will, nor — as between the stepson on the one hand and her nephew (the son of her own brother) and his wife on the other hand — was the latter a stranger to the blood, as that expression is used in our cases.

The voluminous testimony may be thus summarized :

Proponents’ testimony

Minnie S. McCafferty died September 12, 1951, at the Emery Hotel, Bradford, Pa., where she had been living since February 1951. She was 76 years old. She had had a cerebral vascular accident in November, 1950, which required hospitalization until February, 1951. Her left side was paralyzed and she was crippled by a bad arthritic condition in her knees, fingers and arms. Her activities were confined to a wheelchair, although several times a week she would be taken out for an automobile ride. While she was in the hospital she was at times confused and her memory was impaired. After she was discharged from the hospital in February 1951 and moved to the Emery Hotel, she made a “very radical improvement” in her mental condition and according to proponents’ witnesses had thereafter a clear, normal, keen mind. The only evi *591 deuce to the contrary, such as it was, was that of a “night sitter”.

The proponents of the will, Mr. and Mrs. Slattery, who called Mrs. McCafferty “Aunt Min”, proved — (1) by the attorney who at Mrs. McCafferty’s request drew and witnessed the will and (2) by Dr. R. K. Russell, the other subscribing witness, who had known her for forty years and had been her doctor since 1935, and who at her request saw her almost daily for the last ten months of her life, that Mrs. McCafferty was of sound and disposing mind, memory and understanding on July 3, 1951, at the time of the execution of the will. Dr. Russell likewise testified that on that day and during all the time she lived at the Emery Hotel until her death her mind was clear and keen and she was mentally competent to make a will.

Dr. Joseph A. Kervin who saw Mrs. McCafferty while Dr. Russell was on vacation in June 1951 and in August 1951, likewise testified that her mind and mental condition were absolutely clear and sound and he never saw her confused. They were corroborated by a real estate broker and by ten witnesses, Mrs. Frances Madigan, Dorothy Vecellio, Anna Hall, Helen Ledden, Mildred DeWeese, Vivian Vecellio, Theresa Smith, Christine Sebastian and Carl Beyeler, who were employed in various capacities in the Emery Hotel and saw her and talked to her nearly every day in her room at the Emery Hotel or in the hotel lobby for from five minutes to half an hour. All of them testified that she had a clear and normal mind — many of them said she had a keen mind.

William P. McVay was an attorney at law who had resided in McKean County for about thirty-four years. Mrs. McCafferty had been a friend of his family. He had been doing some legal work for Mrs. McCafferty commencing in the latter part of May and through *592 June 1951. He discussed with Mrs. McCafferty her proposed will of July 3, 1951; he prepared it for Mrs. Mc-Cafferty at her request; explained it to her; saw her sign it, and witnessed it with Dr. Russell. Mrs. Slattery was never present at these conferences nor was the will ever discussed with her. Mr. McVay’s testimony is so convincing that we shall quote a few excerpts therefrom: “Q. Would you state to the court under what circumstances this document was drawn and prepared? A. I had been doing some legal work for Mrs. McCafferty prior to July 3, 1951, and at one time she had inquired of the possibility of making a new will. She informed me that she .had made a previous will jointly with her husband. She exhibited to me what I understood to be a certified copy of that prior will. She asked my opinion as to the provisions of that will. I explained to her the provisions of that will as I understood them. She then discussed with me the matter of the provisions of a new will which she contemplated making. She discussed the various persons whom she might or might not consider in her will. * She spoke of her nephew, Matthew Slattery, and his wife, Mrs. Slattery, who was her nurse at that time, one of her nurses, I believe. There may have been others. She spoke of her stepson and she spoke of Beth McCafferty Putnam who I understood to be the daughter of a Mr. Charles McCafferty who was the brother of William McCafferty, Minnie McCafferty’s husband. She would be, I believe, a niece by marriage. Mrs. Putnam would be a niece by marriage of Minnie McCafferty. . . . Q. Mr. McVay, I show you Plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 1 which has been marked for identification and ask you to examine that document. I now ask you if, after examining that document, any other discussion as to the disposition of her

*593 property was had with Mrs. McCaffery, other than what appears in that will. A. Well, as a part of the discussion, Mrs. MeCafferty considered or mentioned the possibility that she might leave a third of her property to her stepson, a third to her nephew, Matthew Slattery, and a third to Mrs. Violet Slattery, the wife of Matthew Slattery. She was, I would describe it as thinking out loud as to what the possibilities were, what she ought to do, and her conclusion, her final conclusion was that the property would be left as is provided in the will under her instruction, one-half to her stepson, Delevan MeCafferty, and one-half to Matthew and Violet Slattery together. ... Q. Mr. McVay, would you say that in your conversations with Mrs. MeCafferty on these different occasions, whether they might have been legal matters or otherwise, that she was a person of keen perception? A. In my opinion she was. We sometimes on a couple of these occasions discussed the matter of disposition of her home and the contents of it, the matter of whether there was sufficient fire insurance coverage on it, sufficient public liability coverage

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Bluebook (online)
119 A.2d 297, 383 Pa. 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-national-bank-v-mccafferty-pa-1956.