Claburn v. Mathews

61 So. 2d 83, 258 Ala. 41, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 23, 1952
Docket7 Div. 161
StatusPublished

This text of 61 So. 2d 83 (Claburn v. Mathews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claburn v. Mathews, 61 So. 2d 83, 258 Ala. 41, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 54 (Ala. 1952).

Opinion

STAKELY, Justice.

This is a will contest. Mrs. Cora Lee Willoughby Claburn (appellant) filed a petition in the Probate Court of Clay County to probate the alleged last will and testament of William A. Willoughby. Mrs. Ella Willoughby Mathews and Mrs. Lula Willoughby Clark (appellees) filed a contest on the grounds that the alleged will was not duly executed by decedent, that decedent was of unsound mind and did not possess testamentary capacity at the time the will was executed and that the will was a product of undue influence exerted upon William A. Willoughby by Mrs. Cora Willoughby Claburn.

On motion of contestants and their demand for a jury trial the cause was transferred to the Circuit Court of Clay County. Trial of the cause resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the contestants. The court overruled a motion for a new trial. Hence this appeal.

William A. Willoughby, an old soldier about 68 years of age, died in the Veterans’ Hospital at Montgomery, Alabama, December 15, 1950. He was survived by four sisters who were his sole heirs at law, — Mrs. Cora Claburn, Mrs. Fannie Diel, Mrs. Lula Clark and Mrs. Ella Mathews. Several years prior to the time the document offered for probate is alleged to have been executed, William A. Willoughby executed a will in which he left his estate to his four sisters share and share alike. The will offered for probate in the present proceedings leaves all his property to two of his sisters, Mrs. Cora Willoughby Claburn and Mrs. Fannie Willoughby Diel. This instrument nominates and appoints Cora Willoughby Claburn as Executrix without bond and in the event she fails to survive or is unable to-serve nominates Mrs. Fannie Willoughby Diel as Executrix. The two sisters omitted from the alleged will offered for probate, Mrs. Lula Clark and Mrs. Ella Mathews, are the contestants.

I. The contention is made that the court was in error in refusing to give Charge A requested by the proponents of the will as follows, “The court charges the jury that if you believe the evidence in this case you must find in favor of the will.” In passing upon the question we shall consider the tendencies of the evidence against the will. Slagle v. Halsey, 245 Ala. 198, 15 So.2d 740.

William A. Willoughby was admitted to the Veterans’ Hospital in Montgomery, Alabama, on October 13, 1950. The alleged will was dated October 31, 1950. William A. Willoughby died December 15, 1950. At the time of his death the decedent was 68 years of age. The hospital record shows that at the time of his admission he ap-. peared to have a senile obsession in his concern about his constipation. In December 1939 he had a stroke. In Decemoer 1940 he became paralyzed on his right side. In 1942 he was paralyzed on his left side. Since 1942 he had been relatively inactive complaining of anginal pain. When he was admitted to the hospital he appeared to be laboring under the delusion of a stomach ulcer and constipation. In January or February 1949 he had severe anginal pains, probably coronary occlusion, which required oxygen therapy and a period of hospitalization. Following this he had more frequent anginal attacks and he would take as many as a dozen tablets daily of nitroglycerin. At that time his only noted injury appeared to be a shrapnel wound on his left lower leg,. leaving it slightly deformed, painful and with somewhat poor circulation. His medical record shows that he continued to complain about his bowel habits, although there appeared to be no [45]*45true constipation. He showed evidences of mental deterioration, oftentimes 'being querulous. He began to complain of pain in his right leg. On October 28, 1950 gangrene developed in his right leg, three days before the alleged will was executed. On December 5, 1950 his right leg was amputated. Pneumonia set in and he died December 15, 1950.

Dr. Marsh testified that stoppage of circulation caused the gangrene. He also testified that from the time Mr. Willoughby entered the hospital until November 5, 1950, he observed defects in his memory. He would oftentimes fail to remember that the doctor had seen him in the morning. According to' the witness lapses of memory of this kind are apt to occur with those who suffer this amount of pain. He further testified that high blood pressure such as William A. Willoughby had, accompanied by strokes, frequently resulted in lapse of memory and inability to use arms and muscles of one side indicated brain damage. Further, bodily disease can also cause a disease of the brain. In other words, the state of the body can affect the state of the mind or brain. According to him some of the involvements which William A. Willoughby had were of a permanent character. He further testified that brain disease may result in the inability of the victim to withstand requests made of him or of being unable to do what a normal person would do under the circumstances. Brain disease has a tendency to destroy normal inhibitions. Furthermore a patient may be insane from a psychiatric standpoint and yet appear normal to a layman or even physicians who are not psychiatrists. According to him the medical record indicates that he was depressive and apprehensive at intervals. He was frequently given narcotics for his pain and the man who receives narcotics frequently will not be in full possession of his faculties. He was restless and had a poor appetite and lost weight while in the hospital. According to him a man in bad physical condition and in a state of anxiety about his physical condition frequently reaches a point where he regards it futile to make demands on his will power. Heart trouble such as William A. Willoughby had implicates the brain or nervous system. Heart trouble or high blood-pressure, or both, might be the starting point for a psychiatric disorder. After his death Mrs. Cora Claburn consented for an autopsy on her brother but did not grant permission for opening his head.

Mrs. L. E. DeShazo, a niece of the deceased, testified that she visited deceased in the Veterans’ Hospital frequently, practically every day beginning two' or three days after he was admitted and that he would talk about his war days and ask visitors if we “Didn’t hear mortars firing and guns firing outside — and he got right angry with us at times when we told him we didn’t hear anything.” She further testified:

“One night, just a few days after his heart attack, he asked us if we heard the commotion that took place the night before We told him no and he said that this Joe Hawkins was standing at the corner of the building with a microphone and spotlight telling people to be on the lookout for William A. Willoughby, he was trying to escape from the. hospital, and we asked him if it wasn’t a nightmare and he said, no, he looked out the window and saw him standing by the comer of the building. He told me that two or three times after that.”

Mr. L. E. DeShazo gave similar testimony and both testified that in their opinion Mr. Willoughby was not of sound mind while he was in the hospital and that his mind was not sufficiently strong to enable him to atr tend ft} ordinary business matters.

H. L. Jackson, Rev. B. W. Mathews, J. E. Mathews, T. O. Mathews and Mrs. Lula Clark testified to facts and circumstances showing that William A. Willoughby was not of sound mind at times and some of them testified that he was not of sound mind while he was in the hospital.

No explanation appears as to why William A. Willoughby developed a change of purpose after he had developed a gangrene, condition to leave all of his property to two of his sisters, where before he had left his property to his four sisters, share and share alike.

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Bluebook (online)
61 So. 2d 83, 258 Ala. 41, 1952 Ala. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claburn-v-mathews-ala-1952.