Cooper v. Cooper

51 N.E.2d 100, 114 Ind. App. 261, 1943 Ind. App. LEXIS 85
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 2, 1943
DocketNo. 16,999.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 51 N.E.2d 100 (Cooper v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Cooper, 51 N.E.2d 100, 114 Ind. App. 261, 1943 Ind. App. LEXIS 85 (Ind. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Draper, J.

This is an action brought by the appellees against the appellants to invalidate and set aside the probate of the last will and testament of John W. Cooper, the complaint alleging that at the time of the execution of the will the testator was of unsound mind, that the will was unduly executed, was executed under duress and was obtained by fraud.

The jury returned a general verdict for the appellees and by its answers to interrogatories propounded at the request of the appellants, without objection by the appellees,- indicated that its verdict was based on a finding that the execution of the will was procured by undue influence, and at appellants’ insistence we shall assume that the answers to the interrogatories, in the form in which they were submitted, do eliminate all other issues, although we do not decide the question, it being unnecessary to do so.

The appellants complain that the verdict of the jury is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law, of error in the giving and refusal to give certain instructions, of the admission of a certain deposition and of the admission of certain testimony.

The testator, a practicing physician about fifty years of age and the father of several children was divorced *264 in 1909 and about three weeks later was married to the appellant Ethel Cooper, hereinafter referred to as the appellant, then in her early twenties. About ten years after the marriage they removed to Indianapolis where he established a practice and the appellant remained there with him about two years, after which he continued to live and practice there, commuting weekly to a farm to which she had moved and where she lived and which she managed. On March 31, 1931, he went to an attorney in Tipton who prepared the will in ques^ tion and mailed it to the deceased at Indianapolis. On the 20th day of the following month he brought the will to the appellant bank at. Tipton, where at his request it was witnessed by two officers of the bank and left with the bank for safe-keeping. He died on January 23, 1939, and on January 28, 1939, the appellant asked the attorney whether the testator had left a will and the latter, having forgotten that he had prepared the will, assisted her in the preparation of an application for letters of administration. On June 3, 1939, following a routine check the will in question was discovered in the bank by its officials and its existence made known. By the terms of the will certain real estate was left to the appellant, who is a childless second wife, together with the greater portion of his personal property. Other real estate was left in trust to be operated and managed by a trustee, the profits therefrom to be divided annually between the two surviving sons or their wives and upon the death of both sons and their wives, then to the testator’s grandchildren then surviving.

The evidence most favorable to the appellees on the question of undue influence would indicate that the appellant, over the period of their married life, had obtained nearly everything of which the deceased was *265 possessed. This she did, insofar as the real estate was concerned, by acquiring the title in her own name or having it put in both, by entireties; some being thus secured before the making of the will and some, including some of that devised to the appellees, after the making thereof, so that the latter was removed from the operation of the will. This she accomplished in part by persistent and long continued pressure taking the form of threats to leave the deceased, break up the family relationship and live apart from him unless he acceded to her demands. In connection with one farm she commenced on him, as she admitted to one of the witnesses, and .'worked on him for six weeks to sign the place over to her. She threatened to leave him unless he did so, and in fact did leave him and go to New York, finally winding up in Chicago, to which city he came and it was two days and two nights before he would give up and sign over. She said that he walked the floor like a crazy man but she just stayed with it until she made him sign the place over. She added that she had everything under her thumb; that she could make him give her money for anything she wanted; that anything she wanted she would make him dish it out to her; that she had him right where she could do as she pleased. She frequently absented herself for rather long periods, sometimes without advising him of her whereabouts, and this fact, coupled with the fact that he suspected her motives in making such excursions, kept him in a state of despondency. She made visits to New York to study voice and to induce her to give this up he turned over to her the management of his farms, which she thereafter ran as she pleased, he having little, if any, voice in the operation or management of them. He was thereafter worried about the manner of the operation of the farms and the finan *266 cial situation as it pertained to them, but dared not try to deprive her of their management. He was unhappy and dissatisfied with the kind of life he was compelled to live — cooking for himself and eating any way he could — but could not change the situation and considered “ending it all.” He could neither induce nor compel the appellant to disassociate herself from women companions whom he considered of questionable character, and when asked why he didn’t leave her, answered, “I can’t.” He learned and disapproved of, yet endured, conduct on her part which men possessed of free minds consistently refuse to tolerate. He was not free from fear of bodily injury at her hands and on at least one occasion when he remonstrated with her about permitting a certain upholsterer to stay with them and asked her to send him away, she seized him by the throat, choked him and threw him to the floor. He had not the physical strength with which to defend himself and sought temporary refuge with one of his sons — but the upholsterer remained. There is evidence that they talked about the will — that she made it out— that she fixed it and he took it in. The judges of this court are not of one mind as to the strength or weakness of the case made by the appellees but all are agreed, after a painstaking examination and consideration of these and other facts appearing in evidence that there is ample evidence to support a finding that the deceased was unduly influenced and dominated by the appellant.

The appellant insists, however, that to render a will, void, undue influence must be directly connected with the execution of it and must operate at the time it is made, and she calls our attention to the fact that the will in question was made while the testator was alone in the lawyer’s office when its provisions were considered and that it was made about eight years before his *267 death and remained unchanged when he died. It is said in Wiley et al. v. Gordon et al. (1914), 181 Ind. 252, 266, 104 N. E. 500, that: “Undue influence, in order to make a will void, must be directly connected with its execution and must operate at the time it is made.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.E.2d 100, 114 Ind. App. 261, 1943 Ind. App. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-cooper-indctapp-1943.