Craite v. Morneau

184 N.W. 705, 175 Wis. 140, 16 A.L.R. 1412, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 202
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 184 N.W. 705 (Craite v. Morneau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Craite v. Morneau, 184 N.W. 705, 175 Wis. 140, 16 A.L.R. 1412, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 202 (Wis. 1921).

Opinion

Jones, J.

If it were not for the testimony that the deceased had suffered from epilepsy since childhood, the facts in this case would call for very little discussion.

The testimony given by relatives as to the peculiarities, forgetfulness, lack of reliability, and foolishness in conversation which they attributed to the deceased was far outweighed by evidence given by disinterested witnesses concerning his general intelligence and especially his ability to attend to his business affairs. Except for an item of evidence by one of his relatives that he had forgotten a small loan he had made, there is no testimony of any unwise business transactions. On the contrary, the evidence shows that by his industry and frugality, notwithstanding the untoward conditions of his life, he had increased his small inheritance from $2,000 to $3,500. In a small way he had become a capitalist and had invested and reinvested his money with at least average prudence. It is true that sometimes Mr. Crait'e, his brother-in-law, had advised with him in these transactions, but at, other times he went to the con-veyancer alone, and seemed to exercise ordinary business judgment, and was “keen enough to get seven per cent, when he could.”

It is strongly urged by the appellants, however, that any preponderance of/the testimony as to the general business capacity- of the deceased is overcome by the fact that he had been an epileptic since infancy. There was testimony that he sometimes had these seizures once or twice a day, sometimes once or/twice a month, that sometimes he would be unconscious for an hour, sometimes for a day. Dr. Wallis, witness for cjontestants, testified that the disease is a progressive onq “in which the seizures become more intense and more frequent until death occurs, which usually does [144]*144eventually, and during this time the mind is in a progressive state of deterioration,” and that the epileptic seizure is followed by mental derangement of some degree which may last from a few hours to a few days. The doctor further testified: “It’s a mental disease, because it is a progressive mental disease in which the mentality of the patient deteriorates from the minute of the first seizure in direct proportion to the intensity and the frequency of the attacks, until the mind is lost or death ensues, or the patient is cured. Those are the three conditions.”

Contestants’ counsel rely largely upon this testimony and upon the fact that’ deceased was committed to the insane asylum as evidence tending to establish his testamentary incapacity when the will was made. This commitment was made four years and eight months after the execution of the will. There was a little testimony h> the effect that his mental condition was not very different at the time of the commitment from the condition when the will was made. The evidence is clear, however, that the seizures had become more violent at the later period, and he died about seventeen months after the commitment.

The testimony convinces us that the meiital and physical condition of the testator had greatly changed in the interval between the execution of the wiH^and the commitment to the insane asylum. We have beefi^ surprised to find that the effect of epilepsy upon testamentary capacity has been so seldom passed upon by the courts oí last resort. Only one such case is cited in the briefs of couri>sel, to wit, Lewis’s Will, 51 Wis. 101, 7 N. W. 829. In that-, case the general testimony showing peculiarities and weakness of mind of the testator was more weighty than in the iinstant case. In that case the testator was about sixty years, of age when the will was executed. He had been absent irom Wiscon-. sin for several years and returned to the statfe for the purpose of selling his land. The will bore date \March 12th. [145]*145On the day before he' had been seized with a fit and became unconscious. There was another seizure within about- five minutes after the execution of the will, and on the 14th of March he died. In an opinion by Mr. Justice Lyon the will was sustained, and it is stated, “It is doubtless within the knowledge of almost every, person of ordinary intelligence that the victims of that malady frequently retain their mental faculties fully to the moment of attack, especially in the earlier stages of the malady.”

In the present cáse there is no- proof of any seizure for some weeks before or after the execution of the will. The testimony shows that the testator first went to his notary public and then to Mr. Coe’ who prepared the will, and on both occasions, in their judgment, seemed in a normal frame of mind. Undoubtedly he had long been the victim of a deplorable mental disease and there had probably been some impairment of his mental powers before the execution of the will. From the answers filled in by the medical examiners when the testator was adjudged insane, it is argued by proponent’s 'counsel that he was not then insane, but it is unnecessary to decide this question. Presumptions are not generally retrospective, and even if he was insane at the time of the commitment it does not follow that he was insane four years and eight months before. Neither insanity nor testamentary incapacity can be presumed from the fact that a testator has long suffered from epilepsy. It is true that such a condition may be an important fact in connection with other facts in the determination of the question, but it is a matter of common knowledge that many persons have long been the victims of this dread disease and yet possessed in the intervals between attacks a high degree of mental power. In Ray’s Medical Jurisprudence of Insanity it is ,said, page 477:

“Zacchias contends that-epileptics should not be responsible for any acts committed within three days of a fit, before or [146]*146after. The principle is undoubtedly sound as it regards criminal acts; and certainly civil acts performed within two or three days after a fit deserve to be closely scrutinized. Not infrequently, however, the intellect may be as clear and strong as usual up to the very moment of an attack, and therefore it would seem as if other and satisfactory reasons should be required for invalidating transactions executed under such circumstances.”

It cannot be said that because a person is an epileptic he is therefore insane. Will of Rapplee, 66 Hun, 558, 21 N. Y. Supp. 801; Johnson’s Will, 7 Misc. 220, 27 N. Y. Supp. 649; Estate of Jansa, 169 Wis. 220, 171 N. W. 947.

There is no testimony that the testator had hallucinations or delusions in the intervals beftween attacks.' Neither the will non the accompanying agreement was so complicated as not to be easily understood. We are convinced from the whole testimony, including that relating to epilepsy, that the testator had sufficient capacity to comprehend perfectly the condition of his property, his relations to the persons who were or should or might have been the objects of his bounty, and the scope and bearing of the provisions of his will, and that he had sufficient active memory to collect in his mind, without prompting, the particulars or elements of the business to be transacted, and to hold them in his mind a sufficient length of time to perceive at least their obvious relations to each other, and be able to form some rational judgment in relation to them. We therefore hold with the county judge and the circuit judge that the testator was competent to execute the will in question.

It is strongly urged by contestants that the will was obtained by undue influence.

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Bluebook (online)
184 N.W. 705, 175 Wis. 140, 16 A.L.R. 1412, 1921 Wisc. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craite-v-morneau-wis-1921.