Cutler v. Cutler

79 N.W. 240, 103 Wis. 258, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 183
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 79 N.W. 240 (Cutler v. Cutler) 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
Cutler v. Cutler, 79 N.W. 240, 103 Wis. 258, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 183 (Wis. 1899).

Opinion

Cassoday, C. J.

Morris D. Cutler died January 22,1897, at his home, in Waukesha, leaving an instrument in writing, purporting to be his last will and testament, executed September 20,1886, wherein and whereby he gave, devised, and bequeathed to his half-brother, James B. Gutter, all his property, real and personal, and therein appointed James B. Gutter as sole executor of such will. At the time of his death he was a widower, with no children or grandchildren, but he left as his next of kin a full-brother, John O., residing in California; three nephews, the contestants herein, residing in Laporte, Indiana, and children of a deceased full-brother; and also four half-brothers, including James B. Gutter, and two half-sisters, residing in the states of Iowa, South Dakota, and California. The three nephews filed in the county court objections to the probate of such will, February 27, 1897, to the effect (1) that the instrument was not duly executed by Morris D. Cutler as his last will and testament; (2) that at the time of the execution of the same he was not of sound mind, and had not sufficient mental capacity to make a will; (3) that the execution of such instrument was procured by undue influence exercised over and upon Morris D. Cutler. Such proceedings were bad in the county court that such will was admitted to probate April 2, 1897, and thereupon James B. Gutter was appointed executor of such will. On or about May 25, 1897, such contestants appealed therefrom to the circuit court. The cause was tried before the circuit court and a jury in January, 1898.

[260]*260Upon such trial tbe court submitted five questions to the jury, which, at the close of the trial, were answered to the effect (1) that the paper writing presented'for probate as the last will and testament of Morris D. Cutler, deceased, was executed in conformity with the provisions of the statutes of this state relating to wills; (2) that Morris D. Cutler, deceased, did so execute the alleged last will and testament with full knowledge of its terms and provisions; (3) that Morris D. Cutler, deceased, was of sound mind, having testamentary capacity, when he executed the alleged last will and testament; (4) that the alleged will and testament was his own voluntary will, act, and deed; (5) that the alleged last will and testament was not obtained, nor the execution thereof procured, by fraud or undue influence used and exerted upon him.

After such special verdict had been entered of record in the circuit court, that court found as matters of fact (1) that Morris D. Cutler, deceased, duly made and executed, as and for his last will and testament, the proposed will offered in probate, and did duly make, execute, and acknowledge the same to be his last will and testament, September 20,1886, at Waukesha; (2) that he so executed the same of his own free will and accord, without'any influence being brought to bear upon him whatever, and without any fraud being practiced upon him, and that he was not under undue influence at the time of the making and subscribing of the will, and that in the execution thereof he duly complied with all requirements of the statutes of Wisconsin; (3) that he so executed the will with full knowledge of its terms and provisions, and that at the time of the execution thereof he was of sound mind and memory and competent to make a will; '(4) that the same was his own voluntary will, act, and deed; (5) that the contestants were the nephews of the deceased; (6) that the deceased was at the time of making the will, and from thence on up to the time of his decease, a widower, without children, and that from the date of making [261]*261the will up to January 22, 1897, when he died, he was au inhabitant of "Waukesha, Wisconsin.

And as conclusions of law the court found, in effect, that the will so offered for probate was entitled to probate in the county of Waukesha as the last will and testament of-the deceased, and the same thereby was admitted to probate as the last will and testament of the deceased; that judgment should be entered by the circuit court admitting to probate the will of Morris D. Cutler, deceased, and affirming the judgment of the county court admitting the same to probate, and that the record and proceedings therein should be transmitted to the county court of Waukesha county for further proceedings according to law; and that the proponent’s costs and attorney’s fees in the circuit court should be paid opt of the estate of the deceased.

From the judgment entered in accordance with such findings the contestants bring this appeal.

At the time of his death the testator was eighty-seven years of age, and had resided in Waukesha for sixty years. He was manifestly a peculiar man, with marked characteristics and some eccentricities. He accumulated a considerable property, located in Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. The petition for the probate of his will states the amount of his property at about $60,000, but it is said to have been two or three times that amount. He was illiterate and ignorant, and hence suspicious; but his accumulations were, evidently the result of his own frugality, forecast, and judgment. He was temperate in his habits, simple in his manners, and economical in his methods. He was naturally reticent, but had a vigorous mind, with fixed notions of his' own, formed in early life, not in perfect harmony with the more expensive methods of many who surrounded him in his later years. To those whom he liked he was kind, and even generous. Several of his kindred received bounties at his hands, but some of them would seem to have been more [262]*262or less annoying to bim; and in bis old age he appears to have had little to do with any of them, except one of his nephews and his half-brother Jewries B. Cutler, with whom he had more or less correspondence and dealing for nearly thirty years before he died.

The will purports to have been executed more than ten years prior to his death, under circumstances to the effect that Malcolm Sellers, who resided at Waukesha and did business as a merchant for seventeen and one-half years prior to December 9,1869, and who during all of that time was a warm personal friend of the testator, with whom he frequently consulted on matters of importance, moved to Et. Howard on the day and year last mentioned; that after-wards such friendship continued; that Sellers frequently visited Waukesha, in some years several times, and sometimes at the request of the testator; that Sellers was a justice of the peace at Ft. Howard, and in 1885 the testator first spoke to him about disposing of his property to his half-brother James B. Cutler; that Sellers talked in favor of his other relatives, as James B. already had enough; that the testator said James B. had always stood by him, and knew more about his property, and he wanted him to have the entire control of it; that he spoke to Sellers again about the matter a short time before the will was drawn; that Sellers told him that he was incapable of drawing the will, but that he had a friend, Judge Ellis of Green Ray, who could draw it; that at the request of the testator he had Judge Elfis draw the will; that he then took it and went to Waukesha, and read it over to the testator, and the next day the testator signed it in the presence of himself and the two other subscribing witnesses, each'of whom signed in the presence of the testator and at his request; that, after it was so executed the testator put it in his safe; that Sellers was at the time of executing the will seventy-six years of age; that John S.

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.W. 240, 103 Wis. 258, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutler-v-cutler-wis-1899.