Dailey v. McCarthy

147 N.W. 520, 180 Mich. 473, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 917
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1914
DocketDocket No. 91
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 147 N.W. 520 (Dailey v. McCarthy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dailey v. McCarthy, 147 N.W. 520, 180 Mich. 473, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 917 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Steere, J.

This is a contest over the last will and testament of Dennis Dailey, formerly of Wyoming township, Kent county, Mich., who died in the city of Grand Rapids on November 3, 1910, at the age of about 67 years, leaving an estate of uncertain value, consisting of over $3,500 of personal property and 40 acres of land lying close to the city of Grand Rapids, valued by certain witnesses as high as $10,000; the whole estate, however, being estimated in the petition for probation of his will at approximately $7,000. He never married, and was survived by a brother, Jeremiah Dailey, residing in Nebraska, a sister, Mrs. Mary McCarthy, and four nieces and nephews residing in Minnesota, and a niece and nephew apparently residing in Massachusetts.

On April 30, 1910, while a patient at a hospital in Grand Rapids, deceased executed the will in controversy, by the terms of which he bequeathed $600 to [475]*475his sister, Margaret (Mary) McCarthy, $100 to his parish priest, $5 to each of four nephews and nieces, and the remainder of his estate to his brother, Jeremiah Dailey.

The instrument in question is in legal form, appearing on its face to have been executed in compliance with all statutory requirements. It was filed with, and admitted to probate in, the probate court of Kent county, on the petition of Mary McCarthy, after a contest in which she was one of the contestants, protesting against its admission to probate. Subsequently the proceedings were removed by appeal to the circuit court, in which she joined with other contesting heirs, where a trial by jury resulted favorably to the contestants. The contest was made upon the grounds of undue influence and mental incompetency.

It was claimed by contestants, and testimony was introduced tending to show, that the alleged mental incompetency resulted directly from an attack of apoplexy followed by partial paralysis, which came upon deceased but three days before the date of the will, and that failing health occasioned by hardening arteries naturally led up to, and caused, the apoplexy; that subsequent to the attack he was removed to a hospital, where he remained until his death, his mind being seriously impaired and enfeebled to such an extent that he was wholly incapacitated to understandingly transact any business, and mentally incompetent to make a will. This claim is further emphasized and elucidated by the testimony of experts, produced by contestants who, in answer to hypothetical questions pages in length, state that deceased must have been, and in truth was, suffering for a considerable time before the making of his will with general atheroma and arterial sclerosis, which were the superinducing causes of the apoplectic stroke, and that mental impairment and ineompetency existed as the inevitable [476]*476result of his malady; while experts called by proponent testify to the contrary in answer to equally long hypothetical questions, and say that deceased’s mental condition at the time of the execution of his will was such that he was perfectly competent to transact such business understandingly, and possessed of sufficient testamentary capacity to dispose of his estate, asserting that, even though affected with the maladies testified to by experts upon the opposite side, it did not follow that his intellect was materially impaired, because persons affected with general atheroma and arterial sclerosis could be, and often were, mentally normal, and competent not only to understandingly make testamentary disposition of their property, but to follow intellectual pursuits.

In support of the will it was claimed, and testimony was introduced tending to show, that the condition of deceased on the day he went to the hospital was not such, nor so serious, as claimed by contestants, and did not result from a stroke of apoplexy, but from an attack of vertigo coming upon him while at work following a very hearty meal; that shortly thereafter he was able to walk and talk, and had possession of his faculties as before, although, realizing he was in failing health, he followed the advice of his pastor and went to the hospital, where he remained until his death, which was six months later; that at the time he went there and when he made his will he was in full possession of his mental faculties, knew his relatives and friends, visited with them, and discussed his business affairs, understood the nature and extent of his property and what disposition he desired to make of it; that, in speaking of his business matters with his brother, who had come to visit him, he asked for a notary to get his affairs settled, and, in compliance with this request, an attorney, who was a notary, was summoned and introduced to him, who, after some general conversation, prepared the will [477]*477while alone with deceased in his room, summoning two nurses as witnesses when the instrument was ready for execution. They testified to facts showing compliance with legal requirements, and to testator’s participation in, and apparent understanding of, what was being done, as indicated by remarks made by him while executing the will, telling the attorney, who started to read the will in their presence, that he need not read the rest of it, as testator knew all that was in it.

The two grounds of contest, upon each of which there was abundance of sharply conflicting testimony, were submitted to the jury, in connection with the general charge of the court, by special questions, which, with their answers, are as follows:

“(1) Q. Was undue influence used upon Dennis Dailey in making the will in question? A. No.
“(2) Q. Was Dennis Dailey on April 30, 1910, at the time of making the will in question, mentally competent to make said will? A. No.”

The question of undue influence having been decided by the jury in appellants’ favor, the 201 assignments of error in this record, upon all of which we are advised appellants rely, relate to the issue of mental incompetency. A careful reading of the record convinces us that most of these are not well founded and call for no serious consideration. Many of them involve a contention that in the general conduct of the case the attitude of the court was adverse to those seeking to sustain the will, and prejudicial to a fair trial.

Nineteen assignments of error and many pages of appellants’ brief are devoted to tentative rulings of the court sustaining objections to subscribing witnesses giving their opinion as to the mental competency of testator, at the time of executing his will; they having related their means of observation and facts upon which they based their opinions. One of [478]*478these witnesses was allowed to testify to her opinion before leaving the stand; the other later. Although the latter’s testimony was insisted upon and considerable discussion had, the court expressed a purpose to further investigate the question before admitting the testimony and said:

“If I am satisfied later that I am wrong about that I will not hesitate to reverse the ruling.”

This occurred during a session of the court on Saturday, and at the opening of court on Monday the court called up the matter of this ruling, stated he had announced at that time he would investigate the question and might change said ruling, and that, after giving the matter some study, he had decided the testimony was competent, and he would allow it. The evidence of the witness was thereupon introduced.

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184 N.W. 529 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
147 N.W. 520, 180 Mich. 473, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dailey-v-mccarthy-mich-1914.