Deighan v. Hanaway

14 A.2d 811, 65 R.I. 322, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 129
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 22, 1940
StatusPublished

This text of 14 A.2d 811 (Deighan v. Hanaway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deighan v. Hanaway, 14 A.2d 811, 65 R.I. 322, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 129 (R.I. 1940).

Opinion

*323 Baker, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of the probate court of Pawtucket admitting to probate a certain instrument in writing, dated December 20, 1938, as the last will of Sarah McMann, and appointing Catherine A. Hanaway the sole beneficiary and executrix thereof. From this decree the appellants took an appeal to the superior court, where a trial resulted in a verdict of a jury that the instrument in question was the last will and testament of Sarah McMann. The appellants’ motion for a new trial was denied by the trial justice.

The case is before us on appellants’ bill of exceptions, first, to certain rulings in the course of the trial concerning a genealogical chart which was admitted in evidence as appellee’s exhibit B; second, to the denial of certain requests to charge on the issue of undue influence; and third, to the refusal of the trial justice to grant appellants’ motion for a new trial. All their other exceptions were expressly waived by the appellants.

The will in question was executed by Sarah McMann, hereinafter referred to as Sarah, in a hospital in the city of Pawtucket. The attesting witnesses were Stephen F. Hughes and John F. Quinn, the former a doctor and the latter the attorney who drew the will.- With the exception of a bequest for a reasonable sum for masses, the will leaves Sarah’s entire estate to “Catherine A. Hanaway, of Providence, R. I. *324 in recognition of her Kindness and devotion to me and in recognition of our warm friendship for over forty years, . ” Catherine was also named executrix and exempted from furnishing any bond while acting in that capacity.

The testatrix Sarah was about eighty years of age and unmarried at the time of her death on December 21, 1938. She had no immediate relatives and few friends. Her four brothers and one sister, none of whom ever married, had all died by 1929. Prior to the death of her sister in 1922' the testatrix had been employed for many years as a saleswoman in stores in the city of Providence. Thereafter she did not work, but lived alone until the time of her death. The evidence shows, and the appellants do not dispute, that she was of a religious and retiring nature, and lived a somewhat secluded life.

The nine appellants in this case claim to be cousins of the testatrix in the third or fourth degree. Only one of them, Ellen, or Nellie, Deighan, testified. It is clear from the evidence that the testatrix met them rarely, if at all, and that she had no particular love or affection for any of them. In fact, appellants’ brief states that: “There is no pretense that these appellants expected anything from Sarah, nor that Sarah expected anything from them.” The appellants’ sole purpose in this case, according to their brief, was “to prevent any interlopers from victimizing Sarah McMann on her deathbed.”

The evidence shows that the appellee Catherine A. Han-away became acquainted with Sarah while both were employed in adjoining departments in the Boston Store in Providence; that the former, being then a young girl, often ran errands for Sarah and some of the other employees during the first years that the appellee was employed in that store; and that in 1903, while working elsewhere, she mar.ried her present husband, James F. Hanaway, who was then and is now employed by the Boston Store. Catherine testi *325 fied that she stopped in occasionally at Cladding’s to see Sarah during all of the time that the latter was employed there, while Catherine’s husband testified that during this same period Sarah frequently stopped at his counter at the Boston Store to ask for Catherine. Apparently neither Sarah nor Catherine visited each other at their respective homes prior to 1928.

Catherine testified that, in March 1928, Sarah called her on the telephone and asked if she, Catherine, “would go up and see her some day”; that she agreed to call on Sarah at an appointed time and that on this first visit to Sarah’s home they spent the afternoon together talking about “the times we had in the store, and what good times we had”; that when she was leaving Sarah asked her if she would come out the following Sunday with her husband, which she promised to do and did; that on this occasion Sarah told her that “she was so lonely she didn’t know what to do, and she asked me (Catherine) .if we would continue coming Sunday”; that thereafter until Sarah was taken to the hospital in 1938 Catherine and her husband visited Sarah practically every Sunday, frequently bringing food out to her and usually helping her with her household duties.

The appellants’ claim of undue influence, which we will later consider, involves the conduct of the appellee, of Dr. Hughes, and of a priest. Sarah was well acquainted with both Dr. Hughes and the priest, the former having been her physician for over twenty-five years, while the latter, who had been a curate of her parish for many years before being transferred elsewhere as a pastor, continued visiting her during the last years of her life. Doctor Hughes testified that he saw the appellee twice before Sarah went to the hospital; once when he called at Sarah’s home, and again when the appellee accompanied Sarah to his office. His testimony does not show that he had ever met the priest prior to December 20, 1938, the date the will in question was executed. By agreement the priest was not called as a witness.

*326 Following her sister’s death in 1922, Sarah lived alone for sixteen years on the first floor of her three-tenement house on East street in Pawtucket. Although advanced in years she was in fairly good health, attending personally to her household duties and to business matters until December 2, 1938, when she fell down the steps leading to the cellar of her home and suffered an injury to her-knee. Doctor Hughes was called that day, and upon being told that she must go to the hospital, Sarah, according to the doctor’s testimony, turned over her bankbook to him for safekeeping. She also gave him appellee’s telephone number and asked him to inform the latter that she, Sarah, was going to the hospital. She went there on December 3, 1938 and on that same day, following her instructions, the doctor called the appellee and told her “to go right-up to the hospital, Miss McMann wanted her”. It appeared in evidence that while Sarah was at the hospital the appellee visited her every day. She also received some visits from a few other friends and neighbors, but none from the appellants.

In view of Sarah’s injury Dr. Hughes consulted Dr. Herbert-E. Harris, an orthopedic surgeon, and they attended Sarah until her death from lobar pneumonia at 7:15 o’clock, p. m., on December 21, 1938. It appears in evidence that Sarah’s condition changed definitely for the worse on the afternoon of December 19, and that her name was placed on the danger list the following day. About 8 o’clock, a.m., on December 20, Dr. Hughes telephoned this information to the appellee, and she in turn notified the priest, who then drove her in his automobile to the hospital. The appellee testified that they both went to Sarah’s room; that after some preliminary conversation between the priest and Sarah, in the course of which she recognized and called them both by name, he asked Sarah “if she would like to fix her affairs and she said yes”, whereupon he then asked her: “‘Did you want to see Mr.

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14 A.2d 811, 65 R.I. 322, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deighan-v-hanaway-ri-1940.