Di Orio v. Cenci

10 R.I. Dec. 22
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 5, 1933
DocketNo. 1329
StatusPublished

This text of 10 R.I. Dec. 22 (Di Orio v. Cenci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Di Orio v. Cenci, 10 R.I. Dec. 22 (R.I. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

CAPOTOSTO, J.

Appeal from the probate of the will of Elviro Cenci, who died at the State Hospital November 2, 1931.

The jury, an unusually good one, in addition to a general verdict against the will, specifically found that the testator was not of sound mind and that the instrument in question was the product of undue influence. The appellees move for a new trial, claiming that the verdict is against the evidence.

The present will, dated December 30, 1929, was the fourth will since 1925 which the testator had executed. El-viro Cenci had seven children, four boys and three girls, all alive at the date of the will. It leaves five dollars to each of the three girls, the youngest of whom is now a patient at Wal-lum Lake; it gives all the real estate, including household furniture, to his son, Salvatore; and it devises all monies, stocks and bonds in equal shares to the other three sons. Salvatore and Vincent are named as co-executors. The estate consists of some $14,000 in cash and securities, two three-tenement houses with garages, and three vacant lots. The real estate, at present day values, is worth conservatively $9000 or more.

The testator’s wife died in 1914 or 1915. He never re-married. All the children continued to live with the father after their mother’s death. The oldest girl, Rosina, now Mrs. Di Orio, took care of the house until she married in 1924. Then Amelia, the present Mrs. Passarelli, took charge until November 1927, when she left due to alleged mistreatment. She married in June 192S. Bernice, the youngest girl, continued to live at home until January 1930, when in consequence of her father’s conduct, as she states, she went to live with her sister Amelia. In February 1932, she became a patient at Wallum Lake. Of the boys, Vincent attended Brown University, then went to a dental school in Boston, and is now resident dentist at the State Hospital. Salvatore never left home. He married in June 1929 and continued to live in the same place. George died in January 1930. Domenic left home, joined the navy and is in the service-now.

[23]*23All four. wills of Elviro Cenci were executed in the office of Mr. William B. Greenough. In each instance the testator took charge of the original, while Mr. Greenough retained a copy. The first will of the testator, executed in March 1925, gave Rosina $100, and then created a trust for all his other children. Ultimately, it gave one-tenth of his estate to Rosina and one-tenth to Bernice, one-fifth to each of the four boys, and a contingent gift to Brown University for the assistance of needy students. This last provision was probably in grateful recognition of what Brown had done for his son Vincent.

The second will, executed November 16, 1927, gave five dollars to each of the three girls, cut out any contingent gift to Brown University, and created a trust for the benefit of the four boys.

The third will, dated November 1, 1929, is similar to the will of 1927, except that it eliminates the .trust and gives all the property outright to the boys.

The fourth will, the one in issue, dated December SO, 1929, is an exact copy of the third will executed November 1, 1929.

The first will of 1925 was destroyed in the office of Mr. Greenough when the second will was executed. What became of the second will is unknown. The testator claimed to have lost the third will. This brings us to the circumstances immediately surrounding the execution of the fourth will, which is the subject of inquiry here. The substance of Mr. Greenough’s testimony, the only attesting witness produced at the trial, was that the testator told him that he had lost the will which he had executed a short time before and that he wanted to sign another will exactly like it; that no details were discussed as it was simply a matter of making a copy; that the deceased, who seemed to be in ¾ hurry, made no statement as to how he had lost the will but did seem troubled over the fact that he had done so. The witness further stated that, other than an indistinct recollection of some statement by the testator in 1927 about changed conditions at home, he knew nothing of his personal habits or home life, and that his opinion of soundness of mind was based solely upon what he saw of the testator in his office.

The appellants claimed that about 1927 a decided change occurred in the testator’s condition. They said that he gradually became more and more unreasonable in his attitude and conduct towards them, always complaining, ever exacting and not infrequently violent. From this time on, the appellants say that he began to indulge excessively in the use of wine to the extent of requiring medical attention, which he disregarded; that this condition continued up to September 27, 1930, when he was arrested for an assault with a razor upon Edna Cenci, wife of Salvatore, with whom the testator continued to live after Mrs. Pas-sarelli and Bernice were obliged to leave home because of the father’s unreasonable, unfair and violent attitude. The appellees denied any excessive drinking, and claimed that if the girls left it was of their own volition in order to secure greater freedom from parental control.

This period is of importance both as to what actually happened and as we see it reflected in the conduct of Salvatore and Vincent from the time of the testator's arrest until his death. In the spring of 1927, the testator, according to Mrs. Passarelli, said on several occasions that he was going to do something to himself and also take some one else along with him. On May 15, 1927, he shot and seriously wounded himself. That same day he was admitted to the Rhode Island Hospital and remained there until June 4. The [24]*24hospital record shows that the patient gave as a reason for his act “a fenny” feeling in his head all that morning and home trouble.

In the late summer of that same year the testator consulted Dr. William F. Sullivan, who advised him at various times between August 1927 and May 1929. He never knew from his patient that he had attempted to take his life. Dr. Sullivan testified that at the very first visit he found the testator a chronic alcoholic; that he apparently did not follow his advice, and that he was always in a state of chronic alcoholism, so much so that at one time he warned Salvatore that if his father did not change his ways it would become a serious matter for him. He further said that he was not surprised at the fact that the testator tried to kill himself because an alcoholic with a chronic saturated brain may, at any time, do violence to himself or to others. This last observation is important in view of what occurred in September 1980. Dr. Sullivan’s testimony was based upon personal observation, it was unequivocal and convincing. In the Court’s opinion it was not weakened in the least by the negative testimony of friends of the deceased to the effect that the testator did not drink to excess.

The next mental explosion evidenced by an outward ace occurred on September 27, 1930, when the testator assaulted Salvatore’s wife with a razor, inflicting a serious wound on her right cheek. He was arrested and imprisoned that same day. In due course of time, after an examination by a physician made simply to determine his criminal responsibility, he was transferred to the Hospital for Mental Diseases, where he remained until his death.

In their attempts to disprove this phase of the case, the appellees urge that the testator was affected with paranoia and that a chronic alcoholic brain was neither an existing or a concurring element.

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Bluebook (online)
10 R.I. Dec. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/di-orio-v-cenci-risuperct-1933.