Doggett v. Morse

12 N.E.2d 867, 299 Mass. 383, 1938 Mass. LEXIS 810
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 12 N.E.2d 867 (Doggett v. Morse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doggett v. Morse, 12 N.E.2d 867, 299 Mass. 383, 1938 Mass. LEXIS 810 (Mass. 1938).

Opinion

Cox, J.

This is an appeal from an order of a judge of probate denying a motion for the framing of an issue for a trial by jury concerning an instrument, dated March 26, 1937, offered for probate as the last will and testament of Maud M. Morse. The proposed issue relates to undue influence on the part of Samuel B. Doggett, who is named in the instrument as executor and residuary legatee. The only issue raised by the contestant is as to the nineteenth or residuary clause. The case was heard on statements, which are reported, made by counsel of the respective parties as to the evidence which they expected to offer if there should be a jury trial.

The governing principles of law need not be restated. See Cranston v. Hallock, 281 Mass. 182; Smith v. Patterson, 286 Mass. 356; Terry v. King, 286 Mass. 598.

The decedent, who was never married, died on June 19, 1937, at the age of about eighty She had worked in the Boston Public Library until about 1923. Her mother, who had kept a lodging house in Boston and with whom, the decedent lived, died in 1926. It was estimated that after [385]*385the mother’s death the decedent had about $13,000. The proponent Doggett, to whom the rest and residue of the decedent’s property was given provided he was living at her death, offers to show that at the time of her mother’s death the decedent appealed to him for financial assistance, saying that she was in need, and that he helped her out and took care of the funerál bills. The decedent had an aunt, Mrs. Upham, who was very wealthy, and Doggett offers to show that he arranged so that the decedent went to live with her aunt and "he gave her a position as housekeeper.” In 1927 the decedent made a will in which Doggett was named executor. In it she provided for several small bequests and two of $5,000 each for the Widows Society and the Home for Aged Men. The residue of her estate was left to five charities. In 1935 she made another will which, besides leaving several small bequests, gave $5,000 to the Widows Society, $1,000 each to the Home for Aged Men and two other charities, and all the rest and residue to Doggett, with the request that he "pay out of the same certain sums of money to those whom” the decedent should "from time to time by a request in writing direct, . . . but these requests” were not “intended as part of my will, and not intended to impose any obligation whatsoever.” The specific bequests amounted to $10,600.

Mrs. Upham, the aunt, died on February 21, 1937. By the terms of her will the decedent was given all her personal and household effects which were inventoried at about $10,000. Doggett was given $200,000 in trust to pay the net income to the decedent so long as she lived. The trust provided for the payments of income "to be made to her or in the absolute discretion of the trustee to be applied for her benefit.” Doggett also received under this will as trustee the residue of the estate to be held for the benefit of the decedént. Among the powers of the trustee was "the full power to decide, without any hearing or consultation with the beneficiaries as to what is capital and what is income.” The annual income of the decedent after the death of her aunt is stated to have been between $40,000 and $50,000. It is stated in behalf of the contestant that the [386]*386decedent was a person of indecisive bearing and of little familiarity with business matters, but this is controverted by the proponent. After the death of Mrs. Upham, Doggett called nearly every day at the decedent’s home down to March 26, 1937, when the instrument now presented for probate was executed. It was not disputed that Doggett had charge of the business affairs of the decedent in addition to his duties as trustee under the Upham will and had possession of all her property.

Statements are credited to the decedent to the effect that on one occasion, when she was told that she should not sign papers unless she read them and knew what was in them, she replied, “Mr. Doggett tells me to sign them and I have got to sign them,” and that she said that Doggett had influenced her in a great many things and she “felt she should do something about it”; that she did not know the amount of money she was entitled to receive from the Upham estate; and that on one occasion, when she asked Doggett if she could not have a small amount of money with which to purchase some dresses for herself, he told her that she could not afford it and suggested that she have Mrs. Up-ham’s clothes made over. It is represented that she said she had requested Doggett to tell her what he had done with her money and that he refused to give her this information; that he kept her in the dark about financial affairs; that she had signed all kinds of papers of which she did not know the contents, and would like to have someone to help her out; that she had no one with whom she could talk about her financial affairs; and that, in referring to Doggett, she said, “He keeps taking my money and will never tell me what he is doing with it and when I ask about it he says, 'Never mind, I will tend to that.’” Other statements attributed to her tend to indicate that Doggett, when requested to make expenditures on her account or to furnish her money for the same, told her that she could not afford them or that she would have to wait until later for them.

Up to the time of Mrs. Upham’s death the decedent had been attended for about twenty-five years by a Dr. Evans, who was also her close friend. He also had treated her [387]*387mother. At the death of Mrs. Upham, Doggett employed a Dr. Dixon to attend the decedent. The decedent objected to this, and told one of the servants that she wanted Dr. Evans and that Doggett would not let her have him and insisted on Dr. Dixon attending her. Doggett is reputed to have said, when this matter was brought to his attention, that he felt “Miss Morse should have two doctors, one for her and one to keep an oversight for me.” In some way this matter came to the attention of Mr. Arey, who drew all of the decedent’s wills, and thereafter Dr. Evans resumed his attendance upon the decedent. On the other hand, it is contended by the proponent that Dr. Dixon had attended Mrs. Upham for a long period of years and that Doggett’s suggestion was that Dr. Dixon drop in occasionally to see her; that there was no intention to discharge Dr. Evans; and that the whole matter was the result of a misunderstanding.

The contestant states that at the death of Mrs. Upham Doggett took entire charge of the household, discharged some of the employees and retained others at reduced salaries, telling them that this was necessary inasmuch as the decedent did not have much money. On the day the decedent was expected to arrive at the home of Mrs. Upham after Mrs. Upham’s death, the cook told Doggett that there was no food in the house, to which Doggett is alleged to have replied that it would not be necessary for her to buy any food for the present, that bread and butter, apple sauce and tea would be ample for the evening meal, and that there was too much milk and cream being used while Mrs. Upham was alive. He gave instructions to the cook as to the purchase of food, telling her to submit the bills to him for his approval. Doggett paid all the bills of the household. There were other representations to the effect that he had charge not only of all of the decedent’s financial affairs but also of the detail's of her every day life.

The relations between Doggett and Mr. Arey are friendly, Mr. Arey occupying an office in the Doggett building and being his attorney. The proponent offers to show through Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 N.E.2d 867, 299 Mass. 383, 1938 Mass. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doggett-v-morse-mass-1938.