Duff v. May

54 S.W.2d 4, 245 Ky. 709, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 645
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 3, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 54 S.W.2d 4 (Duff v. May) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duff v. May, 54 S.W.2d 4, 245 Ky. 709, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 645 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner—

Keversing.

The paper offered for probate as the will of Mrs. Elizabeth Akeman provides for the payment of her debts, the erection of a monument, and bequeaths certain articles of bed clothing to a nephew and the rest of her estate to Ira J. Duff, who was not related to her. The judge of the county court, a nephew by marriage of the deceased, refused to probate the will, and an appeal was taken to the circuit court. The deceased’s heirs were five brothers and sisters and a number of nieces and nephews, some of whom successfully prosecuted a contest in the circuit court. This appeal is by Duff, the devisee, from the judgment declaring the document not to be Mrs. Akeman’s will.

In the approach to the consideration of the facts of the case, it may be well to recall certain fundamental rights and powers. One may dispose of his property as he desires, and it is not for the jury to set aside his will because the disposition of the property was not what its members would have made. The jury is to determine in the matter of mental capacity only whether the testatrix has sufficient mind and memory to know the character and value of his estate, to make a rational survey thereof, to know the natural objects of his bounty and his obligations to them, and to dispose of his property according to a fixed purpose of his own. When a verdict has been rendered and judgment entered thereon and the case is before this, court for re *711 view, as concerns the quantum of proof on the issues raised by the pleadings, we are confined in the first instance to the question whether there was a scintilla of evidence warranting the submission of those issues. Such standard of measurement means that there must be evidence of something of substantial and relevant consequence, carrying the quality of proof and having fitness to induce conviction, and not vague, uncertain, and irrelevant matter, giving rise to a chimerical probability. Poll v. Patterson, 178 Ky. 22, 198 S. W. 567; Burdon v. Burdon’s Adm’x, 225 Ky. 480, 9 S. W. (2d) 220. Finally, if that quality and degree of evidence is found to have been adduced, we are to determine whether the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence, as that phrase has been often defined.

Before 1917, Mrs. Akeman and her husband had lived on a mountain farm in Breathitt county about twenty miles from the county seat. In that year, when the railroad came into their community, they sold the place for $10,000 and moved to Jackson. With a part of the proceeds they purchased a cottage and placed the rest on time deposit in a local bank. The husband died in 1920 and devised all of his property to his widow. She lived alone until her death in June, 1929, aged about seventy years.

The propounders of the will showed that, while' in a hospital in Jackson, she requested her physician, Dr. Wilgus Bach, upon more than one occasion to have an attorney come and write her will. The attorney, Grrannis Bach, went to see her and learned her wishes. He prepared the will at his office and at her request returned to the hospital with Ben Sewell, cashier of the bank where Mrs. Akeman kept her funds. She was able to walk about her room, and after the will was read to her she duly signed it in the presence of her doctor, lawyer, and banker, who witnessed it. This was August 14, 1926, which date appears on the document. These three men testified unequivocally to her testamentary capacity. She asked that nothing be said about the will and requested Mr. Sewell to keep it for her. Later she asked him if he was keeping it safely.

We first state the substance of the evidence presented by contestants in opposition to the will. All the members of the family were always upon friendly terms with Mrs. Akeman, and some of them had waited upon *712 her and had been attentive to her needs. Some of these heirs owned no property. None of them were financially well off. The devisee, Duff, was a well-to-do merchant. While living in the country Mrs. Akeman had been very ill with typhoid fever, and thereafter her appearance, actions, and manner of talking changed, and this was more pronounced after another attack of that disease in 1922. She was sometimes forgetful and would ask the same question twice during a conversation. But the two or three specific instances related were insignificant. She is described by these witnesses —nearly all of them interested relatives — as being peculiar, independent, and “not a mixing woman.” They expressed their opinions or decisions in their own minds, as one of them expressed it, that “she was on the decline and feeble in her mind.” Some of them answered negatively the usual and formal question as to testamentary capacity. An intimate friend and church member testified that she was a sensible woman, but sometimes was “different.” Since childhood she had known Mrs. Akeman and often called her “Aunt Elizabeth.” One time she objected to being addressed by that term of affection, and at another time without cause, so far as the witness knew, she became offended at her teacher and quit going to Sunday School for several Sundays. It would not do to establish that as a test of insanity! The record is deficient as to the time of these conditions and incidents in relation to the date of the will.

Of more potency is the evidence of contestants as to the circumstances preceding and attending the execution of the will. Mrs. Akeman was afflicted with a cancer of the breast. Shortly before the will was made she was sent by Dr. Bach to Louisville for radium treatment. One of her brothers came in from the country to go with her. She told him that Ira Duff owed her a lot of money and the witness stated that he came in the day before they started to Louisville and paid her $350. They stayed in Louisville for eight or nine days while Mrs. Akeman was being treated by Dr. Wallace Prank. He came home with his sister on the train on Thursday, August 11th, according to his memory, and she was taken from the station to Dr. Bach’s hospital, suffering a great deal. On the following Saturday this brother and another came to Jackson from their homes and on the way to the hospital met Dr. Bach who told themj *713 that they could go to see her but she would not know them. They found her in bed in a stupor and she did not seem to recognize either of them. She called one of her brothers “Lee,” although that was not his name. However, he sometimes had been mistaken for Lee Deaton. They saw neither Grannis Bach nor Ben Sewell there during the day. Both witnesses were positive that this was on Saturday next following her return from Louisville, and they say that according to their best recollection it was August 14, 1926, which was the date. the will bore. A niece testified that she was brought home from Louisville on "Wednesday, and the next day was in great pain and talked irrationally. Her uncles were there on the following Saturday, as was also the father of Ira J. Duff. It is not denied that this niece had been very kind and attentive to her aunt, not only during her illness, but upon many other occasions. Some days thereafter, having heard that a will favorable to Duff had been written, she looked up the .calendar and found the Saturday next after her aunt had returned from Louisville and the day on which ■ her uncles and Elijah Duff had been there to be August 14th. On the second Saturday after her return from Louisville, she testified, Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 S.W.2d 4, 245 Ky. 709, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duff-v-may-kyctapphigh-1932.