Duncan's Contested Will

23 A.2d 357, 147 Pa. Super. 133, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 385
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 8, 1941
DocketAppeal, 8
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 A.2d 357 (Duncan's Contested Will) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duncan's Contested Will, 23 A.2d 357, 147 Pa. Super. 133, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 385 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldrige, J.,

James Mills Duncan died May 21, 1939, at the age of 71, first having executed a holographic will dated *135 August 19, 1938. This was found among the papers relating to his estate in the possession of the Farmers Trust Company, his committee, in an envelope addressed to it.

The testator bequeathed small sums to his nieces and nephews, children of his deceased brothers and sisters. He gave to the Big Spring Presbyterian Church $200 in trust for the maintenance of a cemetery lot and expressed the desire that not more than $200 be used for his funeral ¡expenses. The balance of his estate, which aggregates $13,500, he bequeathed to Frank A. Diehl and Nannie Diehl Lehman, who were children of his former farmer. Prior to his commitment to the insane hospital he spent considerable time on his farm and had his own room in the tenant’s house. Neither of the residuary legatees saw Duncan after 1909, but he carried on some correspondence with them while he was in the hospital. No mention was made in the will of the testator’s sole surviving sister in whose house he was living when he died.

A caveat was filed by one of the testator’s nephews against the probate of the will on the ground that the testator did not have testamentary capacity when he executed that document. The register of wills certified the record to the orphans’ court and after a hearing was had an issue devisavit vel non was granted and certified to the court of common pleas for trial. The jury found that the testator had testamentary capacity. Motions for judgment n. o. v. and a new trial were overruled. Hence this appeal.

The testator, in 1908, was judicially declared a lunatic without lucid intervals, and the Farmers Trust Company of Carlisle was appointed his committee. The following year he was committed to the Harrisburg State Hospital for the Insane where he remained until April 29, 1939, when he was paroled. He then went to . the home of his sister in Newville, Cumberland County, *136 where he died less than a month later, May 21,1939.

This man’s history was prima facie evidence, but not conclusive of a lack of testamentary capacity. The burden, however, was upon the proponents of producing evidence to sustain the will: Titlow v. Titlow, 54 Pa. 216, 224; Hoopes’ Estate, 174 Pa. 373, 34 A. 603; Sterrett’s Estate, 300 Pa. 116, 121, 122, 150 A. 159; Brennan’s Estate, 312 Pa. 335, 339, 168 A. 25.

It does not necessarily follow that one who is insane and confined to an institution is incapable of making a will. In Draper’s Estate, 215 Pa. 314, 64 A. 520, the testator was in an insane asylum from 1872 until his death in 1902. His will was dated June 8, 1889. While he was free of delusion and hallucination, he suffered from mental depression. Judge Penrose in the course of his opinion, which was adopted by the Supreme Court, stated: “His commitment, in 1872, stated that he was suffering from ‘melancholia;’ but this, while, from the physicians’ point of view, affording justification, perhaps, for a certificate that the patient is ‘insane,’ is not, of itself, a necessary indication of testamentary incapacity ; and, as the records of the asylum show, it was understood that the decedent was there voluntarily, and he was kept under no restraint.” See, also, Sterrett’s Est, supra.

A will should not' be declared invalid except for compelling reasons. The law is concerned with protecting the testator and the legal objects of his bounty. “His property is his own and he can dispose of it as he pleases, in life, and after death, by means of his will.” Central Trust Co., Exr. v. Boyer, 308 Pa. 402, 408, 162 A. 806. If, however, there is a substantial dispute respecting the testator’s capacity to make a will, an issue must be granted: Geist’s Estate, 325 Pa. 401, 191 A. 29.

One may be old, infirm, suffer from physical and mental debility, have loss of memory, inability to recognize acquaintances, and incoherent speech, yet have a mind sufficiently sound to make a will: Aggas v. Mun *137 nell et al., 302 Pa. 78, 85, 152 A. 840. The question is: Does sufficient intelligence remain to make a will? Wilson v. Mitchell, 101 Pa. 495.

In Sterrett’s Estate, supra, Miss Sterrett was 78 years of age, had been living in a hospital for mental and nervous diseases for 30 years, and was found to be a lunatic in 1906 when a guardian was appointed for her. One of the questions before the court on a declaratory judgment was whether or not she was capable of executing a valid will. The court p. 122, quoted with approval from Smoot’s Law of Insanity, p. 390, §461, as follows: “ ‘That a person has been adjudged incompetent from a mental derangement ...... is not necessarily conclusive of his competency to make a will, [and] it is generally held that the fact that a person making a will is under guardianship will not be conclusive of his testamentary incapacity.......The will might have been made during a lucid interval, even where the insanity entirely clouds the mind for the time [citing Titlow v. Titlow, 54 Pa. 216, 224]. This is true even where the testator is confined in an asylum, where the insanity is not [specifically] shown to have affected his testamentary capacity.’ ”

The evidence principally relied upon by the proponents to show a testamentary capacity was that given by Dr. Petree. He testified that he became connected with the Harrisburg State Hospital in 1930, and since 1938 has been first assistant to the superintendent. The testator came under his care originally in 1930 and until 1935 he saw him twice daily. Thereafter, until the testator was paroled, he saw him a couple times a week. He stated that the testator had dementia praecox or schizophrenia of a paranoid type, but although he was mentally affected he had an intelligence quotient of 106, which was above normal; that he possessed good memory, had ability to carry on ordinary business matters, understood the value of money, had a capacity of knowing the extent of his estate, who his *138 relatives were, and who the objects of his bounty should be; that he understood thoroughly what he was doing when he wrote a will and knew the effect of a will. The witness in conclusion expressed the opinion that while the testator exhibited poor judgment in some instances, he had intellectual capacity to make a will.

Dr. J. S. Hammers, who never saw Duncan, was called by the contestants. He agreed with Dr. Petree’s diagnosis of testator’s mental condition, but he was of the opinion, based only upon facts given by Dr. Petree, that he had delusions and while he had knowledge, his intelligence was affected by a diseased mind. In his judgment the testator “knew, what he was doing” but his “intelligence was missing” and therefore did not have testamentary capacity.

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Bluebook (online)
23 A.2d 357, 147 Pa. Super. 133, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncans-contested-will-pasuperct-1941.