Estate of Brast

160 P.2d 193, 69 Cal. App. 2d 704
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 26, 1945
DocketCiv. No. 12813
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 160 P.2d 193 (Estate of Brast) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Brast, 160 P.2d 193, 69 Cal. App. 2d 704 (Cal. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

69 Cal.App.2d 704 (1945)

Estate of MARGARET T. BRAST, Deceased. ANNIE MUNNELLY, Respondent,
v.
KATHERINE G. HANLON, Individually and as Administratrix With the Will Annexed, etc., Appellant.

Civ. No. 12813.

California Court of Appeals. First Dist., Div. Two.

June 26, 1945.

Joseph J. McShane, A. E. Levinson and Frank J. Fontes for Appellant.

John B. Ehlen for Respondent.

GOODELL, J.

This is an appeal from a decree cancelling a deed of gift made by the decedent to the appellant on December 2, 1941.

Margaret T. Brast, a widow, died on December 19, 1941. On June 9, 1941, she had made a will wherein she named the Bank of America as executor, but the bank renounced its right to act and the appellant, Katherine G. Hanlon, a sister of the testatrix, was appointed administratrix with the will annexed. The testatrix had owned a piece of real property, improved with flats, on Fell Street between Scott and Divisadero Streets in San Francisco, and by the will this property was devised to the respondent, Annie Munnelly, a niece of the testatrix, residing in Ireland. The will bequeathed to the respondent the furniture and furnishings in the flat occupied by the testatrix, personal effects and clothing, and named her as the residuary legatee and devisee. Two cash legacies of $300 each, and three of $200 each, were left to friends. To a niece the testatrix left $1.00. To each of her four sisters, including appellant, the testatrix left $1.00 with the comment that they were already well provided for.

On December 2, 1941, seventeen days before her death, Margaret Brast made a deed of gift to the appellant of the Fell Street property which by the will had been devised to the respondent.

Some sixteen months after letters had been issued a petition *706 on respondent's behalf was filed in the probate proceeding alleging that no inventory had been filed; that the deed had been made when Mrs. Brast was extremely weak and infirm, totally incapable, because of her mental and physical weakness and infirmity, of executing a deed or of comprehending its significance and under undue influence, and that the appellant claimed under the deed adversely to the estate. For these reasons it prayed for the suspension or revocation of the appellant's letters and for the appointment of a special administrator to sue on behalf of the estate for a cancellation of the deed. Within a month thereafter an inventory was filed listing as the estate's only assets $1,019.09 in bank and an account in a savings and loan company appraised at $876.76. Thereupon the respondent filed a second petition repeating the allegations respecting the deed and the circumstances under which it was made, showing further that the inventory scheduled only the money and the savings and loan account as assets of the estate, and praying that the administratrix be compelled to disclose all transactions between herself and the decedent and all property obtained by her from the decedent. An answer was filed and a hearing on the issues resulted in the decree cancelling the deed. The appellant was neither suspended nor removed as administratrix.

Margaret Brast's death, at the age of 72 years, was caused by a cerebral hemorrhage suffered several months theretofore, which left her completely paralyzed on her left side. Her attending physician was first consulted by her at his office on August 15, 1941, before which time, he testified, she had suffered a slight stroke according to symptoms she then had, including numbness. Her memory then was poor and she seemed somewhat confused. She had marked arteriosclerosis and high blood pressure. At that first visit she gave her medical history. After that "she evidently had another stroke" and September 20 the doctor ordered her to the hospital where she remained until October 27 when, on the doctor's recommendation, she was returned to her home, not because of her improvement, but because she was troublesome and there were conflicts between the appellant and the hospital people respecting the patient's care. After her return home and until her death seven weeks later, Mrs. Brast was cared for by a practical nurse who stayed at the home day and night. While she was in the hospital the doctor visited her practically every *707 day and after her return to her flat on Fell Street he called on her on October 30, November 6 and 30 and December 7, 13, 17 and 19. The doctor testified that almost every time he saw the patient, whether in the hospital or in her home, she "was very irrational, her mental condition was bad" and that the only time when her mind was fairly clear was the first time he saw her, on August 15, 1941. In the hospital, the doctor said, she was very hard to take care of. "Sometimes I could talk to her and she would answer very well, but her mind was bad." He did not talk any business with her. He was asked, "Q. In your opinion, would she know fully what she was doing in executing a deed of gift to her property?" to which he answered, "I could not answer that. She might have had some lucid intervals during the last part. I didn't see her every day; I saw her November 30th, and I didn't see her again until December 7th." The hospital charts showed that while Mrs. Brast was there she was very irrational and they were unable to get her history from her. The doctor admitted that in the hospital "she may have had some lucid intervals, but not very often." In his opinion "she was not competent to decide matters for herself." On the first visit Mrs. Brast, according to the doctor, told him that her memory was very poor. After that he never tested it "because she wasn't rational enough, and there was no necessity to do that." The doctor testified that he did not remember talking to the decedent about her will or of saying to Mrs. Hanlon or anyone else that Mrs. Brast was mentally capable of making a will. When asked flatly if in his opinion she was so capable he said "she was not."

The doctor was called in rebuttal and was asked by the judge: "Q. If you were present in court and heard Mr. McShane testify, and also the notary who went there, Mr. Allen, they testified they had conversations with her and that she was perfectly normal, her mind was clear and she indulged in conversation on different topics, and that she knew what she was doing when she signed this deed and requested the notary to appear there, and wanted to give her house to her sister, would your testimony be the same?" To this he answered frankly: "A. No, it would not, but I would take the opinion of all these people that she must have had a clear space during that time. When you attend people who have cerebral hemorrhage *708 their mind is frequently normal. Then there are times when it is perfectly irrational. Q. Can they clear up at times? A. They could clear up at times; you must remember the great French chemist, Louis Pasteur, had a cerebral hemorrhage when he was 47 and for six months could not do anything, yet most of his great work was done after that. A person can be paralyzed on one side and still have his mind clear, paralyzed I mean from a cerebral hemorrhage. But this patient of mine, this lady, when I attended her, she was not clear, she was awful when she was in the hospital, and even at home she tossed and turned, and while she may have answered some questions to me clear enough, as she certainly did when I signed the letter to the bank when I asked her, 'Do you want your sister to open the safe deposit box?' And I remember she said, 'Yes'. Then I said, Put your mark here', and she did so, and I signed it." The foregoing is the only medical testimony in the case.

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160 P.2d 193, 69 Cal. App. 2d 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-brast-calctapp-1945.