Estate of Casarotti

192 P. 1085, 184 Cal. 73, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 299
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 9329.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 192 P. 1085 (Estate of Casarotti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Casarotti, 192 P. 1085, 184 Cal. 73, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 299 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

SLOANE, J.

This is an appeal from a verdict and judgment revoking probate of a will. The will was contested on grounds of undue influence and incompetency. On the trial the question of undue influence was by the court taken from the jury for insufficient evidence on motion for a nonsuit. The only question on this appeal is as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment on the ground of the testator’s mental incompetency to make a will. The only evidence offering support to the claim of contestants on this point was the testimony of the physician in attendance upon the testator during his last illness and covering the period when the will was executed.

One of the grounds of error relied on by appellant is the admission of this testimony over appellant’s objection that the physician’s testimony was inadmissible under subdivision 4 of section 1881 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for the reason that it was the disclosure by a physician of information acquired in attending the patient which was necessary to enable him to prescribe or act for the patient.

The patient, in this instance, was suffering from pneumonia. Though it was primarily for the trial judge to weigh the facts upon which the admissibility of this testimony depends, it is doubtful if it sufficiently appears to support the court’s ruling that the observations made by the doctor as to the patient’s mental competency were merely incidental and were not necessary to his treatment of the disease, or were not of a nature to come within the protection of professional confidence. (Estate of Black, 132 *75 Cal. 392-396, [64 Pac. 695]; In re Redfield, 116 Cal. 644, [48 Pac. 794].)

If, however, it does not appear that there was error in admitting this evidence, we do not think, in any event, it was sufficient to support the verdict. [1] The burden of proving incompetency rested with the contestants. There was no pretense that the testator was delirious, irrational, or insane or under any delusions, but merely that he was in such a state of bodily weakness and mental stupor as to be incapable of an intelligent disposition of his property or determination of the objects of his bounty. It is also urged that his condition of weakness was such as to render him peculiarly susceptible to suggestion. The issue of undue influence having been eliminated, there is no evidence of influence or suggestion of any kind tending to direct his testamentary acts. The evidence is wholly to the effect that he personally and voluntarily suggested the parties to be the beneficiaries of his will, and his desire that all his property should go to them, and even enumerated the various possessions that were to be carried by the general terms of the will. Neither was there anything in the disposition of his estate to strangers by blood, to the exclusion of his several brothers or sisters, to render it obnoxiously unnatural.

The testator, Henry Casarotti, was unmarried, and evidently a comparatively young man. His next of kin were his brothers and sisters, some nine in number. He had for some time been living in the family of Cornelius P. Lyons and the latter’s wife, who are the beneficiaries of the will, and proponents of the will, and appellants in this action. His relations with his own people, while not unfriendly, seem to have been not overly cordial because of their objections and criticisms of his relations with the Lyons family, and because of some differences arising in the distribution of their father’s estate through which Henry Casarotti derived most of the property transferred by this will. His relations with Mr. and Mrs. Lyons had been friendly and intimate for a considerable period and he was living at their home at the time of his last illness and death. He was taken down with an attack of influenza six days prior to his death. This had developed into pneumonia. He died on the 19th of September, 1919, at about 3 in the afternoon. *76 Dr. Gossage, the attending physician, and witness here, visited him about 8 o’clock in the forenoon and again at 12 or 1 o’clock, and did not thereafter see him alive. The will was made between 9 and 10 o’clock in the forenoon. The doctor found him very low at his first visit on the morning of the 19th. He was breathing with difficulty and in a state of stupor bordering on coma. The doctor testifies that death was imminent. He told his patient that if he had any affairs to settle he had better send for Ms lawyer, and on the patient’s acquiescence and the subsequent suggestion of Mrs. Lyons, upon leaving the house the doctor telephoned to G. P. Hall, the attorney who prepared the will, that he was to visit Casarotti’s sick-bed for that purpose. Obviously, the doctor at the time of this suggestion as to settling his affairs and making a will contemplated sufficient intelligence and competency on the part of the sick man to give some consideration to winding up his earthly business. The will was executed between the doctor’s first and second visits, within an interim of two or three hours. On the second visit he found his patient in a similar state of stupor with evidence of the nearer approach of dissolution. His testimony covering physical and mental symptoms observed at both visits is in substance as follows:

“I saw him alive, I think, about 12 or 1 o’clock on the day he died. I had seen him that morning prior to that” (about 8 o’clock). “His mental condition was such that he was very stupid, comatose condition.” “I never saw Mm very delirious to amount to anything. He was sinking at time of first visit. I probably told him if he had any property to dispose of he had better have a will made. I telephoned after I left to the attorney.” “I could not say he was irrational but he was in a stupid condition.” “I had to talk to Mm, rouse him up to get Mm to say anything.” “I did not mean to say he was irrational at all after he woke up.” “He was not taking any opiates or medicines to make him stupid.” “When he was aroused he seemed to answer all my questions rationally.” “He seemed to understand in a way when I told him to make a will. He did not seem to pay much attention to me. I thought in a way he comprehended what I was saying to Mm.” “He was not insane because he was not in full possession of his faculties.” “Q. When he was aroused he was all right? A. I would *77 not hardly say he was all right. He was not as bright and intelligent by any means as he was when he was well.” “The man was in a bad condition in every way, he was very weak, but his reason had not left him. I think his mental condition was such that any person of ordinary intelligence could understand it as well as a physician.” “I visited him again between 12 and 1 o’clock. He was then in a rather worse condition,” “There was discoloration in his face.” “He was not of sound mind on the occasion of my visits that day.” “From being in the condition he was at 8 o’clock I don’t think he would be thoroughly in possession of his faculties and be able to determine who was about him by 10 o’clock.” “He knew me when I was there.” “Q. For aught you could tell us Henry Casarotti may have been perfectly clear in his mind had he been thoroughly aroused after you were there on the morning visit? A. He might have been.

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Bluebook (online)
192 P. 1085, 184 Cal. 73, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-casarotti-cal-1920.