Estate of Dole v. Dole

81 P. 534, 147 Cal. 188, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 380
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1905
DocketS.F. No. 4037.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 81 P. 534 (Estate of Dole v. Dole) 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 Dole v. Dole, 81 P. 534, 147 Cal. 188, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 380 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

COOPER, C.

This is an appeal from a judgment of non-suit dismissing the contest of the will of deceased. The facts. *189 are substantially as follows: In July, 1900, deceased was of the age of about eighty-three years, and the owner of an estate of the value of some eighteen thousand dollars. He then resided, and had for many years resided, in Hayward, Alameda County, with Mary A. Dole, the widow of his deceased brother, who had taken care of him and furnished him a home. He had no wife nor child nor grandchild. He made his last will and testament and therein bequeathed to his nieces, Lizzie Dole, Plora Dole, Helen Noyes, and Caroline Webb, being four of the contestants, all residents of Bangor, Maine, the sum of five hundred dollars each. To Mrs. Eva R. Hiehborn, his niece and a daughter of Mary A. Dole, and to her two children, Blanche A. Hiehborn and A. F. Hiehborn, he gave five hundred dollars each. The residue of his estate he left to his sister-in-law, Mary A. Dole, and her son, Walter W. Dole, share and share alike, and appointed said Walter W. Dole the executor of his will. The will was duly executed and witnessed by E. G. Ryker and E. S. Warren.

In April, 1901, Mary A. Dole applied for and was granted letters of guardianship upon the person and estate of deceased by the probate court of Alameda County, and she duly qualified as such guardian. About this time Mary A. Dole and deceased left Hayward and made their home with Mrs. Hiehborn in the city of San Francisco, where deceased continued to make his home, receiving the care and attention of his sister-in-law and niece, until May, 1902, when he died at the age of eighty-four years and six months. In June, 1902, the executor named therein filed the will and petition for letters testamentary in the county of Alameda. The will was admitted to probate by the superior court of Alameda County on the seventh day of July, 1902, and Walter W. Dole appointed executor thereof. The court found in the order admitting the will to probate that deceased at the time of his death was a resident of the county of Alameda, and that at the time of the execution of the will he was of sound and disposing mind and not acting under duress or undue influence.

This contest praying for the revocation of the probate of the will was commenced July 3, 1903, within the year after its admission to probate. The contest came on for hearing in April, 1904, before the court with a jury, and at the close of *190 the testimony on the part of the contestants, the court, on motion of the attorney for the executor, granted a nonsuit.

Counsel for appellants claim that there are two propositions on which the case should be reversed: 1. That the evidence was sufficient for the case to go to the jury upon the question of the mental capacity of the deceased to make the will, and hence that the court erred in holding otherwise; and 2. That the superior court of Alameda County had no jurisdiction because deceased did not reside in that county at the time of his death. We will discuss the two propositions in the order presented.

The contestants allege about all the statutory grounds of contest under five separate headings, alleging that the will was not the will of deceased, that it was not signed by him, that it was not attested by two witnesses as required by law, that it was procured by restraint, undue influence, and fraudulent representations, and that at the time it was executed deceased was “not of sound and disposing mind, and was a person of unsound mind, and wholly incompetent and unable to execute a will, or any other legal document, and wholly incompetent to transact any business whatever, and was non compos mentis

All the alleged grounds of contest are now abandoned except the latter, which brings us to the question as to whether or not the evidence is sufficient to show that deceased, at the time he executed the will, was not of sound and disposing mind. It must be borne in mind that deceased is presumed to have been of sound and disposing mind, that the probate court has found and adjudged in its order admitting the will to probate, that he was of sound and disposing mind, and that the burden was upon contestants to allege and prove that he was not of such sound and disposing mind. While evidence of the condition of the testator’s mind, both before and after the date of the testamentary act, was admissible, yet such evidence was important only so far as it tended to show the condition of the mind of deceased at the very date of the execution of the will. (In re Wilson, 117 Cal. 276, [49 Pac. 172, 711].) The right to dispose of one’s property by will is most solemnly assured by the law of the land, and is a most valuable incident to ownership. The beneficiaries of a will are as much entitled to protection as any other prop *191 erty-owners, and hence the rule that a will cannot be set aside except upon allegation and proof that it was not in fact the will of the testator, or that he did not have a mind capable of disposing of his property. (In re McDevitt, 95 Cal. 33, [30 Pac. 101].)

The evidence shows that deceased, at the time he made the will, was old and feeble and fast approaching the end, but this of itself is not sufficient to justify the court or jury in setting aside the will. Even in old age, if the testator knows his property and the manner in which it is invested, and his relatives who are the object of his bounty, he may make a valid will. It is not necessary that his memory be perfect. The aged person often fails to remember the details of business and the names of his friends, but this is often the case with persons in the prime of life. The memories and reasoning powers of people, even in the prime of life, differ as the features of each individual differ in a multitude of ten thousand. . Of course, if the mind of the testator no longer grasps the facts in relation to his property, its situation, and the objects of his bounty, there is no mind capable of disposing. (1 Underhill on the Law of Wills, secs. 114-117, inclusive.) In the latter section the author says: “It is safe to say that old age alone, no matter how great, never did and cannot invalidate a will, if from all the evidence it appears that the testator had sufficient capacity.”

In Waddington v. Buzby, 45 N. J. Eq. 173, the court held that deceased, although feeble and eighty-three years old, was capable of making a will. The court said: “She was feeble and forgetful to the extent of persons ordinarily at such an advanced age, and she was nearly blind, so that she could not read, or did so with difficulty. But she could at that time go about the house, knew the members of the family, talked about her business affairs, remembered the amount of her property, and where it was invested, objected to the reduction of the percentage of interest, took part in the routine of the house and the payment of bills, and conversed with visitors whom she knew. She had been an intelligent woman, but not of very strong will, rather reticent than talkative, and became more silent and absent-minded as she grew old. She was injured by a fall, and failed in physical and mental strength from that time gradually until her death. The op in- *192

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Bluebook (online)
81 P. 534, 147 Cal. 188, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-dole-v-dole-cal-1905.