Estate of Teed

247 P.2d 54, 112 Cal. App. 2d 638, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1077
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 11, 1952
DocketCiv. 18937
StatusPublished
Cited by197 cases

This text of 247 P.2d 54 (Estate of Teed) 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 Teed, 247 P.2d 54, 112 Cal. App. 2d 638, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1077 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

DORAN, J.

The judgment herein refused probate to a will of the decedent, Ida Teed, executed on January 25, 1949, -on the -ground of' mental, incompetency. The. decedent, a *640 maiden lady aged about 93 years, died on January 31, 1949. The trial court found that there was no undue influence and no fraud. The appellant Helen Hough is a grandniece of Miss Teeed; appellant Mabel Croy is a niece; appellant Childrens Hospital is a beneficiary under the will of January 25, 1949. Contestants and respondents James Hough and Edith Pazderniek, the decedent’s nephew and neice, claimed as beneficiaries under a previous will dated October 15, 1948.

Appellants’ contention is that the record discloses no substantial evidence “to show that Miss Teed had a mental sickness of such a degree that it incapacitated her from making a valid will.” In regard to mental competency, it is urged that the trial court did not follow principles of law repeatedly laid down by the courts of this state, and that the “uncontroverted evidence affirmatively proves the competency of the testatrix on January 25, 1949.” Conversely, the respondents assert that there is substantial evidence in support of the findings.

It appears from the record that Ida Teed, a Columbia graduate, was a retired school teacher and had been an art instructor in the New York and Los Angeles public school systems. In August of 1948, decedent was admitted to Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles, then being acutely ill from a stomach hemorrhage. According to Dr. Urabec, decedent’s physician, Miss Teed’s condition improved after September, 1948. Likewise, an orthopedic specialist, Dr. Chappel, testified to decedent’s improvement to such an extent that the patient was able to walk. On November 20, 1948, Miss Teed was discharged from the Good Samaritan Hospital and entered Longwood Manor Sanitarium where death occurred on January 31, 1949.

The respondents rely upon the principles enunciated in Estate of Teel, 25 Cal.2d 520 [154 P.2d 384], as follows: “the weight to be accorded to the evidence, and the province of a reviewing court, are the same in a will contest as in any other civil case. ... It is an elementary principle of law, that when a verdict is attacked as being unsupported, the power of the appellate court begins and ends with a determination as to whether there is any substantial evidence, contradicted or uneontradieted, which will support the conclusion reached by the jury.” (Respondents’ italics.) It is appellants’ contention that the “six items of evidence which they (respondents) contend constitute substantial evidence that Miss Teed was incompetent at the time she exe *641 cuted the will,” do not meet the requirement of “substantial” evidence, within the meaning of the above rule.

The items relied upon by respondents as “substantial” evidence of Miss Teed’s mental incompetency, comprise (1), the testimony of Jane Morgan, an acquaintance; (2) decedent’s hospital chart; (3) medical testimony of Dr. J. M. Lacey; (4) testimony in response to a hypothetical question propounded to Dr. Victor Parkin, a psychiatrist; (5) previous wills executed and unexecuted by the decedent; (6) “failure of Ida Teed to know and comprehend the nature and extent of her property on January 25, 1949.” A résumé of this evidence is essential to an understanding of the case. Unless the sum total of these items meets the above requirement, it must be assumed that the trial court’s conclusion was wrong, both in fact and in law.

Jane Morgan testified to having known the decedent for some 18 years, visting Miss Teed periodically, the last conversation being at the sanitarium on January 20, 1949; that the witness found Miss Teed “failing rapidly”; that “she would talk very fast and her breath was very short, and I was fearful she might have a heart attack, so I asked her not to talk. . . . She seemed very excited and she was trying to tell me.something but I couldn’t understand her.” On cross-examination it was brought out that decedent had “difficulty in enunciating,” but the witness thought that “if she knew what she was saying I could have got a drift of what she was trying to tell me regardless of whether she was enunciating clearly or not.” When asked as to “the soundness or unsoundness of the mind of Miss Teed,” the witness replied, “Well, my opinion was her mind was affected. Q. That she was of unsound mind? A. Unsoundly, yes.” The witness did not discuss decedent’s property or relatives, and had “no information with respect to her property or with respect to her relatives.”

Decedent’s hospital chart for January 24, 25 and 26, 1949, is the second item relied on as affording substantial evidence of mental incompetency. The notations for January 24, merely disclose that Miss Teed complained of various pains, was “Up in chair while eating” at 1:30, and shortly thereafter was “Reading paper”; pulse was “regular” and “unchanged,” and respiration “normal.” On January 25, the date when the will in question was executed, the patient *642 was “very nervous at 7 a. m.; after eating breakfast complained of tightness in chest and exhaustion, “wants to read but goes to sleep.” At 4 p. m. the patient was “more comfortable—reading. Dr. TJrabec here. Ate well—visiting nurse while eating.” At 6 p. m., “patient appears improved this p. m.” According to the chart, “Mr. Olson & Mr. Martin” (attorneys) were there after decedent finished lunch at 1 p. m., at which time, according to the attorneys’ testimony, the will was executed after Miss Teed had read and discussed the will, “expressed her desires,” and had remarked, “This Will will certainly make my relatives mad.” The chart indicates that on January 26, the patient was complaining, uncomfortable and nervous, and had “a poor day.” The chart contains no notations concerning Miss Teed’s mental condition.

According to respondents’ brief, “The testimony of Dr. J. M. Lacey definitely shows that decedent was of unsound mind January 25, 1949.” The witness, a physician of 25 years’ experience, specializing in “internal medicine diagnosing,” with six months’ experience in a psychiatric hospital, first met Miss Teed two years before death; had seen decedent professionally on two occasions in September, 1948, at Good Samaritan Hospital, spending a total of approximately two or three hours with the patient. Dr. Lacey gave the patient’s history as including gastrointestinal hemorrhage prior to entering the hospital and a stroke of paralysis about September 1, 1948, with a high degree of arteriosclerosis. Dr. Lacey stated that Miss Teed “seemed to be very much of a crotchety old lady. She was 93 years old, and nothing would please her,” and then expressed an opinion “that anyone with a history that she had . . . never does recover their mental equilibrium, so that their judgment is worth anything.” With this basis, the physician concluded that when the will was executed, Miss Teed “was of unsound mind.”

The fourth item of evidence alleged to constitute substantial proof of Miss Teed’s incompetency is the testimony of Dr. Victor Parkin, a psychiatrist, who had never seen the patient.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 P.2d 54, 112 Cal. App. 2d 638, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-teed-calctapp-1952.