Estate of Tibbetts

69 P. 978, 137 Cal. 123, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 512
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 5, 1902
DocketS.F. No. 2594.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 69 P. 978 (Estate of Tibbetts) 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 Tibbetts, 69 P. 978, 137 Cal. 123, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 512 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

McFARLAND, J.

This is a contest of the will of Clara L. Tibbetts, deceased. Her mother, Sarah A. Dyer, is the proponent, and John C. Tibbetts, the surviving husband of the deceased, is the contestant. The question was whether or not the will was the result of the undue influence of the mother, and of the sisters of the deceased, Mary R. Dyer and Minnie G. Trumbley, and of her half-brother, Fred L. Stevens, or any of them. This question was submitted to a jury as a special issue. The jury answered in the affirmative, and judgment was rendered denying the probate of the will on the ground of the alleged undue influence. The proponent appeals from the judgment and from an order denying a new trial. The main contention of appellant is, that there is not sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in finding the fact of undue influence. The case is undoubtedly a very close one, when considered in the light of former decisions of this court cited by appellant, and particularly the decisions in Estate of McDevitt, 95 Cal. 17; Estate of Langford, 108 Cal. 608; and Estate of Wilson, 117 Cal. 269,—all of which cases were beyond doubt correctly decided, and rightly declare the law touching the subject of the contest of wills. But, after mature consideration of the case at bar, we have reached the conclusion that the evidence was not so entirely insufficient to support the finding *125 of undue influence as to warrant us in disturbing the verdict. The verdict might with propriety have been the other way; but we cannot say that it was entirely outside the legitimate province of the jury.

The facts here are, in important particulars, different from those in the cases above cited. In the McDevitt case it appeared, among other things, that there was no evidence that “the subject of the testamentary disposition of his property was ever mentioned to the brother Andrew, ’ ’ who was charged with the undue influence, or that the latter knew of the execution of the will until after the death of the testator. The will in that case, after its execution, “was taken away by the attorney, and there was no proof that any member of Andrew’s family knew of it.” In the Langford case the testator, when he concluded to make his will, went, two or three weeks prior to its execution, “entirely alone to his attorneys,” talked his business affairs over with them freely and fully, and gave specific directions as to the provisions of the intended will. He called on his attorneys several times before the draft of the will was completed, and then executed it in their law office, in the absence of his wife, who was accused of the undue influence, and three years afterwards he republished it with a codicil. The facts in those two eases connected with the immediate execution of the will were very different from those of the case at bar. In the Wilson case the only point decided was in relation to the mental soundness of the testatrix when she made the will.

In the case at bar, as we affirm the judgment, it is not necessary to state the evidence with much detail; but as it is contended that.this case is within the cases above cited, we will notice the general features of the present case. The deceased and the respondent were married at Santa Crux, California, on April 15, 1897. He was seventy years old, and she thirty. They immediately went to Chicago, Illinois, and remained there a year, and then returned to Santa Cruz, arriving there in the latter part of April, 1898, where they continued to reside until her death on February 3,1900. The will in question was executed on May- 31, 1899. The relations between them were, beyond doubt, pleasant and affectionate until after their return to Santa Cruz. While they were in Chicago he conveyed to her some real property there, worth about ten thousand *126 dollars, and she at the time of this conveyance, and before it was executed, promised to make a will devising it to him, so that in the event, of her death before his it would go back to him; and she did make such will. The property devised in the will which is here contested is the property which the respondent conveyed to the deceased in Chicago. Two or three months after their return to Santa Cruz unpleasantness and hostility arose between the mother and sisters and brother of the deceased, on the one side, and the respondent, on the other. As to the cause of this hostility there is a sharp conflict of evidence,—the mother claiming that the deceased, who was in bad health, was not properly cared for by the respondent, that he would not employ a physician, that she had too much work to do, etc., and that these things caused the unpleasantness. Respondent denied these charges, and asserted that the mother unduly interfered with his domestic affairs, and said and did things calculated to prejudice his wife against him: As to these matters the jury, no doubt, found for the respondent, and the evidence being fairly conflicting their finding cannot be disturbed. He said that, in the presence of his wife, the mother said many unpleasant and harsh things to him: that he was a “nonentity”; that “my wife ought not to stay with me”; that “my wife owned one half of the home, and that she [Mrs. Dyer] had as good a right there as I had; and that she would set her boys on me, and would have me tarred and feathered, or the boys would have me tarred and feathered. ’ ’ He also testified that in the first part of December, 1898, Mrs. Dyer and the said Stevens came to his house; that the latter would not shake hands with him, and said “he had heard of the conversation I had had with his mother, and did not want anything to do with me, that he came to my house because he wanted to, that he would come to my house when he wanted to, and stay as long as he pleased and would go when he got ready. Mrs. Dyer said, ‘You ought to have your mug smashed.’ Neither Mrs. Dyer nor Fred Stevens have been in my house since that time. This conversation was in the parlor, in the presence of my wife.”

There was evidence to support a belief by the jury that the deceased was always affectionately attached to her husband, notwithstanding the hostility of her family, and that the latter endeavored to destroy her affection for him. A witness said *127 that in August or September, 1898, she was at Mrs. Dyer’s home with Mrs. Tibbetts, when the sisters were present, and testified as follows: “They were talking about the trouble between Mr. and Mrs. Tibbetts; thought she ought to leave him; thought she could have his property; one suggested that she send back to Chicago and get her share of the rents. Mrs. Tibbetts replied that the rents would not support her. Then one of them suggested that she should get a divorce. On the ivay home from Dyer’s Mrs. Tibbetts said she loved her home and didn’t want to leave.” The same witness further testified as follows: “In the month of July, 1899, [the second month after the execution of the will,] I had a conversation with Mrs. Dyer at Olive Springs. She said that she did not Avant Mr. Tibbetts to come back to Mrs. Tibbetts any more; that she had cured her up three times and was tired of it. Mrs. Tibbetts told me at that time Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
69 P. 978, 137 Cal. 123, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-tibbetts-cal-1902.