Fisher v. Security Trust & Savings Bank

259 P. 755, 202 Cal. 205, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 332
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1927
DocketDocket No. L.A. 8906.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 259 P. 755 (Fisher v. Security Trust & Savings Bank) 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
Fisher v. Security Trust & Savings Bank, 259 P. 755, 202 Cal. 205, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 332 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

This is an appeal from an order admitting the will of decedent to probate. The Security Trust and Savings Bank of the city of Los Angeles filed a petition in the superior court of the county of Los Angeles for the probate of the holographic will of Harry C. Fisher, deceased, wherein it was named as executor. Said will was produced subsequent to the issuance of letters of administration to Hart C. Fisher, father of the decedent. The said father opposed the admission to probate of said will, which was dated August 12, 1919, alleging that said *208 Harry C. Fisher was not of sound mind at the time he executed the purported will; that the instrument was not entirely written, dated, and signed in the handwriting of decedent, and that if executed at all by decedent it was procured by the undue influence of Josephine Anderson, his aunt, who was named as a beneficiary therein. At the hearing contestant introduced no evidence whatsoever in support of his charges that the instrument was not entirely written, dated, and signed by the decedent and that it was procured by the undue influence of decedent’s aunt, but relied wholly upon decedent’s unsoundness of mind as a ground of opposition to the admission of the will to probate. The contest being heard by the court without a jury, it found against contestant on all three issues and accordingly decreed that the will was entitled to be admitted to probate and directed that letters testamentary be issued to petitioner.

Contestant asserts that the trial court committed reversible error in refusing to permit him to introduce in evidence the record in a proceeding in the superior court of the county of Los Angeles taken under the provisions of section 2185c of the Political Code, wherein decedent was committed to a state hospital for inebriety for a period of two years commencing June 21, 1917. It is contestant’s contention that the order of commitment was a judicial determination that decedent was of unsound mind on the date of the order; that the presumption is that insanity judicially established continues until restoration to capacity, and that the evidence introduced by petitioner was insufficient to rebut the presumption of incompetency. It is further contended that the court erred in refusing to permit the witnesses offered by contestant to testify as to decedent’s soundness of mind.

The presumption of law is that a person is sane, and the burden is always upon the contestant to show affirmatively by a preponderance of evidence that the testator was of unsound mind at the very time of the execution of the will. (Estate of Perkins, 195 Cal. 699 [235 Pac. 45], and eases therein cited; 26 Cal. Jur. 635.) Evidence of the testator’s mental condition both before and after the execution of the instrument is relevant and admissible for the light that it sheds upon the soundness of his mind at the time of the execution of the will. (Estate of Perkins, supra; *209 In re Wilson, 117 Cal. 262 [49 Pac. 172, 711]; Estate of Barr, 69 Cal. App. 16 [230 Pac. 181].) It appears from the testimony adduced on behalf of proponent, as-well as from that of contestant, that decedent for several years before his death was addicted to the excessive use of alcoholic liquors and possessed confirmed habits of intoxication. Contestant makes no claim that decedent suffered from mental disabilty or unsoundness of mind as the result of any other cause or condition. Where the point is made that a decedent was of unsound mind at the time he executed his will because of long use of alcoholic liquors, evidence of such use both before and after the execution of the will and of the effect thereof upon his mind is admissible in so far as it tends to reveal his mental condition at the time of the execution of the will. The intemperate use of alcoholic beverages, if continued for a sufficient length of time, may destroy testamentary capacity. Nevertheless, in the absence of proof that the intemperate use has actually destroyed testamentary capacity, no presumption will be indulged, however long continued the habit is shown to have been, that it has thus been destroyed.

Contestant offered in evidence the records in a proceeding in the superior court of the county of Los Angeles in which decedent was committed to a state hospital for a period of two years commencing June 21, 1917, in pursuance of the provisions of section 2185c of the Political Code. The trial court ruled that such record was inadmissible, on the theory that it related to decedent’s condition at a time too remote from the date of the execution of the will, in 1919, and on the further ground that a commitment for inebriety is not an adjudication of mental incompetency. Section 2185c of the Political Code provides for the arrest and commitment to a state hospital by the judge of the superior court, after an examination and hearing in open court, of persons who are “so far addicted to the intemperate use of narcotics or stimulants as to have lost the power of self-control” or who are “subject to dipsomania or inebriety.” Where a claim is made that an excessive addiction to alcoholic liquors for a period of years preceding the execution of the will has destroyed a testator’s mental powers, we are of the opinion that the record of a commitment under section 2185c is admissible in proof of the

*210 intemperate use of such liquors, and the fact that the acts of intemperance for which the commitment was made took place at a period two years before the execution of the will does not render the record inadmissible on the theory that the acts therein recited are too remote to be weighed as evidence. The commitment in such cases is based on a determination that the subject is one who, when under the influence of liquor, loses the power of self-control, and that he is so frequently in such a condition as to require confinement. It is not, however, even prima facie evidence that the use of alcoholic liquors has caused a permanent impairment of the mental faculties and a loss of self-control which persists after the temporary effects of the liquor have passed away, nor will it be presumed from the fact that the subject of the commitment was a victim of the liquor habit at the time of the commitment that such habit persisted thereafter. It is only in those cases where the mental disease has become settled that the mental disorder is presumed to continue.

If it be conceded that the record of the commitment proceedings was admissible in the instant case, its exclusion did not prejudice contestant’s case and does not constitute reversible error, for giving the fullest effect possible to said record and to the evidence introduced by contestant as to testator ’s indulgence in the excessive use of alcoholic stimulants and to the evidence which, it is charged, was erroneously excluded, the proof would be wholly insufficient as a matter of law to sustain a finding of mental incompetency. Practically all of the facts as to the effect of the inordinate use of alcoholic liquors upon decedent were shown in evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 P. 755, 202 Cal. 205, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-security-trust-savings-bank-cal-1927.