Gaffney v. Coffey

124 A. 788, 81 N.H. 300, 1924 N.H. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 6, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 124 A. 788 (Gaffney v. Coffey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaffney v. Coffey, 124 A. 788, 81 N.H. 300, 1924 N.H. LEXIS 37 (N.H. 1924).

Opinion

Snow, J.

It is conceded that the testatrix had sufficient mental capacity to make a will and that the will was executed with legal *302 formality. The single contention of the appelant is that the will was the product of undue influence exerted over the testatrix by the son. The appelee, on the other hand, claims that the will was the voluntary act of the mother, prompted only by her own dissatisfaction with Mamie’s conduct in accepting the attentions of Pappachristo. Such displeasure on the part of the mother is conceded. The sole question, therefore, raised by the appelee’s motion for a directed verdict is whether there was substantial evidence from which the jury could find that the threats and over-persuasion of the. son, rather than the mother’s own displeasure, produced the will. This necessitates an analysis of the appelant’s proofs, considered in the light most favorable to her contention.

The appelant’s evidence tended to show that, beginning in the latter part of 1919, Fred, in the presence of his mother, gave expression to his opposition to Mamie in language and manner calculated to prejudice and to intimidate the mother in respect to the disposition of her property if his sister should persist in her attachment for Pappachristo. On this phase of the case the evidence of the appelant and her witnesses was in substance as follows: that in August or September, 1919, Fred said to Mamie in the presence of her mother, “If you ever have anything to do with that damn Greek you will never get a cent of my father’s money for that damn Greek to spend”; that at the same time he said to the mother, “Now, if she is going to keep company with this Greek, you must do something and do it quick, because he is never going to have a cent of my father’s money”; that in December, 1919, during an altercation with Mamie as to whether she was making the Greek a Christmas present, he slapped his sister in the face, blackening her eye, called her by a vile name and pursued her to the kitchen, causing the mother to fall on the stove; that on January 1, 1920, while partially under the influence of liquor, he told them with an oath that if Mamie didn’t stop keeping company with the Greek they would both have to get out, that he wasn’t going to stand it any longer; that he said to his mother, “You are hiding up this girl, and she is going out with this damn Greek all the time, and it has got to be stopped or else I won’t keep you in this house; and if you don’t act as I want you to act you will have to get out of this house”; that he threatened to kill Mamie and the Greek if ° he should ever meet them together, and accompanied such threats by conduct tending to terrify the mother; that nearly every morning following January, 1920, he inquired of his mother before leaving *303 for Ms office, “Well, have you done anytMng about changing that will yet?” and, upon an evasive reply from the mother, he would say, “Well, I want you to change it and change it damn quick, too”; that like threats were repeated nearly every day until May 30 following; that with the apparent purpose of intimidating the mother, he claimed to be suffering from the nervous strain occasioned by Mamie’s conduct and threatened to go to a sanatorium; that on May 30 upon the return of the mother and sister from mass he met them upon their entrance at the home and said, “Now, you stand just where you are. . . . Now, one of you is just as bad as the other one. You are shielding her and hiding her up long enough, and she is keeping company with this damn Greek, and the two of you must get right out”; that when Mamie, following his direction, left the house, he followed- her to the door and calling her by a vile name said, “Now you go, . . . and don’t you ever come back to this house again”; that the next forenoon, May 31, the mother called on her brother-in-law to come over to console Fred, saying that she was afraid he would commit suicide, and that he had threatened her; that the - brother-in-law found Fred walking the corridor with his hands at his head, saying, “Oh, dear, what shall I do? Mother, Mamie will never come into this house again. Mother, if you die in the morning, Mamie can’t come in here and look at you.” The will was made the forenoon of the following day. That such conduct and threats were of a character calculated to produce the change made in the will is apparent.

The state of mind of the mother as réspects Mamie’s conduct, according to -appelant’s evidence, was not vindictive in character, but was one of sorrow, of regret at losing the companionship of her daughter, and of worry for the hardship to Mamie in assuming the care of a family of small children. It is evident that a jury might find the appelee’s threats and importunities more potent as a moving cause for the mother’s action than her own displeasure with Mamie’s conduct, and that except for such threats and importunities the testamentary changes would not have been made.

In "weighing the effect of Fred’s threats and importunities on the mother, her situation was material. The mother, Fred and Mamie had been living in intimate physical and mental association. The mother was dependent upon Fred in many ways. He was her adviser and counselor in her business affairs, so far as she had need of one, and attended to the management of her property. Although the home was regarded as the mother’s in the sense that she was *304 the mistress, the house from which he was threatening to drive her was his. Having in mind this situation the effectiveness of Fred’s conduct on the mother is apparent from her statements and bearing coincident therewith. Appelant’s evidence showed that following the episode of January 1, 1920, the mother said to a son-in-law, “What am I going to do?”; “that fellow” (referring to Fred) “has broken my heart; I don’t know what I am going to do, Johnnie. What is going to become of me?”; that in February, 1920, she" said to her niece that he had been raising Cain and raving continually and making life unbearable for her and Mamie; that when Fred threatened to go to a sanatorium, the mother appeared nervous and told Mamie she did not know what she would do if he went away and what would happen to him; that some two weeks later she stated to Mamie, “I have got to do something about my will. He doesn’t let me alone one minute. He never gives me any peace. Now I have got to do something to satisfy him”; that she made inquiries for a tenement, and referring to Mamie and herself, stated, “We don’t know what is going to become of us; he is carrying on something terrible”; that in the forenoon of May 30, the day following Mamie’s departure, the mother went to her niece’s house crying, and told her that Fred had put Mamie out; that on the same-day Fred said to his cousin that his mother- was at home crawling on her hands and knees to him, begging him to look for Mamie and take her back, to find her; that she stated to her son-in-law within two weeks after the execution of the will, “I have been down to make my will. Then I hope' and trust in God . . . that Fred will give me peace.”

It could be found from this evidence that the testatrix, moved by a fear of consequences to the appelee, Mamie and herself, induced in turn by appelee’s excessive importunities and threats, made the will for the sake of peace.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 A. 788, 81 N.H. 300, 1924 N.H. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaffney-v-coffey-nh-1924.