Greenwood v. Cline

7 Or. 17
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 7 Or. 17 (Greenwood v. Cline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenwood v. Cline, 7 Or. 17 (Or. 1879).

Opinion

By the Court,

Prim, J.:

This suit was brought in the county court of Marion county, to set aside a will made by Mrs. Elizabeth Greenwood, on the ground that she was of unsound mind when the will was executed, and that it was procured through fraud and undue influence Of the respondents, Mary C. Cline and her daughter, Mrs. Olive Newsom. The will was executed on the twelfth day of October, 1872, and the testatrix died on August 9, 1875. She was sixty-two years of age at the date of the will, and sixty-four when she died. At the time the will was made she had three children living: Mrs. Cline, the eldest, about forty-four years of age; Mrs. Eliza Smith, thirty-seven years of age; and John W. Greenwood, the youngest of the family living, about thirty-five years of age. The will bequeathed to Eliza and William, the appellants, one hundred dollars each, and to Olive Newsom, the granddaughter of the testatrix, eighty acres of [19]*19land, and the residue of the estate to Mrs. Mary Cline. The whole estate was worth, at that time, about twenty-six thousand dollars. Shortly after the death of the testatrix the will was duly admitted to probate, in common form, and the executors having duly qualified proceeded to administer upon said estate, and thereafter, in August, 1876, made their report for final settlement, after giving the usual notice required by law. Thereupon appellants filed their petition, setting forth that said testatrix at the time of making her said will was not of sound mind. That in consequence of old age and other causes her mind was seriously impaired and shattered, her memory destroyed, and that she was incapable of exercising any judgment whatever. That her mental condition was such that she was easily persuaded in her course of conduct; and that her attempt to make and execute the will and dispose of her estate in the manner therein provided, was the result of undue influence exercised upon her by the said Mary Cline and Olive Newsom, or other parties acting for them or in their interest, and that • the same was not in fact the will of said Elizabeth J. Greenwood. Respondents joined issue, denying all the above charges, and affirming the capacity and competency of the testatrix. All the testimony except two depositions having been taken orally before the county court and reported in short-hand, the cause was submitted and decided in favor of the contestants — that court holding that notwithstanding the testatrix had testamentary capacity, the will was executed under undue influence. The cause was then appealed to the circuit court. Upon a hearing before that court the judgment of the county court was reversed. Whereupon the contestants have appealed to this court.

In examining the testimony bearing upon the mental condition of the testatrix during the last years of her life, embracing the time at which the will was executed, it appeals that in 1866 the testatrix had a severe attack of paralysis, from the effects of which she never fully recovered. That her memory became defective; that she could not tell who was working for her; that she would lease a piece of land one day and the next day could not remember it, and would [20]*20ask t-lie same questions over repeatedly at short intervals. Mr. Bedfield, íd his valuable work on wills, pp. 94 and 95,' in speaking of this subject, says: “The loss of memory is one of the earliest and surest indications of the approach of mental infirmity.”

Dr. Cusió, a witness, says that sometimes the testatrix was very despondent, and in many respects different from the majority of people; that at times there was some degree of mental obliquity. Dr. Peyton, a witness, who met her frequently while attending upon her late husband and her youngest son in their last sickness, says: “Her condition seemed to be that of impaired mental powers.” He also states that her husband directed his attention to the fact that her mind was not what it had been. Sarah Buxton, another witness, says of her: “Her eyes had a dead expression, and her manner was sometimes like that of an intoxicated person.” J. M. Hagey, a witness, says that “he noticed her acting very peculiar ” in her conversations; that she would stop before she had completed the remarks she was making, and “ never resume the subject or refer to it again.” He noticed this peculiarity about 1872. Hardin McAllister, a witness, described her as absent-minded. He noticed her on one occasion, after she was attacked by paralysis, that while lying in bed she would imitate the actions of a person examining and breaking something in pieces which she held in her hand, pretending that she had a piece of quartz, which she was breaking up and examining for gold. This Avitness also testifies as to her disposition to yield her opinion to those Avith whom she talked. He says she was in the habit of talking a great deal about stock; and if she thought a great deal of a certain horse, and you Avould say another horse Avas a finer one, she would side with you, and conclude that it was a finer horse. A witness, Caleb Chapman, testifies that on one occasion, Avhile the testatrix was going from Salem to Howell’s Prairie alone,' she became turned around in the road, and was coming back to Salem without knowing it when he met her. Another witness, Mary Sappingfield, describes her as appearing to be “in a kind of worry.” Wilmot Scott, a witness, who [21]*21liad lived at Cline’s awhile, and afterwards stayed with the testatrix, says that the winter he was there she didn’t appear to ever laugh or be cheerful; that she did not pay any attention to “her housework or anything that was going on.” She told witness it “was from the effect of her head; that her head was hurt from the effect of a buggy running down hill with her.” This witness also testifies that she said: “They all told her that she (the testatrix) was not right.” Delos Jefferson, another witness, testifies that about the year 1870 Mrs. Cline, the principal beneficiary under the will, told him that her mother’s mind was not quite clear.

These are brief references to the testimony of such witnesses as were old neighbors and intimate acquaintances of the testatrix. Many of them are aged persons, and had been intimately acquainted with her for thirty years. Their opinions in relation to the mental condition of the testatrix are of paramount importance, because they are accompanied with a statement of the facts upon which they are founded. They hare undertaken to relate the conduct, manners, bearing, conversation, appearance and acts of the testatrix, from which their impressions of her mental unsoundness were formed; and such opinions are entitled to more weight than the mere opinion of' witnesses who do not give the facts upon which their opinions are based.

Mr. Nedfield says that “testimony to establish partial or general insanity should come, as far as practicable, from those persons who have had extensive opportunity to observe the conduct, habits and mental peculiarities of the person whose mental peculiarities are brought in question, extending over a considerable length of time and reaching back to a period anterior to the date of the malady.” (1 Ned. on Wills, 136, 137.)

The respondents, to rebut the evidence heretofore ténding to show the mental unsoundness of the testatrix, have introduced another class of witnesses, among whom are many of the leading business men of the city of Salem, who had had some acquaintance with the testatrix and occasional business transactions with her. They are men, not only of intelligence but of high standing and character, and [22]*22their evidence is entitled to consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Or. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwood-v-cline-or-1879.