Hall v. Burpee

168 S.E. 39, 176 Ga. 270, 1933 Ga. LEXIS 59
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 11, 1933
DocketNo. 9145
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 168 S.E. 39 (Hall v. Burpee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Burpee, 168 S.E. 39, 176 Ga. 270, 1933 Ga. LEXIS 59 (Ga. 1933).

Opinion

Beck, P. J.

H. A. Hall, named as executor in the will of Miss Dorothy Burpee, offered to probate the will in solemn form in the court of ordinary of Coweta County. S. T. Burpee, alleging himself to be an heir at law of the testatrix, filed his caveat to the application for probate. The will was admitted to probate in solemn form, and an appeal was taken. In the superior court the caveator amended his caveat and added thereto the following:

“1. At the time of making and executing said pretended will and codicil said Miss Dorothy Burpee was afflicted with monomania against her brother, this caveator, she insanely supposing and be[274]*274lieving that he had endeavored and intended to endeavor to kill her or do her great bodily harm or to burn or destroy her property, and further insanely supposing and believing that since marriage was wrong-, and that since caveator alone of the children of her parents had married, he had ceased to be a member of her family or her brother, ceased to be entitled to treatment and affection as a kinsman and a brother, all of which were insane delusions constituting monomania against caveator, and were produced by and the result of said monomania, and the offspring of a diseased and disordered mind and intellect, and thereby deprived her of testamentary capacity towards her brother at time of making and executing said alleged will and codicil. Said' insane delusions she insanely conceived to exist when they had no actual existence whatsoever, and she was incapable of being reasoned permanently out of said conception, and said insane delusions sprang up spontaneously in the mind of Miss Dorothy Burpee, and were not the result of evidence of any kind and had no foundation in fact, but sprang from a diseased condition of her intellect. For the caveator never at any time nor in any manner whatsoever endeavored or sought in the slightest way or intended to endeavor to injure or harm, bodily or otherwise, his said afflicted sister, or to burn or otherwise destroy or injure or interfere with any of her property, nor ever conceived any such idea. Nor had caveator ceased to be a member of her family or entitled to treatment, affection, and claims as such, but was her only brother and heir at law at time of making said pretended will and codicil. With an affectionate sympathy and pitying love of a natural and devoted brother, he at all times loved her and pitied her in her mental afflictions. Said insane delusions were the cause of the making and execution of said pretended will and codicil, which pretended will and codicil were the result of said insane delusions.

“2. For that Miss Dorothy Burpee executed said pretended will and codicil under a mistake of fact as to the conduct of caveator, the sole heir at law of deceased, in this, that she supposed and believed that caveator had endeavored and attempted, and intended to endeavor and attempt to kill her or do her great bodily harm or to burn or destroy her property; whereas caveator was totally innocent of such conduct or such idea, and was at all times devoted and forbearing and respectful and forgiving towards his sister, [275]*275Miss Dorotliy Burpee. While she was in this condition of mistake of fact, and while she was laboring under and believing in said mistake of fact, said pretended will and codicil were made and executed as a result of said mistake of fact. Said mistake of fact had no foundation whatsoever in fact.”

The propounder demurred on the grounds (1) that paragraph 1 of the caveat states merely a conclusion of the pleader; (2) that paragraph 2 of the caveat does not set forth facts upon which' the monomania and insane delusion are .based, etc.; (3) that paragraph 3 merely states the conclusion of the pleader, etc.; and (4) that the copy of the codicil clearly and distinctly sets forth the grounds upon which the testatrix left one dollar only to the caveator, etc. The court rendered the following judgment: “ . . Paragraphs 1 and 4 of the above demurrer are hereby overruled. Said demurrer is also overruled in so far as same refers to the charges in said caveat as amended, referring to monomania and insane delusions. Said demurrer is sustained in so far as same refers to the allegations of said caveat, as amended, that refer to any mistakes of fact as being grounds or reasons why caveat should be sustained and the probate of said will denied, and the grounds of said caveat as amended, setting out said alleged mistakes of fact, are hereby stricken.” To this judgment the propounder excepted.

The judgment on the demurrer was not erroneous as against the propounder. The allegations in the caveat relating to insanity of the testatrix were sufficient, and the allegations of monomania were also sufficient to withstand the demurrer. In Stephens v. Hughey, 174 Ga. 561 (162 S. E. 915), the following is found in the opinion: “The fourth ground of caveat alleges that ‘at the time of the making and executing of said pretended will said Paul T. Hughey was not of sound and disposing mind; that he did not execute the said pretended will freely and voluntarily, but was moved thereto by the undue influence,’ etc. . . This ground was demurred to upon the ground that these statements are ‘mere conclusions of the pleader and are insufficient . . to require defendant to probate said will in solemn form, because the grounds alleged therein are insufficient to raise any grounds of the illegality of said will or to base a finding or adjudication by the court that the will probated in common form is not the will of the said Paul T. Hughey.’ As this demurrer goes to the entire ground, the [276]*276court properly overruled it, because the allegation that at the time of making and executing the will Paul T. Hughey was not of sound and disposing mind and memory was sufficient to raise the question of devisavit vel non.” The allegations as to the testatrix being afflicted with monomania were sufficient to withstand the contention that they stated only conclusions of the pleader, and not facts. The ground of caveat setting up the contention that the testatrix was afflicted with monomania as related to the caveator is quoted in the first part of this opinion. Heading of this paragraph shows that the facts were sufficiently set forth.

The ruling in headnote 2 requires no elaboration.

Exception is taken to the refusal of a request to charge the jury as follows: “The wills executed in 1909 by each the testatrix and her two brothers, George T. 'Burpee and T. Glenn Burpee, have been introduced in evidence, and the wills of T. Glenn Burpee and the testatrix, Dorothy Burpee, made in 1922, have all been introduced for the purpose of showing a fixed purpose and intention on the part of . the testatrix at the time of their execution, and to show in each and all of said wills by the testatrix and her brothers the caveator had been left nothing; and I charge you that this evidence has been admitted for the purpose of showing, if it does show, that the testatrix at the time the former wills were made had a fixed intention of leaving out the caveator from any participation in her estate, and carried out the same intention in the execution of her will made on the first day of October, 1925, and in her codicil on the 19th day of February, 1929.” There is no fact alleged in connection with this ground to show for what purpose the evidence referred to was admitted, or that it illustrated in any way or supported in any way the contention of the movant here.

The rulings stated in headnotes 4 and 5 need not be elaborated.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.E. 39, 176 Ga. 270, 1933 Ga. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-burpee-ga-1933.