Harvey v. Knapp

170 N.E. 75, 270 Mass. 354, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1029
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 170 N.E. 75 (Harvey v. Knapp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harvey v. Knapp, 170 N.E. 75, 270 Mass. 354, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1029 (Mass. 1930).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying a motion to frame issues to be tried by a jury, upon a petition for the allowance of an instrument purporting to be the last will of Addie L. J. French. The motion was filed by the respondent, Fannie B. Knapp, a sister of the decedent, and her only heir at law. The issues presented by the motion are (1) whether the instrument purporting to be the last will of Addie L. J. French was executed according to law; (2) was she at the time of the execution of the alleged will of sound mind; and (3) was the execution of the alleged will procured by the fraud or undue influence of one Mary Garner.

The case was heard upon statements made by counsel for the contestant and for the petitioner, respectively, as to the nature of the evidence each expected to be able to present. A stenographer was appointed under the provisions of G. L. c. 215, § 18, as amended. The motion was denied by the judge of probate, and the case is before us on an appeal from the denial of the motion. There is nothing in the statements made to show that the instrument was not legally executed and that issue need not be further dealt with.

Upon the issue of the mental capacity of the deceased to execute the alleged will, counsel for the contestant stated as follows: The decedent was sixty-eight years of age on December 5, 1928, the day the alleged will was executed. For about a year and a half prior to that time she had been afflicted with cancer without her knowledge, and when the instrument was executed the disease was in an advanced stage. On December 3, 1928, she was operated on for gall stones by Dr. Gardner, a witness to the will which was executed two days later. Dr. Gardner had not seen her before he was called to operate. The operation disclosed that she suffered from cancer. For about thirty years she had had a mental disorder and insane delusions against her sister, the contestant, and such delusions continued up to the time of her death, and would be shown by letters written by her. A condition of dementia praecox would be shown by the testimony of two experts on mental [357]*357diseases, in whose opinion the delusion respecting her sister was formed nearly thirty years ago and existed at the time the alleged will was executed. The contestant proposed to show that an uncle of the decedent was committed to an insane hospital in 1917. The judge ruled that unless insanity could be traced to a common ancestor, such evidence would not be competent. Counsel for the contestant also relied on statements written in a diary kept by the decedent’s husband in the year 1910, and contended that the decedent was not then of sound mind; that she was a very nervous woman and had attacks of nervousness which caused vomiting; that she was not willing to do what her doctor directed, and that such attitude was one of the symptoms of dementia praecox. The contestant produced an abstract from a record of a hospital where the decedent was a patient in 1910, in which the diagnosis was given as “neurasthenia”; her illness was described as worry over trivial matters, lack of sleep and poor appetite, irritability and physical fatigue without adequate reason, and that she was in a state of absolute dejection. The physical examination was as follows: “A well-nourished individual and perfectly normal in all organs, etc.”

Counsel further stated: The will was made about a quarter to seven o’clock on December 5, 1928. At about four-thirty o’clock on that day the deceased had a severe hemorrhage and vomited a large amount of a reddish fluid, and was so much worse that the superintendent of the hospital injected five grains of caffein under the patient’s skin. At five o’clock her pulse was one hundred twenty, very weak and irregular, and Dr. Gardner arrived about half an hour later and gave her subcutaneously a quarter of a grain of morphine; at six o’clock she was given a strong heart stimulant. Two medical experts would testify that when the will was made at a quarter before seven that night, the patient, according to the hospital record and bedside notes, was suffering from shock.

The record shows that the alleged will was executed at the Lowell Corporation Hospital; that Dr. Varney, the attending physician, Dr. Gardner, who performed the operation, [358]*358and the decedent’s nurse were all present, and that Dr. Gardner, the decedent’s nurse and another nurse were witnesses to the will.

Counsel for the proponent stated as follows: Both Dr. Varney and Dr. Gardner would testify that the deceased was of sound mind when the will was made, both had expressed that opinion to the attorney who drafted the will immediately before it was prepared to be signed and witnessed, and Dr. Gardner had testified in the Probate Court in proof of the will that the decedent was of sound mind at the time of its execution. Dr. Varney began treating Mrs. French in the month of August before her death, and treated her continuously during that season and called at her house probably every other day during that time. He stated her general health was excellent, that the only complaint she had was with reference to her stomach, and said, “There is absolutely no question about the condition of her mind.” He would testify there was nothing in her physical condition which would in any way tend to weaken or enfeeble her mind. The attorney who drafted the instrument had stated the conversation which he had with Mrs. French as to the disposition of her property, and had said she gave him explicit directions respecting her wishes. He was present while the instrument was executed by her and signed by the witnesses. His statement tended to show that the deceased was of sound mind.

Upon the statements of counsel as to what the contestant expected to prove respecting the mental capacity of the decedent to make a will, there is no presentation of facts upon which to found a reasonable hope for a result favorable to the party requesting the framing of an issue upon that question. Fuller v. Sylvia, 240 Mass. 49, 53. Johnson v. Talbot, 255 Mass. 155. Union Trust Co. of Springfield v. Magenis, 259 Mass. 409. Old Colony Trust Co. v. Landers, 262 Mass. 268. McIntosh v. McIntosh, 263 Mass. 315. Brackett v. Harris, 263 Mass. 334. Taylor v. Callahan, 265 Mass. 582. Swift v. Charest, 268 Mass. 47. The case is distinguishable from New England Trust Co. v. Folsom, 268 Mass. 342, where the decedent’s family physician testified [359]*359that she was not of sound mind, and there was other testimony to the same effect.

The decedent died on December 6, 1928, leaving an estate of about $72,000. By her will Mary Garner was given $20,000 and also the decedent’s household furniture and certain personal effects; she was also named as the sole residuary legatee. A gift of $1,000 was made to the contestant. A gift of $10,000 was made to the Worcester Polytechnic Institute, “the same to be expended for the same purposes as the donation hereintoforé given to said Institute by my said deceased husband.”

Upon the issue of undue influence, which the contestant contends was practised by Mary Garner, who had been a domestic nurse, it appears that the latter was not related to the decedent, but they had been acquainted for at least two years before the decedent’s death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 N.E. 75, 270 Mass. 354, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-v-knapp-mass-1930.