Hoban v. Campau

17 N.W. 797, 52 Mich. 346, 1883 Mich. LEXIS 503
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 17 N.W. 797 (Hoban v. Campau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoban v. Campau, 17 N.W. 797, 52 Mich. 346, 1883 Mich. LEXIS 503 (Mich. 1883).

Opinion

Cooney, J.

The writ of error in this case brings before the Court the proceedings had in the circuit court for the county of Wayne on the probate of the will of Emilie Campau, late of the city of Detroit, who had died March 25, 1881. The will with a codicil thereto had been duly probated in the probate court for Wayne county, and the contestants had appealed to the circuit court, assigning as the sole reason for appeal, that the said will was obtained by undue influence exercised upon said testatrix.” The trial in the circuit court occupied the attention of that court for seventeen days, and resulted in a verdict sustaining the will. The contestants assigtffor error eighty-seven rulings on the admission of evidence, twenty-five refusals to instruct the jury as requested, and twenty-four instructions actually given or remarks upon the evidence. Most of the exceptions appear to be relied upon in this Court, and will be considered so far as they seem to have importance.

The trial judge in his charge to the jury gave a personal history of Miss Campau, as it was disclosed by the evidence, and as this summary was objected to in some few particulars only, it may be assumed to have been in other particulars correct, and it is accepted as such in the statement which follows. It appears from this that Miss Campau was a daughter of Barnabas Campau, Senior, an old French resident of Detroit, who died about the year 1845 leaving a considerable estate which he divided by will equally among his four children, Alexander M., Barnabas, Jr., Emilie and Angelique. The mother, who was of another French family, the Cicottes, had died before he did, and Angelique was married to Charles Piquette. At an early day, but exactly when does not appear, Emilie went to reside with her sister Mrs. Piquette, and continued to reside with her after the father’s death until the sister herself died as hereinafter stated. Two boys named John and Charles L., were born to Mrs. Piquette after her father’s death, and two girls, [349]*349Elise and Emilie. Mrs. Piquette’s husband appears to have died early : the date is not important.

Miss Campau is described by the witnesses as a feeble and somewhat sickly person from her earliest days, but the full significance of these terms, as they make use of them, it is difficult to gather. It is plain, however, that as a child she was not as strong as an ordinary child of her age, and that as a woman she was not as strong as an ordinary woman of her age. She was tall, and perhaps her somewhat slender and attenuated form, together with the fact that she was pale and sallow, may have given the impression that she was sickly, and sickly would perhaps describe her appearance to a person using ordinary language; but she apparently was not in general sick in the ordinary sense of the term. At the same time she was not so strong physically as other persons commonly are.

Miss Campau went to school as other children did. Witnesses speak of having been in school with her from 1825 to 1828, when she appears to have been from sixteen to nineteen years of age. She learned to read and write, but how much more she learned we are not informed. The intimations in the evidence are that she was backward in her studies, and that she was favored somewhat by her teacher on account of her poor health. All the evidence tends to show that she was timid and shy in the extreme, and hesitated to meet strangers, and this continued to some extent through life. One of the witnesses for the contestants, who perhaps knew as much of her as any one except the immediate family of her sister, describes her as a recluse who did not seem inclined to talk much and did not talk much and did not visit, or go into society, or attend public entertainments. She was a pious lady, and devoted to her church, which was the Catholic.

The Piquettes, together with Miss Campau,' lived in Springwells, adjoining Detroit, a number of years; after-wards they moved into Detroit and occupied a house on Jefferson avenue next to that of Judge Moran, where they lived ten or twelve years. They then moved across the way [350]*350into a house known as the Beattie or Field House. In 1870 Elise Piquette was married to Major Mitchell of the United States army, and for a time lived with him at Fort Washington, but he resigned his commission after a time, and brought his wife to Detroit, where he entered upon the sti;dy of the law occupying while doing so an office adjoining that of Mr. Levi L. Barbour who will be further mentioned hereafter.

In 1872 Mrs. Piquette died. In 1871 Emilie Piquette went to Europe under the protection of Governor Baldwin, expecting to meet a lady friend who was then there. In the spring of 1875 Major Mitchell was advised by his physician to take a trip to Europe for his health, and he and his wife decided immediately to go. When this decision was communicated to Miss Campau, she said at once, “ Why can I not go with you ? ” When Mrs. Mitchell went to Miss Campau’s rooms a day or two later, she found that preparations by her aunt to accompany them were already under way. Before this time John Piquette had died, and Charles L. Piquette had married the lady who is now one of the contestants, and had taken his wife to Europe. This last event seems to have taken place in May, 1871, and Miss Campau, if she had remained at home, would have been unattended by any of the family.

Major Mitchell and his wife, (she being one of the proponents of the will) left for Europe in March, 1875, taking with them their two children. Miss Campau went with them, taking along Mrs. Duggan as attendant and companion. They landed in Liverpool, where they remained a few days for rest, and where Miss Campau and Mrs. Duggan drove about together to see what they could see from the carriage. They then went on to London, where they remained several days, and from there they went to Paris. In Paris they met Emilie and her friend who had apartments together, while the Mitchells and Miss Campau had apartments in another part of the city. There Miss Campau remained until April, 1876, and Mrs. Mitchell also most of the time, though she seems to have made a visit in the mean time to Switzerland and Italy.

[351]*351While the Mitchells and Miss Campau were on their way to Europe, Charles L. Piquette and his wife passed them on the ocean, returning. In the fall of that year Charles and his wife went back, and joined the Mitchells and Miss Campau in Paris the latter part of December. In April the Mitchells and Miss Campau returned to Detroit, leaving Charles and his wife in Paris, where they remained until July or August following, when Charles died, and his wife immediately returned to Detroit with his body. Two children had been born to Charles previous to his death, only •one of whom survived him. Another was born the following December.

In July, 1876, Miss Campau had a somewhat serious illness, and was attended for a number of days by Dr. Morse Stewart. About that time she determined to make her will which she seems to have had in contemplation before, and to have spoken of her intention to some persons. Mr. Levi L. Barbour had transacted some business for the Mitchells before they went abroad and while they were absent, and she sent for him to consult him on the subject. Previous to this time Mr. William B. Moran had been acting for Miss Campau, and her papers were in his hands; but Miss Campau with the aid of maps and memoranda was able to give descriptions of her property, and after several conversations a will was drafted which was afterwards copied and executed.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Briner's Estate
266 N.W. 394 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1936)
In Re Laliberte's Estate
262 N.W. 278 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1935)
Raymond v. Malacos
272 Mich. 424 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1935)
Estate of Whitworth
294 P. 84 (California Court of Appeal, 1930)
Soules v. Soules
168 N.W. 413 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1918)
Hirsh v. Twyford
1913 OK 755 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1913)
Jersey v. Jersey
110 N.W. 54 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1906)
President, Etc., of Bowdoin College v. Merritt
75 F. 480 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California, 1896)
Stribley v. Welz
4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 520 (Hamilton Circuit Court, 1894)
Stribley v. Welz
8 Ohio C.C. 571 (Ohio Circuit Courts, 1894)
In re Probate of the Will of Birdsall
2 Connoly 433 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1890)
Spratt v. Spratt
43 N.W. 627 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1889)
In re Bull
2 N.Y.S. 52 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1888)
Chrisman v. Cherisman
18 P. 6 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 N.W. 797, 52 Mich. 346, 1883 Mich. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoban-v-campau-mich-1883.