Hughes v. Freeley

144 A. 277, 294 Pa. 391, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 393
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 1, 1928
DocketAppeal, 72
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 A. 277 (Hughes v. Freeley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. Freeley, 144 A. 277, 294 Pa. 391, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 393 (Pa. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Frazer,

This appeal from refusal of the court below to grant plaintiff’s motion for judgment n. o. v. brings before us but one question for determination; namely, does the evidence support the verdict of the jury that Mary F. Hughes, known as the wife of appellant, did not possess testamentary capacity to make the will here in dispute at the time of its execution? The controversy had its inception in an appeal from the decision of the register of wills admitting the writing to probate and praying the orphans’ court to direct a citation to Thomas Hughes, reputed husband of decedent and named in the will as her executor and sole beneficiary, to show cause why the probate should not be set aside and an issue directed to the common pleas to try by jury the following questions of fact; (a) whether or not decedent was at the time of the execution of the will a person of sound mind; (b) whether the will was procured by undue influence practiced by Hughes and others, and (c) whether the writing was the will of decedent. The orphans’ court, after hearing, refused to award an issue on the ground of testamentary capacity, and held the will was executed in accordance with the Wills Act of 1917, but awarded *393 an issue d. v. n. on the ground of undue influence and restraint. Exceptions by contestants to the failure of the court to include the questions excluded were, dismissed and on appeal to this court, Hughes Est., 286 Pa. 466, we held that so much of the decree of the orphans’ court as refused to award an issue to try all three of the questions be reversed and ordered that these three issues be submitted to a jury for determination. In accord with this ruling, the case was subsequently tried in the common pleas upon the issues thus directed and resulted in a verdict against contestants upon the question of the legal execution of the will and undue influence. But on the issue of testamentary capacity the jury reached the conclusion that decedent was not at the time of the execution of the will of sound mind and understanding and of sufficient capacity to make a valid will. A motion for judgment n. o. v. was overruled and this appeal followed.

The four assignments of error submitted are directed against rulings by the court on requests for charge and the rejection of the motion for judgment n. o. v. We need not pass on these specifically, since a discussion of them must be along the same lines as our consideration of the single issue before us, whether there was sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury.

The evidence in the record now before us is substantially the same as that presented at the time the case was here before, with the important addition of clarifying details as to the mental capacity of decedent and the manner in which the will was executed. We may say here at the start that there hangs over the entire affair of this will an air of things deliberately arranged to achieve a projected wrong purpose. Deceased was a widow, mother by her first husband of three children, contestants here. Appellant, Hughes, is her reputed second husband, having married her while he still had a lawful undivorced wife living and who by the terms of the will is made her executor and sole beneficiary. The *394 estate is of value, amounting to about $100,000, and while the parties on both sides are interested parties, Hughes, proponent, had been for years the idle sharer in the income, had first lived in meretricious relations with decedent, then a widow, and later established a semblance of legality for that relationship by marrying her while his lawful wife still lived. His subsequent divorce from this wife did not of course validate his marriage with decedent. It is perhaps true that they lived together in harmony, and when she was stricken with a fatal illness he was not remiss in securing attention for her. The fatal illness brought forth the will which the jury has found was executed by decedent when she was mentally incompetent to make a valid testament. The writing on its face shows it was signed with two “X” marks, minus any statement that they were marks made by Mrs. Hughes, with her name written in front of the marks by one of the attesting witnesses and with {attestation made by two witnesses. It was drawn, as testified by Hughes himself, by a friend of his at his request and copied by the scrivener from a form found in a law book, with the necessary changes as to place and names. No directions or information, as Hughes and the scrivener testified, were given the latter as to what provisions should be set forth in the writing; no directions as to the character of the estate and its disposal were given him, and the only guidance he had, as he declared on the witness stand, was the impression Hughes gave him that decedent was childless, and he accordingly made Hughes the sole beneficiary and executor. The latter testified that he had the will prepared at the request of testatrix, but there is no evidence that she instructed him as to its provisions or that he advised her what its provisions would be. The instrument was written in lead pencil by the scrivener and the following day, the day before its execution, Hughes, without reading it, as he says, took it to the house of a friend and had it copied in typewriting. Except for the wholly doubtful *395 and entirely uncorroborated testimony of one of the attesting witnesses, Mrs. Ruppel, it was not at any time, before or after execution, read to or by decedent, and the testimony of Hughes himself establishes definitely that she was at no time apprised of its contents. It certainly was not read to her, explained to her or read by her at the time at which she is said to have signed the writing.

On June 29, 1925, decedent had become so seriously ill that Hughes called Dr. Kistler, the first of the two physicians who attended her. On June 30th Dr. Lang-ton was summoned. Their evidence conflicts as to the nature of her illness and her mental and physical condition on June 30th, and on July 1st the date of the execution of the writing. It is contended by contestants that testatrix suffered two strokes of paralysis, one June 30th and the second July 1st, a short time after signing the will, and that as a result of the first stroke she was rendered helpless physically, unable to use her right arm and hand, that her right side was paralyzed and her mental faculties so shattered as to wholly incapacitate her from malting a valid testament, continuing in that state until her death July 5th. Proponent claims that, although she was seriously ill, there was no stroke previous to the execution of the will, and that, while physically unable to write her name, the result of a fall from her bed, injuring her right arm, she was not mentally incapacitated at the time of executing the will. Dr. Kistler says he first attended her June 29th and then June 30th and July 1st, the latter visit being in the morning, about two hours before the will was signed. He diagnosed her sickness as kidney trouble, as acute nephritis. He says she spoke rationally to him. He testified as follows on direct examination: “A. I diagnosed it as acute nephritis. Q. Up to that time had there been any evidence of any stroke? A. Not to my knowledge...... Q. On June 30th when you were there was there any evidence of any paralysis or anything of *396 that sort at that time? A. Not that I could see. Q.

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Related

Estate of Mary F. Hughes
98 Pa. Super. 328 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
144 A. 277, 294 Pa. 391, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-freeley-pa-1928.