In Re Allen's Estate.

203 N.W. 479, 230 Mich. 584
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1925
DocketDocket No. 153.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 203 N.W. 479 (In Re Allen's Estate.) 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
In Re Allen's Estate., 203 N.W. 479, 230 Mich. 584 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Wiest, J.

This is a will contest, in which a daughter by a first marriage attacks her father's will and codicil, on the grounds of mental incompetency and undue influence. The jury found testator mentally competent, but the will and codicil were the result of undue influence exercised by proponent, the second *588 wife, with whom testator had lived 28 years at the time the will was executed, 31 years at the date of the codicil, and to whom she bore a son, who was 12 years old at the date of the will. At the close of contestant’s proofs, proponent moved for a verdict sustaining the will, renewed the motion at the conclusion of the trial, after verdict asked for judgment non obstante veredicto and also moved for a new trial. These motions were all denied. The case is here by writ of error sued out by proponent.

Some questions, touching rulings on evidence, will be considered in the course of this opinion, but the main point is whether judgment should have allowed the will. In disposing of the motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial the trial judge stated:

“Frankly, I think the jury might justly and properly have reached a different verdict than they did as to the will, at least as to the will.”

In the will, executed in 1917, testator devised all of his estate to his wife and son, making no mention of contestant, but in the codicil, executed solely for such purpose, in 1920, he mentioned her as follows:

“Whereas, in my last will and testament, no mention was made by me of my daughter by my first marriage, Madge Allen:
“Now, therefore, in order that it may be understood that when I executed said will and also at this time, I have not forgotten the said Madge Allen, I do hereby purposely exclude the said Madge Allen from any interest in my property and estate under my will and I now mention her to evidence my purpose not to make any provision or devise any of my property and estate to her, feeling that I am under no obligation so to do.”

The will was prepared by the late Alfred J. Mills, an attorney of high standing, under directions given by testator in person, and executed in the office of the *589 attorney, proponent not being present. The codicil was also prepared by Judge Mills, but was executed while testator was in an hospital.

Madge Allen, contestant, was born August 31, 1879, and was 38 years of age when the will was executed and 41 at the date of the codicil. She is well educated, having for many years attended boarding schools, and has musical ability. In 1887 testator and Madge’s mother were divorced, and in 1889 testator married Lucille Dixon, his stenographer, with whom he lived until his death in 1920. Incidents before the divorce in 1887 were brought into the case by contestant to show attentions paid by testator to his stenographer, and this was followed by expressions of dislike of Madge and her mother by the second wife. This ancient subject should have been excluded.

As stated by this court in Pierce v. Pierce, 38 Mich. 412, 419:

“The domestic scandals of many years ago could have no legitimate tendency to prove any modern state of things, and could only serve to burden the case with irrelevant and discreditable details that might and evidently did prejudice the jury, but which had no tendency whatever to show influence in 1871. The law does not confine the power of making wills to persons of blameless character, nor does it disqualify all others from being legatees. And whatever may have been the relations of the testator and his second wife eighteen or nineteen years before his death, and whatever may have been the circumstances of their marriage, it cannot be permissible to draw inferences from them concerning a condition of things many years thereafter, which if existing at all could be proved without difficulty as an existing fact, and not a possible contingency.”

For a full discussion of the subject, see Fulton v. Freeland, 219 Mo. 494, 514 (118 S. W. 12, 131 Am. St. Rep. 576). In this case old domestic sores were *590 reopened, and hatred vented, after the lips, once having power of refutation, have crumbled into dust.

We may draw the inference that proponent never liked contestant and her mother, and find ourselves also having the companion inference that the dislike was not only mutual but no occasion lost to evidence its existence, and on the whole find ourselves with nothing of probative value upon the real issues involved. In the eye of the law, a wife is not to be branded with wrongdoing if she does not love those who despitefully use her. At the time her father and mother were divorced, Madge was eight years of age. For many years after the divorce testator had a father’s affection for Madge, schooled her, provided her with money and their relations continued pleasant. Madge never lived with her father after his second marriage. There came a time after Madge was through school, when her father evidently thought she should turn her education and ability to account and not lean on him for her entire support, and to bring this about he stopped giving her money. This Madge did not like, and she went to him so often, importuning him for money, that he finally refused to see her, and then she called him by telephone and visited his home trying to see him. To show the extent to which the relations between them became strained and the length to which she was determined to go in her purposé to bring her father to terms, we give an instance: Two years before the will was executed, when Madge was 36 years of age, she went to her father’s home one fall evening about 6 o’clock, rang the door bell, asked for her father, and when he would not see her, she seated herself in a chair on the porch and drummed her feet on the floor until midnight; an officer was called and even then she remained until the hired man turned the garden hose on her. She says she kept her feet going to warm them. Walking *591 away would undoubtedly have served the same purpose. The next day an officer visited testator to make inquiry about the act of the hired man and testator assumed full responsibility for the act.

The reason why testator became vexed with contestant is clearly traceable to her annoying importunities for money after he thought she was capable of caring for herself. Testator, needed no spurring by proponent to carry his resentment of contestant’s conduct into his will. If this was the reason for leaving her out of his will his act must stand. But contestant and her mother testified to statements they claim were made by testator indicating a desire on his part to help his daughter but he was not at liberty to do so because it made trouble between himself and proponent. These statements and others made by testator, relative to acts and utterances of proponent adverse to contestant, did not constitute proof of what he so stated. ' In re Morris’ Estate, 228 Mich. 555; Zibble v. Zibble, 131 Mich. 655; In re Provin’s Estate, 161 Mich. 28; In re Walter’s Estate,

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Bluebook (online)
203 N.W. 479, 230 Mich. 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-allens-estate-mich-1925.