In Re Cook's Estate

1918 OK 569, 175 P. 507, 71 Okla. 94, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 869
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 8, 1918
Docket9534
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 1918 OK 569 (In Re Cook's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Cook's Estate, 1918 OK 569, 175 P. 507, 71 Okla. 94, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 869 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

KANE, J.

The question involved herein arises out of the contest of the will of William Nye Cook, deceased. The testator at the time of his death left surviving him a wife and an infant son and his mother. His estate consisted of about 240 acres of land of the value of $5,000. The will of the testator, after bequeathing $100 to his wife and 40 acres of the land to his child, bequeathed and devised the rest and residue of his estate to his mother, whom he appointed his executrix without bond. Upon this will being presented for probate Gena Cook, the wife, for herself .and as nest friend of the infant son of the deceased, filed this contest upon various grounds, the only one which it is now necessary to notice being as follows ;

“That at the time of making said will the said William Nye Cook was under undue influence, the same being exercised by Mary Cook, his mother, who is the chief ben-ficiary under the said will, and also other members of his family who were present during his last illness.”

Thereafter the issues raised by this contest were heard by the county court, and judgment was rendered denying said will probate because, as the court found, the same was signed by decedent under duress and undue influence by his family and *95 friends. Thereafter the proponent, Mary Cook, filed an appeal 'bond in said cause for the purpose of appealing said cause to the district court. After finding that the will was duly and regularly executed, and that the deceased at 'the time of his death was competent to make a will, the district court affirmed the judgment of the county Court denying the will probate upon the ground:

“That previous to the execution of said will the said William Nye Cook had been unduly influenced toy his mother and other members of his family to execute said will and had been induced to do same prior to the execution of said will; that said will was not the result of his free and voluntary act and deed; and that said undue influence of his mother and other members of his family had been exercised prior to the execution of said will and prior to the time Dr. Shi and T. L. Karris came to the home of said William Nye Cook, where said will was executed.”

It is to reverse this action of the district court that this proceeding in error was commenced. As there is no controversy between counsel for the respective parties upon any question of substantive or procedural law, all that is left for us to do is examine the evidence presented fotr review by the record, and, in the light of thfe agreed applicable XU’inciples of law, state our conclusion as to its sufficiency to support the judgment of the trial court. This we have done, and we are fully convinced 'that the contention of the plaintiff in error is well taken and should be sustained.

The evidence contained in the record is quite voluminous, and no useful purpose would be served by setting it out at any great length in this opinion. The material facts disclosed thereby may be briefly summarized as follows;

The testator, William Nye Cook, a member of the Chickasaw Tribe of Indians, of about one-sixteenth blood, and 'the contestant, Gena Cook, were married when both were' very young, the former being 18 or 19 and the latter 16 years of age. It seems' that the young people lived together as husband and wife for something like a year and a half or two years, during which time a child was born to .them, when .they separated, he remaining with his parents where they had been living, and she returning to the home of her parents, who resided in the same neighborhood. The reason for the separation as stated by the contestant, was that she “go,t tired” of living with her, husband’s parents. This, separation occurred some two years prior to -the death of the testator. After the separation the testator frequently called upon his wife and child at her mother’s home, but finally discontinued these visits upon the request of his mother-in-law. From then on the marriage relations were never resumed between husband and wife. There is nothing in the evidence which tends to fasten any tolame for the separation upon the parents of either of the parties. The parents of the husband were willing that he and his wife should live with, them or that they should provide a home for themselves, and the parents of the wife were perfectly willing that she should return home and live with them. The attitude of the mother of the testator, we think, is fairly and truthfully reflected in the following excerpt taken from her cross-examination :

“Q. You don’t feel very kindly toward your daughter-in-law, do you? A. I have nothing against her. I never had a word with her in my life. Q. Are you friendly with ibier? A. No; since they separated I haven’t been on friendly terms with her. Q. He lived directly with you since .this separation? A. Yes, sir; his wife was something we never discussed in the home except when Mir. Wiggins came around, because he was trying to get them to go back together, and he asked me if I had any objections to them going back together, and I says, T did nothing to marry them and I did nothing to separate them and I am doing nothing against them going hack together.’ To use his own judgment. If he wanted to go back to 'her, it was immaterial with me.”

Thus matters stood at the time of the death of the testator. The evidence directly relating to the execution of the will may be summarized as follows:

The testator, a robust and healthy young man, barely twenty-one years of age, was taken seriously il] with double_ pneumonia on Saturday and died the following Monday. The attending physician, who. was also the family physician of the Cook family, testified that he 'first called on the testator! early Saturday morning and found him suffering from double pneumonia; that he returned again th'e evening of the same day and stayed all night; that prior to his leaving Sunday morning the testator told him he wanted to make his will and also told him how he wanted to dispose of his' property; that the witness made some memoranda of the provisions the testator wished in his will upon a prescription blank and informed him that when he returned in the evening he wonld bring a lawyer to prepare the will. After the witness left his patient Snnday morning he procured an attorney and returned with him to the Cook home, where the will was prepared. The witness testified that the will *96 was executed on Sunday, the lllh of March, and that the decedent died about 12 o’clock the Monday following; that when the will was executed the mind of thte testator was perfectly clear and rational; that his illness did not make him delirious and that as far as he could observe the testator was free to execute a will as he saw fit.

■ Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 569, 175 P. 507, 71 Okla. 94, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cooks-estate-okla-1918.