In Re Demaris' Estate

110 P.2d 571, 166 Or. 36, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 55
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 110 P.2d 571 (In Re Demaris' Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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 Demaris' Estate, 110 P.2d 571, 166 Or. 36, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 55 (Or. 1940).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court which, after dismissing a contest of an instrument testamentary in form which was presented to the county court for probate as the last will and testament of George Demaris, deceased, held that the said instrument was in truth the last will and testament of said deceased and was entitled to probate as such.

George Demaris, a bachelor, 39 years of age, died in Milton, Umatilla county, April 11, 1939, leaving an estate which was appraised as worth $7,347.57. The contested instrument made the deceased’s sister, Ida Fuller, sole beneficiary. She is the proponent. The original contestant was Amos Demaris, father of the deceased. He died after the proceeding had begun and was succeeded as contestant by Arch Demaris, his son and executor of his estate. The petition made two charges against the script: (a) improper execution; and (b) undue influence. The latter charge has been *39 virtually abandoned. The findings of fact of the circuit court state:

“At tbe time of the execution of said will George Demaris was not acting under duress, fraud or undue influence.”

We have carefully read the transcript of evidence and are fully satisfied that there was no room for any other finding. The evidence shows that when he signed this instrument the deceased was free from all improper influences and acted purely upon his own volition. His mind was clear.

The portion of the petition which recites the charge of improper execution says:

“Said instrument of writing was prepared by Harold B. Gillis, in the absence of George Demaris and it was never read by nor read to him and he did not know the contents thereof at the time he subscribed his name thereto; that after the said George Demaris subscribed his name thereto, the said instrument of writing was taken from the room occupied by the said George Demaris into another room more than twenty-five feet from the said George Demaris, entirely out of his sight and wholly out of his presence, where it was then signed by the said Harold B. Gillis and Jean I. Gillis, his wife, as pretended witnesses, and the said George Demaris did not see either of said witnesses subscribe his or her name to the said instrument of writing and he did not know and never did kow who were witnesses to the said instrument of writing or whether the same was witnessed by anyone or at all.”

It will be observed that the signatures of the testator and of the two attesting witnesses are conceded. The only issues, therefore, are: did the testator know (1) the contents of the instrument, and (2) the identity of the attesters; and did the attesting witnesses sign *40 “in the presence of the testator” within the contemplation of § 18-201, O. C. L. A., which says:

“Every will shall be in writing, signed by the testator, or by some other person under his direction, in his presence, and shall be attested by two or more competent witnesses, subscribing their names to the will, in the presence of the testator. ’ ’

George Demaris’ mother had predeceased him. His father was still living at the time of George’s death, but died shortly thereafter. He left no estate, unless George’s descended to him. Since George left no issue, and since his mother had predeceased him, his estate descended to his father, if the will under attack is invalid. The father’s will bequeathed the sum of one dollar to Ida Puller, sole beneficiary of George’s will, and of the remainder of the estate left to Ann Kelly and Arch Demaris one-fourth each. All three of those persons were children of Amos Demaris; Ann and Ida were sisters of George, and Arch was his brother. We shall refer to these three frequently hereafter. As has already been said, Ida Puller is the proponent and Arch Demaris is the contestant. Ann Kelly was one of the latter’s principal witnesses. George was the youngest of the nine children of Amos Demaris and his wife. Some time before their deaths the parents had separated. This and other circumstances caused friction to develop, not only between some of the children and the father but also between some of the children themselves. George was one of the children who sympathized with his mother and evidenced displeasure at his father’s course. He and Ida were near in age and shared the same views. Ida did not marry until a year or so before George’s death.

*41 We shall now give a resume of the evidence which bears upon the above charges. George Demaris lived upon a farm situated near Milton. April 2,1939, he was taken ill and summoned his sister, Mrs. Ann Kelly, who lived nearby. Shortly she took him to the office of Dr. Harold B. Gillis in Milton. Dr. Gillis is the person named in the contestant’s petition. At the time of George’s arrival Dr. Gillis was absent, but his wife, a registered nurse, who was in charge of the office, communicated with her husband by telephone. Pursuant to instructions which she received over the telephone, Mrs. Gillis administered to George a quarter grain of morphine, the purpose being to relieve the intense pain from which he was suffering. George weighed 190 pounds. The uncontradieted evidence indicates that a man of that weight, experiencing pain as intense as that which George'was suffering, could sustain no lessening of mental powers from the administration of a quarter grain of morphine.

The witnesses referred to Dr. Gillis’ office as a clinic. It was a one-story building, 30 by 30 feet in ground dimensions, divided into eight rooms. We are concerned with only the three front rooms. These were a waiting room with a consulation room to its left and a treatment room to its right. The following plat, drawn to scale, will assist in an understanding. The two doors connecting these three rooms were 29 inches wide. The plat shows a cot and a bed in the treatment room and a desk in the consultation room.

When George entered the clinic he was taken at once into the treatment room and was placed upon the cot. In order to make him more comfortable a bed was then brought into the room and he was placed upon it with his head toward the west. -The cot was

*42

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Bluebook (online)
110 P.2d 571, 166 Or. 36, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-demaris-estate-or-1940.