In Re: Estate of Annie J. Dible

170 A. 440, 112 Pa. Super. 23, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 6
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 25, 1933
DocketAppeal 35
StatusPublished

This text of 170 A. 440 (In Re: Estate of Annie J. Dible) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Estate of Annie J. Dible, 170 A. 440, 112 Pa. Super. 23, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 6 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldrige, J.,

This is an appeal by Harry Yance, a first cousin of the decedent, from an order of the court below refusing to grant an issue devisavit vel non to determine the decedent’s testamentary capacity and whether undue influence at the time of the execution of the will was exercised by Emerson Hazlett, Esq., her legal adviser, and Louisei Sefton, her nurse, both strangers to the blood.

Annie J. Dible died on December 13, 1931. On June 22, 1931, she executed a will, by her mark, prepared by, and in the presence of, Emerson Hazlett, Esq., and witnessed by R. B. Wilson and G. Merle White. She added a codicil on the 5th of August, 1931, signed by her mark, which had been written by, and signed in the presence of, Hazlett, and witnessed by Louise Sefton and her daughter, Lillian Brewer. The decedent bequeathed $1,000 to the Episcopal Church Home in Pittsburgh; $1,000 to the East Ninth Avenue United Presbyterian Church of Tarentum; $200 to Rev. D. I. Róse, pastor of that church; $100 to Clarence Sefton and his wife; $2,500 to Louise Sefton; $2,500 to Emerson Hazlett, Esq.; $600 to Annetta Muder; and $200 to Sally Fleming (which she revoked by the codicil); and directed that the inheritance tax be paid on the above legacies by her estate. She gave her residuary estate to Frank Y. Cooper and Mazie A. Clowes, second cousins.

The decedent was a spinster and had been a resident of the borough of Tarentum for more than fifty years. She was below the average person in intelligence, with a very meager education, and was afflicted with defective eyesight and impaired hearing. Since 1921, if not before, she was practically incapable of conducting any business. Her personal affairs were largely under the care of her favorite cousin, Mrs. Cooper, who died May 15, 1931, and, thereafter, her son, Frank iV. Cooper, transacted any. business requiring attention *25 until he was superseded by Emerson Hazlett, Esq. When the will was executed, the decedent had an estate of approximately $18,000, inherited in 1921 from her uncle, Robert Miller, but her securities had. depreciated so, that at the time of her death the appraisement of her property amounted to but $8,188.36.

Robert B. Elliott, Esq., a member of the Allegheny County Bar, transacted some legal business for Miss Dible upon the death of her uncle, in 1921, until about October 1, 1924. He had difficulty in explaining various matters to her in connection with the estate and testified that “from my experience with her and my endeavor to explain various matters to her during the time that I represented her, things in my judgment which I thought I explained to her in very simple language, she could not comprehend any of them, and was certainly not of sufficient mentality that she could make a valid will at- any time during that period.”

On February 8, 1927, the decedent was stricken with a cerebral hemorrhage, and lay unconscious in her home, unattended, for a period of approximately twenty-four hours, when her condition was discovered by a neighbor. She was immediately removed to the Allegheny Valley Hospital in Tarentum, where she remained as a patient until the 6th of May, 1927. Dr. Weaver, called upon the part of the proponents, testified that this was “an attack of apoplexy and was a profound shock;” that her case followed the ordinary course that apoplexy runs and her mental condition was gradually clearing; that he had known her for many years and she had always had a lisp and talked peculiarly prior to that stroke. This physician’s attendance continued until Miss Dible left the hospital on May 6, 1927. He expressed the opinion that she had testamentary capacity at the time he knew her, but he would not deny that he had previously stated that she did not have testamentary capacity. Testimony was given by Jane Painter, a daughter of Mrs. Cooper, *26 that Dr. Weaver had told her that Miss Dible had no education and was not capable of making a will or of transacting business of any sort.

Dr. Arnold, called upon the part of the contestant, testified that he attended Miss Dible in 1914 when she was bitten by a horse; that he had lived in the neighborhood and had seen her practically every day for eight or nine years, until he left Tarentum in 1918; that her hearing was impaired; she was illiterate, reluctant, backward, and lacked in intellect, and not nearly normally developed.

Dr. Duncan, called by the contestant, stated that he attended Miss Dible at various times at the home of Mrs. Adams between August 2, 1927, and December 6,1929, and that she had a cerebral disturbance during this period, accompanied by an increase of her paralysis. This witness testified that he could not understand any of the patient’s conversation, she seldom recognized him, it was impossible for him to get any intelligent answers from her, and during his attendance her condition grew progressively worse. In his opinion, “she was not capable of doing any business in any form; she was absolutely dependable on someone else.” On cross-examination, he said that the attack he referred to was very slight, and he thought that she had numerous other minor ones while she was at Mrs. Adams’.

Miss Dible was taken to Mrs. Sefton’s home in December, 1929, and from the 13th of February, 1930, until the time of her death, Dr. Booth was her physician. He was called by the proponents and testified that the decedent was able to answer questions, she knew people, and understood that she had an estate and an income from it. But, on cross-examination, he stated that she had a certain mental deterioration; that she was not a normal person; and that her paralysis had extended more or less to both sides of her body. He was asked: “Could you say that she was *27 not capable of understanding a will that was more than six or seven words ? ’ ’ After some discussion the doctor finally said: “I stated that it would have to be a short will.” He was asked whether the decedent could understand the provisions of the will at the time it was written. His answer was: “Now, I feel that Annie did understand the major part of it.” After considerable indecision, he finally said, in answer to whether she had mental capacity: “I believe she did.” He testified further that he had advised the relatives of Miss Dible to remove her from the Sefton home, “partly because I was a friend of theirs, and I thought their interests might be better protected by having her there at their place. That was the prime cause of that ...... I told [Mr. Husted] that her state was such it was possible to unduly influence her.” Later he was asked again whether or not he had told Mr. Husted that if the will consisted of six or seven words it was possible she could understand it. He answered: “I told him from her condition it would of needs have to be a more or less simple form of will. Q. Did you tell him that her condition was such that she could be easily influenced? A. I did. Q. Did you tell him that her mind was not clear, due to the fact that she was confined to her room for so long in a helpless condition? A. Yes, sir. That was not the only reason, but I told him that. Q. Did you tell him that the time of the making of this will Annie was in a: weakened condition, due to her physical afflictions? A. Not just in those words. Q. Well, but in substance? A. In substance; yes, sir. Q. Did you tell Frank Cooper and Mrs. Jane Painter that they should get Annie away from the Sefton home? A. I did.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 A. 440, 112 Pa. Super. 23, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-annie-j-dible-pasuperct-1933.