In Re Estate of Carithers

105 P. 127, 156 Cal. 422, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 341
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1909
DocketL.A. No. 2380.
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 105 P. 127 (In Re Estate of Carithers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California 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 Estate of Carithers, 105 P. 127, 156 Cal. 422, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 341 (Cal. 1909).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Appeal from a judgment entered after verdict of a jury revoting probate of the last will of William D. Carithers, deceased, and from an order denying appellant’s *423 motion for a new trial. The contention is made on behalf of respondent that, by the failure to argue orally the motion for new trial, the said motion was waived. This is an interesting question which, in view of the conclusions reached by us with reference to the appeal from the judgment, need not be here considered at great length. This court has decided recently, however, that mere failure to present oral argument on the motion for a new trial is not a waiver of said motion. We think that the circumstances in this case and the fact that the motion for the new trial was made upon the very day of the settlement of the bill of exceptions bring it clearly within the rule announced in Boin v. Spreckels Sugar Co., 155 Cal. 612, [102 Pac. 939].

By stipulation but two forms of verdict were submitted to the jury. One was as follows: “Did the deceased, William D. Carithers, know and understand on the evening of August 18, 1906, that he was then making his will and leaving his property to the parties therein named?” The other was a general form of verdict to be signed by the foreman after finding for plaintiff or defendant. To the question calling for special verdict, the jury returned a negative answer, and the general verdict was in favor of the plaintiff. The form of the verdict makes it necessary for us to determine its sufficiency or error in view of all the grounds of contest, which are: 1. Mental incompetency; 2. Undue influence; and 3. Lack of due execution. If the general verdict may be sustained upon any one of the above grounds, the judgment must be affirmed.

We will first consider the evidence with reference to the first ground of contest mentioned above, as the special verdict was evidently based upon the belief of the jurors that the testator was of unsound mind at the date of the execution of the will. It appears from the testimony of several witnesses, and seems to be conceded by all parties to this proceeding, that prior to taking up his residence in California, William D. Carithers, who was a prosperous banker and merchant in Illinois, was a regular drinker of alcoholic liquors but not addicted to the excessive use of such stimulants. After he came to California his habits grew worse and he was frequently intoxicated for weeks at a time. In 1902 he married the proponent, but marriage did not seem to im *424 prove his habits. He continued to drink heavily in spite of his wife’s efforts to bring about a reformation. He was taken for treatment to an institution for the care of those addicted to the improper use of liquor, and was also for a time in a home where Christian Science was practiced. Neither form of treatment availed, and he died on October 17, 1906, not quite two months after the execution of his purported last will, the cause of death being acute alcoholism. He was fifty-seven years of age at the time of his death. About twelve days after the execution of the will he was taken to a hospital, and from that time until his death was under medical treatment.

Contestants called two physicians, Doctors Bassett and Justice. The former, in answer to a hypothetical question, gave it as his opinion that the person therein described would be insane, and expressed the belief that Mr. Carithers, whom these physicians saw for the first time when he was taken to the hospital some days after the signing of the testament, was then demented and incapable of making a will. A critical examination of the testimony of the physician, however, fails to reveal anything in the condition of his patient which would not be accounted for by the fact that Carithers had entered upon a fresh debauch after the execution of the will. In other words, the witness failed to relate any circumstances that might not well comport with the theory that Carithers was merely suffering from the usual effects of over indulgence in liquor by a man of his age and physical condition, rather than a permanent state of insanity which to avoid the will must have existed on August 18, 1906, when the will was prepared, signed, and attested. Doctor Justice testified that, from the specifications of the hypothetical question the man described must have been insane, and that testator, whom he saw about ten days after August 18, 1906, was at that time an “alcoholic dement,” and must have been one for a period extending back further than the date of the will. Neither physician saw the patient on or prior to the eighteenth day of August, 1906. Benjamin McCartney, a lifelong friend of the decedent, who was called by the contestants, testified that Mr. Carithers was of unsound mind in the summer of 1906, but he seems to have limited that judgment to periods when the testator was actually drunk. He stated that when not *425 too drunk to attend to business, Mr. Carithers possessed a fairly bright and active mind. Doctor Guy Elder, witness for contestants, who before he was a physician had acted as a nurse for Mr. Carithers, testified that when he first saw the patient at the Emergency hospital during the first week in September, the latter was drunk. Later, in the month of October, when he was called to nurse the testator at the latter’s home, he found that, according to his judgment, Mr. Carithers’s mind was unbalanced. Regarding the mental condition of the testator during the period of his stay at the Emergency hospital, however, he testified as follows": “When I went there he was heavily under the influence of liquor. I sobered him up then. After he was sobered up I considered his condition of mind as good as anybody’s. He seemed to be in perfect possession of all his faculties and during the ten days that I was there with him—during all that time—beseemed to be in possession of all his faculties.” Other witnesses described particular eccentric acts of Mr. Carithers, but their 'testimony throws no light on the subject of the sanity or insanity of testator at the time when he performed the testamentary act.

There is nothing in the will itself to raise any suspicion. respecting the mental condition of the testator except perhaps the signature which, according to the testimony, seems to have been badly written and not in his usual chirography. It was explained, however, that he signed his name while he was sitting on the edge of his bed, and without having adequate support beneath the paper. These circumstances might easily account for the bad penmanship. The will itself is a natural one, containing nothing essentially unjust. There is a small devise to a sister, and the residue of the property is devised and bequeathed to his wife. The testament was drafted by Mr. Lynn Helm, a reputable member of the bar, who had acted as Mr. Carithers’s attorney for a long time. He emphatically asserted at the trial that Mr. Carithers was of sound and disposing mind when the will was prepared and executed. The most significant facts concerning the writing and signing of the will may best be given in Mr. Helm’s own words: “Mr. Carithers was lying in bed, and I said to him, ‘How do you do, Mr. Carithers? Are you sick? I am sorry to see you sick.’ He said ‘No, Helm, I am not sick. I am just getting *426

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Bluebook (online)
105 P. 127, 156 Cal. 422, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-carithers-cal-1909.