In Re Estate of Morcel

121 P. 733, 162 Cal. 188, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 515
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1912
DocketS.F. No. 5788.
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 121 P. 733 (In Re Estate of Morcel) 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 Morcel, 121 P. 733, 162 Cal. 188, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 515 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment refusing ro admit to probate a paper offered as the last will of *190 deceased, and from an order denying the proponent’s motion for a new trial.

The paper was one executed by “Therese Berthol” on January 30, 1908, with all the formalities required by law for the execution of wills. By its provisions the contestant, a natural daughter of deceased, was given ten dollars only, one Marie Doyen Morcel, wife of J. Vincent Morcel, was given the jewelry and personal effects of deceased, and all the rest of her property, amounting in value to some eighteen thousand dollars or twenty thousand dollars, was given to Joseph Morcel. Said Joseph Morcel' and Gustave Kleinclaus were appointed executors without bonds.

The ground of contest was undue influence on the part of said Morcel, who was alleged by the contestant to have lived with her mother for many years in the relationship of man and wife, although never legally married. The contest was tried with a jury, to which were submitted the issue of undue influence and the issue of marriage' or no marriage between deceased and Morcel. The jury found in favor of contestant upon both issues, viz: that the will was procured to be made through undue influence of Joseph Morcel, and that deceased was never married to said Morcel. Both of these conclusions are assailed as unsupported by the evidence.

At the outset it may properly be stated that the validity of the alleged will is, of course, in no way dependent on the question of marriage between deceased and Morcel. If the will was not procured by undue influence, the fact, if it be a fact, that Morcel was not legally the husband of deceased, could in no way affect it or impair its provisions. The question whether the relationship between Morcel and deceased was illicit can be material only as a circumstance in determining whether the will was procured by undue influence, and as will be disclosed by our statement of undisputed facts shown by the record in this case, it is apparent that here the question whether such parties were lawfully married is of no importance whatever in the determination of the question of undue influence.

The substantial contention on this appeal is that the finding of undue influence is without sufficient support in the evidence.

As said before, contestant was the natural daughter of de *191 ceased. She was bom in France in the year 1860, and, so far as appears, was never in the care and custody of deceased, and never has been supported in whole or in part by the deceased. In 1872 deceased, who had never married, met Morcel in France. Morcel had a few months before married a woman who had then left him, and whom he has never since seen. During that year, deceased and Morcel came together from France to California. According to his testimony, this woman brought a divorce action against him in October, 1872, and obtained such divorce in October, 1873. He said that he received the papers showing that such divorce had been granted in the year 1877. This was the only evidence on the question of divorce. Some four years after their arrival in California, deceased and Morcel agreed to live together as husband and wife, with the understanding that their several earnings should be kept separate. From that time to the day of death of deceased, a period of over thirty years, the parties lived together as husband and wife. There is nothing to indicate that the relationship thus formed was not entirely satisfactory to both parties, to the end, and there was absolutely nothing to distinguish it, in the eyes of the world, from the relationship of husband and wife, save the single fact that deceased used her maiden name in some matters of business, such as her bank deposit, and her will, and was referred to in the same way in some letters written to the contestant. To the public generally she was known as Madame Morcel, the wife of Morcel, and the parties held themselves out to the world as husband and wife. Apparently happy in their relations with one another, they were also industrious and frugal, and each accumulated money, Morcel becoming very well to do, and deceased accumulating, as already said, something in the neighborhood of twenty thousand dollars. The deceased was illiterate, being unable to read or write, except to the extent of signing her name, and Morcel generally attended to her investments and business affairs, as well as to writing her letters. Everything indicates that he was scrupulously honest with relation to her business, and without any desire to mingle anything fairly belonging to her with his own property. He knew nothing of the existence of contestant until the year 1887. From 1872 to 1887 there was no correspondence whatever between deceased and her daughter. After Morcel learned *192 from deceased of the existence of the daughter, a correspondence was commenced. Some of the letters on the part of deceased were signed “Therese Berthol” and others were signed in his own name by Morcel. All the letters so written which are contained in the record were written by Morcel, and these letters show, as does the other evidence on the subject, a friendly feeling upon the part of both Morcel and deceased for the contestant and her husband, a desire on their part that the contestant and her husband should come to California and live near her mother, and a disposition to assist them financially in getting a home if they did come. During a few years next preceding their coming to California, it appears to have been the desire of deceased to make contestant a beneficiary under her will. The record shows that there was no dissent to this on the part of Morcel, and in his expressions to both contestant and her husband he took it for granted that .contestant was to share in the property left by deceased at her death. Finally, in January, 1907, in response to repeated invitations on the part of deceased and Morcel, contestant and her husband came to California. They were received by deceased and Morcel in the most affectionate manner. For a short time they lived with the old people, but soon established themselves in another place. Morcel introduced the husband at the French Bank in San Francisco, where he obtained a position. Deceased assisted contestant in the purchase of a home by contributing two thousand dollars of the purchase money. As long as the relations between the deceased and her daughter continued to be friendly, Morcel was apparently most friendly, and the record shows that he assisted in keeping the parties on friendly terms on one or two occasions when strained relations had followed quart rels between them. But it speedily became evident that the contestant and deceased could not get along together. There were several quarrels between deceased and contestant, and finally, in the latter part of December, 1907, a dispute arose between the two at contestant’s house, Morcel not being present, ending, according to the claim of deceased, in the ejection of deceased from the house by her daughter. Deceased and contestant never met after that occasion, and there was apparently no real attempt at reconciliation on the part of either. The evidence of one of contestant’s witnesses showed *193 that contestant avoided meeting her mother at the home of the witness on one "occasion, leaving the house at once when she saw that her mother was a. visitor there.

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Bluebook (online)
121 P. 733, 162 Cal. 188, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-morcel-cal-1912.