In Re Estate of Offill

274 P. 623, 96 Cal. App. 640, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 921
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 1929
DocketDocket No. 6347.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 274 P. 623 (In Re Estate of Offill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal 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 Offill, 274 P. 623, 96 Cal. App. 640, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 921 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

STEPHENS, J., pro tem.

A purported will of Mathias Walter Offill, deceased, was offered for probate under petition of E. Louise Bell, for. letters with the will annexed. Addie 0. Freeman, a daughter of deceased, contested the probate thereof on a number of separate grounds. Only three of the grounds of contest need be noticed herein, and they put in issue the points covered by the following references and quotations from the court’s findings.

*642 After hearing without a jury the court found that neither of the alleged witnesses “signed said purported will as attesting witnesses or witnesses in the presence of said decedent.” That “said decedent did not at the time of or prior or subsequent to the subscribing of said purported will, declare to Ann Gambs, B. R. Darling and R. J. Darling, or any or either or all of them, that the instrument was his will.” That “ . . . the decedent did not, by word or action, or in any manner whatever, request the said [witnesses] or either or any of them, to sign said purported will as attesting witnesses. ’ ’

Based upon these points the court denied the probate of the will and proponent appeals.

Decedent had been married twice. The contestant was the only surviving child of the first union. The second marriage was between decedent and a widow, the mother of several children. The determination of this contest will decide whether the surviving child shall take as an heir or share the estate with the decedent’s stepchildren, as provided by the terms of the purported will.

The second wife, after many years of life with decedent, predeceased him by a month or so. The property affected by the will was held in joint tenancy. Shortly after her death he caused the stepchildren (his own daughter not then being in the home) to come into his room where he lay sick abed, and indicated to one of them that he desired to 'make a will. That he wanted a Mr. R. J. Darling or Mr. Pierce or anybody called in for witnesses. Mr. Darling and his son, B. R. Darling, responded. Decedent said he wished to leave his estate share and share alike to all. One of the stepdaughters, at decedent’s request, wrote out these wishes by lead pencil and decedent signed, and the paper was passed to the Darlings who were standing at the foot of the bed, and they signed as witnesses. The nurse, Ann Gambs, also signed as a witness. The signing and witnessing of this will seemed to have been according to all of the legal requirements, but someone suggested that a lawyer should be called. Thereafter, an hour or more having elapsed, the same people (six, eight, or ten) again assembled in the sick man’s room, and there was in addition a Dr. O’Flaherty, who was practicing medicine, but was also an attorney, although not in the active practice of the law. The doctor, *643 who was not attending the sick man, had been induced to help out because a practicing lawyer could not be secured. He had partly prepared a will on the typewriter before leaving his office and before seeing the sick man, and copied by long-hand in ink the devising part of the pencil will into a blank of his typewritten form and entered the sick room. Dr. O’Flaherty approached the bed, exhibited the document to the sick man, who was propped up by pillows and who was from time to time giving evidences of pain by groaning and moaning, and then read it aloud.

The testimony of Dr. O’Flaherty as to the signing, which is not varied from materially by other witnesses, is as follows: “Q. Was the will read to him? A. After I took it away from him I read it to him specifically, just as it is written here, and asked him if that was his will. . . . And the old gentleman said £Yes,’ ... So I told him that it would be necessary to sign the will hi the presence of two witnesses who were standing at the foot of the bed, Mr. Darling and his son. The Court: Did you mention those names to Mr. Offill? A. I don’t believe I did, your Honor, because I presumed that he knew who they were. He seemed to be all right. So he . . . took the pen and signed it after I read it to him, and I told Mr. Darling it would be necessary for him and his son to sign it in the presence of Mr. Offill.”

The doctor then (and the younger Darling’s testimony differs in some respects therefrom) stated that the Darlings were standing right up against the foot of the bed—that Mr. Offill was still sitting up in bed. Both of the Darlings signed above the foot of the bed, using a magazine to write upon. The will was again in the doctor’s hands and he told Ann Gambs, the nurse, who had signed the pencil will, that two witnesses were sufficient, but she could sign, too, and she did.

B. B-. Darling testified: ££Q. Examine the signature, M. W. Offill. Was that signature signed in your presence? A. Yes, sir. Q. When and at what time ? Where and at what time ? Where was that signed? A. Why, in the bedroom. I don’t remember the time of day. Q. Of what house? A. Mr. Offill’s house. Q. In Santa Monica? A. Yes. Q. Examine the date and see if that is the date it was signed. (Showing paper to witness.) A. I think it is. Q. Did he sign in *644 your presence? A. Tes. Q. Did you sign in Ms presence? A. Yes. Q. Did R. J. Darling sign in your presence? A. Yes. Q. And Ann Gambs? A. Yes. Q. And did R. J. Darling sign in the presence of the testator, Mr. Offill? A. Yes. Q. Mrs. Gambs signed in the presence of Mr. Offill? A. Yes.”

The witness further testified that when he signed the will presented by Dr. 0 ’Flaherty he took the will from his father, R. J. Darling, and when he signed, two or three persons were between him and the foot of the bed; that he was standing some few feet back of the foot of the bed. He did not notice at the moment of signing whether the line of vision was clear between himself and Mr. Offill or not. He also testified in answer to the court’s question: “We signed at the foot of the bed.” “Q. By the Court: Where was Mr. Offill at that particular time—sitting up in bed or lying down? A. In bed. He laid back down. ... Q. By the Court: Did you observe him at all after he actually appended his signature to that document? A. No.” The court then asked if he is to understand that Mr. Offill was placed flat in bed after signing, and the witness answered in the affirmative, and that he did not observe Offill at all after that; he further testified that he thinks the vision between himself and the testator was obstructed by the foot of the bed when he signed as a witness. That he was standing at the time and someone held a magazine in his hand to rest the will upon as the witness signed. He estimated the bed as being three or three and one-half feet Mgh and the point at which the will was held on the magazine to be about four feet high; that Mr. Offill said nothing from the time he said “Yes” to the doctor’s question until after the signing was completed.

Dr. O’Flaherty and the nurse testify that Mr. Offill sat propped up by pillows all of the time until after the signing by the witnesses, after wMch the pillows were taken away and he was laid back. Dr. O’Flaherty says that no one was between B. R. Darling and Offill at the moment of Darling’s signing.

The nurse also testified: “Q. What did you actually see? A. He (B. R. Darling) went to hand it (the will) back, I presume, to Dr. O’Flaherty, he made this motion, and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
274 P. 623, 96 Cal. App. 640, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-offill-calctapp-1929.