In Re Estate of Roberts

386 P.2d 301, 192 Kan. 91, 1963 Kan. LEXIS 340
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 2, 1963
Docket43,237
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 386 P.2d 301 (In Re Estate of Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas 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 Roberts, 386 P.2d 301, 192 Kan. 91, 1963 Kan. LEXIS 340 (kan 1963).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroeder, J.:

This is an appeal from an order of the district court of Cowley County, Kansas, admitting a will to probate, after a verdict by an advisory jury was approved and judgment entered.

The underlying question in the case is whether the testator had sufficient mental capacity to make a will.

The appellant contends this case is unusual and unique among previously reported will contest cases before the Supreme Court on the subject of mental capacity in that the unchallenged and positive medical testimony of three specialists, who had treated *93 the testator for years, was the only medical testimony in the entire case. Their testimony was to the effect that the testator was totally incapacitated by advanced cerebral arterio-sclerosis and senile dementia, which affected the ability and power of his brain to use the reasoning processes. The appellant charges that the evidence in this case and the decision of the trial court admitting the will to probate “dramatize the wide and startling gap between the progress in medical science and the static and backward existence of Kansas law on the subject of mental capacity.”

On the 5th day of August, 1952, Charles T. Roberts, hereafter referred to as the testator, executed his last will and testament. On February 11, 1953, testator was adjudged incompetent and a guardian appointed.

On March 3, 1961, shortly after the testator’s death, his will was admitted to probate in the probate court of Cowley County, Kansas, and on appeal to the district court the matter of the decedent’s testamentary capacity was tried de novo, with a jury in an advisory capacity.

The jury found the testator had testamentary capacity on August 5, 1952, and the trial court approved the finding of the jury and ordered the will in question admitted to probate.

The appellant attacks the testimony of the proponents’ witnesses stating it is unsubstantial and incompetent. The appellant argues the witnesses for the proponents are weak because they do not measure up to the Kansas rule which requires a witness, preliminary to expressing an opinion on capacity, to relate facts which he observed about the testator as a foundation for such opinion. (Citing, Baughman v. Baughman, 32 Kan. 538, 4 Pac. 1003; and In re Estate of Harris, 166 Kan. 368, 201 P. 2d 1062.) The foregoing charge is not substantiated by the record.

At the trial in the district court the scrivener of the will, Stewart S. Bloss, an experienced attorney in Winfield, Kansas, and his secretary, Grace Hill, testified to all the essential matters necessary to show testamentary capacity. Other witnesses for the proponents were a real estate man who had known the testator for more than two years prior to the execution of the will and visited with him frequently; a friend of fifty years standing and a constant companion for four years immediately after the execution of the will; a niece who visited with the testator in 1952; a neighbor and a tenant of the testator who saw him many times in the summer *94 of 1952; and a former abstracter who had known the testator for forty years.

The substance of the testimony given by these seven witnesses, if taken as true, established the necessary elements of mental capacity to make a valid will as required and frequently applied by this court — that at the time the instrument was executed the testator knew and understood the nature and extent of his property; that he knew about his relatives and others who may be the objects of his bounty, and their condition and relation to him, and was able to direct and make disposition of his property with understanding and reason. (Hudson v. Hughan, 56 Kan. 152, 42 Pac. 701; Barnhill v. Miller, 114 Kan. 73, 217 Pac. 274; Klose v. Collins, 137 Kan. 321, 20 P. 2d 494; Stayton v. Stayton, 148 Kan. 172, 81 P. 2d 1; In re Estate of Ellis, 168 Kan. 11, 210 P. 2d 417; and In re Estate of Millar, 185 Kan. 510, 345 P. 2d 1033.)

The last will and testament of the testator, among other things, gave a life estate in the testator’s 400-acre farm to Albert H. Roberts, his only son, the appellant herein. Albert had two children by his second wife, who later divorced him, and these two children are the named beneficiaries of the remainder interest in the real estate of the testator. The son of Albert died after the testator’s death, and his infant daughter, Kim Roberts, is a party to this action in his stead.

The divorce between Albert and his second wife and its aftermath was very bitter, involving among other things the refusal of the mother to allow the children to see either Albert or his parents, one of whom was the testator. The result was complete estrangement between Albert and his children. Albert, the appellant herein, having been given only a life estate in the farm, is contesting the validity of the testator’s will on the ground that he lacked testamentary capacity, and his daughter and granddaughter, having been given the remainder in fee to the farm and a house and lot in Winfield, are the proponents of the will.

The substance of the appellant’s testimony was that the testator in 1940 at the age of 70 years suffered severe head injuries in an automobile accident, and according to medical testimony and lay testimony began to decline thereafter, both physically and mentally. Early in February, 1952, the testator suffered first, second and third degree burns to his lower limbs and body when his clothing ignited from a brush fire he had carelessly started on the farm. There was *95 evidence the testator developed peculiar mannerisms and behavior patterns noticeable by neighbors and business acquaintances, which became quite pronounced from 1951 onward, including a penchant to set fires. Early in the period of 1950 through 1951 the testator made three different wills (other than the will admitted to probate herein), one of which was admitted in evidence, and two of which were excluded, in all of which he left his property, excluding some minor bequests, to his son, the appellant, absolutely. The appellant contends the significant period, as far as the mental capacity of the testator was concerned, was from the time he was hospitalized from the severe burns early in February, 1952, until his adjudication as an incompetent in the probate court of Cowley County early in February, 1953.

Evidence was conflicting as to the testator’s mental state during his hospitalization and thereafter. All of the appellant’s witnesses described the testator as being incompetent, unsound of mind, and as having mental deterioration.

Three of the appellant’s witnesses were physicians, two being specialists in diseases of the circulatory and cerebral-vascular system.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
386 P.2d 301, 192 Kan. 91, 1963 Kan. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-roberts-kan-1963.