In Re. Kaven's Estate

272 N.W. 696, 279 Mich. 334
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1937
DocketDocket No. 18, Calendar No. 39,220.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 272 N.W. 696 (In Re. Kaven's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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. Kaven's Estate, 272 N.W. 696, 279 Mich. 334 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

North, J.

This is a will contest tried on appeal in the circuit court without a jury. The court sustained the will and contestant has appealed. Invalidity of the will is asserted both on the ground that at the time the will was made the testatrix was suffering from an insane delusion which affected the terms of her will and that the will was not executed in conformity with statutory requirements. (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13482.)

The will was executed February 18, 1933. Mrs. Kaven died August 22,1933. The alleged insane delusion consisted of an unfounded and unjustified be *336 lief on the part of the testatrix that her husband, the contestant, had sexual relations with other women. For many years Dr. Kaven was a practising physician and the manager and operator of a hospital at Unionville, Michigan, wherein several beds were maintained for patients and usually two nurses were employed. Notwithstanding at the time of mailing the will and at the time of her death Mrs. Kaven was seized of a substantial estate (approximately $18,000, as disclosed by the inventory on file in this court) and that she had no children, she left nothing to her surviving husband, the contestant. As bearing on the issue of insane delusion, we quote a statement of facts from proponent’s brief:

“Carrie Wright Kaven, the testatrix, was born about 1865 and was 68 years of age at the time of her death on August 22,1933. Her first husband, Dr. Wright, died in November, 1902. From the estate of Dr. Wright she inherited a house and lot in Union-ville worth $1,200, mortgages to the value of $5.,000, insurance of $2,000. On December 28,1909, she married Dr. Grottlieb H. Kaven, the contestant in the present case. Dr. Kaven was 33 years of age at the time of the marriag’e and Mrs. Kaven was 10 years older. At the time of the marriage it was agreed that the house and lot was to be owned by Dr. Kaven and subsequently title was made jointly to it with Dr. and Mrs. Kaven. Mrs. Kaven, at that time, also assigned four or five mortgages to Dr. Kaven amounting to about $5,000. Mrs. Kaven also deeded the so-called Forester lot to Dr. Kaven. * # * After the marriage Mrs. Kaven handled all of the cash, and transacted all of the business deals of loaning and collecting the money. This continued up to the time of her death. Mrs. Kaven had no children born in either of her marriages. * * * She had three living sisters. * * * Under the will the property was all left to her sister, Mrs, Henrietta Turner, of Caro, Michi *337 gan, except one-half of the furniture, clothing, bedding and books to Mrs. Edith Tack, a niece. # *
“The numerous facts as shown by witnesses for the appellant were as follows:
‘ ‘ That Mrs. Kaven suffered a malformation of her genitals which prevented her from having- children. That she had unpleasant sexual relations with her first husband and with Dr. Kaven. That in the year 1912 Mrs. Kaven referred to Dr. Kaven’s hospital as a whorehouse, and said she would call it that and didn’t give a damn if she did hurt the business. She said, ‘ That is the way I look at it; it is chasing the girls all the time.’ That also in 1912, Mrs. Kaven said if the doctor wouldn’t spend so much time with other women he would have more time to spend in Ms own home; and when calling on women he took more time than was necessary, and sometimes saw women she didn’t know anything about. From 1912 until 1933 statements of similar nature were made by Mrs. Kaven to strangers and friends. That the subject of her husband’s infidelity was a continuous topic in the mind of Mrs. Kaven in her conversations with friends and some of the doctors who visited the home to see Dr. Kaven. * * * That one night in 1922, at 11 o’clock she got out of bed and went to the hospital and ordered Dr. Kaven to go home and that same Mght they quarreled because Mrs. Kaven accused the doctor of having an affair at the hospital with one of the nurses. That one nig'ht about the same time Mrs. Kaven got out of bed and went to the doctor’s bedroom and cried, ‘Where is she?’ and searched about for a woman she suspected was with the doctor. Mrs. Kaven said she thought she heard the door open. One afternoon in 1922, Mrs. Kaven ran out of the house and ordered a nurse out of the doctor’s automobile. In September, 1931, Mrs. Kaven saw a stranger in the street and told Dr. Kaven’s niece that he was an old buck, and his wife must be leading a miserable life having to put up with that every day, every night. On another occa *338 sion about the same time (September, 1931) while Mrs. Kaven and her niece were at a farmer’s home to get apples, the farmer appeared after a few minutes ’ wait, Mrs. Kaven said, ‘he had probably been doing his family duty.’ * * * In early April, 1933, Mrs. Kaven flew into a rage and called Dr. Kaven and his driver, Carl Schaar, many vile and obscene names, and accused them with being out with the whores at Bay City. That during* the last eight years (1925 to 1933) of the marriage of Dr. and Mrs. Kaven that they did not sleep together. That many times Mrs. Kaven peeked in windows, and drove about the hospital with the apparent purpose of spying upon Dr. Kaven, and offered money to Carl Schaar to spy upon Dr. Kaven.”

A careful review of the testimony in this record practically forces the conclusion that the testatrix was suffering from an insane delusion; and that as a result of such insane delusion she made a disposition of her property which is not otherwise subject to a reasonable explanation or understanding. The major portion, if not all, of the estate of which Mrs. Kaven died seized unquestionably was the accumulated earnings of her husband in the practise of his profession and in the operation of his hospital. Because of Mrs. Kaven’s unfortunate physical and mental condition she had not been happy in her domestic relations, but such unhappiness was the natural and necessary result of her mental aberration that her husband was a philanderer. The record is absolutely barren of any testimony tending to establish such misconduct on the part of the contestant. Appellee makes no contention that it has any foundation in fact. Mrs. Kaven’s mental condition was something more than a mere mistaken notion or conclusion as being a wrong* deduction drawn from certain facts or circumstances. It was more than in *339 ordinate jealousy. Her persistent habit of talking to strangers and friends alike about misconduct on the part of her husband which had no foundation in fact, as well as her habitual references to his hospital as being a place of ill repute, when the truth was all to the contrary, and her evident total disregard of her husband’s feelings or the effect of her false accusations on his professional reputation cannot be accounted for except as being the result of mental derangement. Her otherwise inexplainable act of wholly depriving’ her husband of any participation in a large amount of property which was accumulated as a result of his own efforts is shown by this record to have resulted from her mental derangement. The cause of Mrs. Kaven’s excluding her husband from sharing in her estate is disclosed by the testimony of a disinterested witness:

“At the time of this conversation (1932 or 1933) she spoke about disposing of her property.

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272 N.W. 696, 279 Mich. 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kavens-estate-mich-1937.