In re Lukaszewski's Estate

194 N.W. 497, 223 Mich. 524
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1923
DocketDocket No. 55
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 194 N.W. 497 (In re Lukaszewski'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 Lukaszewski's Estate, 194 N.W. 497, 223 Mich. 524 (Mich. 1923).

Opinion

Steeee, J.

This case is a contest over the will of Dr. Stanislaus J. Lukaszewski, deceased, a Polish physician who practiced his profession in Detroit for 10 years or more and died on the 11th day of September, 1920. At the time of his death he was 47 years of age. He was survived by various relatives and Stephanie Lukaszewski, his wife, to whom he had been married two years and with whom he was not living at the time of his death. She was 23 years of age at the time this case was heard in 1922. When his will was presented to the probate court of Wayne county for probation she appeared and contested it unsuccessfully. She then appealed to the circuit court where the case was tried before a jury and the will held invalid on the ground of undue influence. Appellants bring the case here for review upon 11' assignments of error which center to the two propositions that there was no evidence of undue influence upon which to submit the case to the jury, and, under the assumption that there was, the verdict was against the great weight of evidence. The grounds of invalidity claimed for contestant were mental incompetency and undue influence. At conclusion of the proofs counsel for proponents moved for a directed [526]*526verdict which the court rightly granted as to mental incompetency, but submitted the question of undue influence to the jury under an able charge of which no complaint is made, reserving decision on that feature of the motion until after verdict. Proponents unsuccessfully moved for judgment non obstante, and after judgment was entered on the verdict made motion for a new trial on the ground, among others, that the verdict was against the great weight of evidence, which was denied.

No special questions of law are involved. The will, dated July 20, 1920, is a simple, concise, well drafted instrument legally executed, which gives without restrictions $1,500 to contestant, to two “faithful servants” $500 each, $1,000 each to the Detroit order of Elks, the Detroit Chemical Laboratory and deceased’s stepmother, $2,000 to his stepbrother, $2,000 to his attorney who had professionally attended to deceased’s legal business for some years and drew his will, and $3,000 to “my friend” John C. Dysarz, Jr., who it is claimed by contestant mainly exerted the undue influence charged. The residue of deceased’s estate, after paying his debts, funeral expenses and the specific legacies provided, was divided between his two brothers and two sisters.

Regardless of where blame rested, the marriage between testator and contestant proved an unhappy one. Her home was in Cleveland where she resided with her parents and was employed in the courthouse as a stenographer. He met her in Detroit following a concert at which she sang and later visited her occasionally in Cleveland. After their marriage he took her to his home in Detroit, and almost from the beginning their marriage relations appear to have proved uncongenial. She accused him of ill-treatment and cruelty, while he accused her of unseemly conduct and undue familiarity with a Polish priest of Detroit. [527]*527These disagreements resulted in their separating on three occasions within a year, the third being final, after which she neither wrote to nor saw him again during his lifetime. Their final separation was on October 30, 1919, when she returned to Cleveland where she has since resided. On November 3, 1919, she filed a bill for separate maintenance on the ground of extreme cruelty, including accusing her of unchaste conduct and “running around with other men.” On December 22, 1919, he filed an answer in denial and explanation with a cross-bill charging her with ill-treatment of him personally and misconduct in various ways, including unseemly association with a Polish priest named Kolldewiez which became a-matter of neighborhood gossip to his disgrace and humiliation in the eyes of his friends and acquaintances, asking a decree of absolute divorce on the grounds of extreme cruelty. On January 4, 1920, he began an action by capias against Sylvester Kolkiewicz, the priest with whom he accused her of improper association, to recover damages for alienation of his wife’s affections. On April 24, 1920, he filed in her suit against him an amended cross-bill charging her with adultery. Amendments to pleadings in those cases with increased vehemence of crimination and recrimination terminated so far as disclosed here on June 9, 1920, but testator died before either of the cases reached a trial or final hearing.

This ample record is replete with written and oral evidence relating to the issues involved in the cases pending when testator died, to a point where as this case ran the trial court was seemingly confronted with a consolidation of the two cases begun before testator died with a contest of his will after his death. That the unkindly feeling engendered between testator and his wife by the litigation pending at the time he made his will had a bearing on his action in framing [528]*528it as he did may be conceded; but if he acted on his own initiative under the free exercise of his own volition he had the legal right to make such will as he saw fit. His will was not an unnatural one under the circumstances, nor is it claimed to have been except in his failure to provide more liberally for his wife. They were then living apart after a final separation. They had no children. Divorce proceedings were then pending between them on her initiative. She was standing on her legal rights under their contract of marriage and making serious charges against him, reciprocated by counter charges on his part against her. He was stricken with a fatal disease when he made his will and presumptively knew that by it he could not divest her of the interest in his estate which the law gave her if she chose not to take under the will.

The undisputed testimony shows that testator was an educated man of keen and active mind, with a well-established practice in his profession largely but not entirely amongst people of his own nationality. He was recognized as a man of ability and an able physician by members of his own profession. Five physicians sworn by appellant testified that he was a well-educated physician, with a clear and apparently independent mind. Dr. Rowland E. Loucks, a physician of 20 years’ practice in Detroit, testified to acquaintance with testator since 1914, that he knew him well and treated him professionally for some time, the immediate cause of his death being pneumonia to which he was rendered very susceptible by an insidious, fatal disease called leukaemia impairing the spleen and other parts of the body by having too many white corpuscles in the blood; that he was well informed on things*in general, discussed medical subjects with him, understood the nature of his affliction, “was right up to date on many things” and mentally [529]*529perfectly normal in every way. Dr. Stevens, who had practiced in Detroit 33 years and was one of his physicians, testified that while attending him they discussed at times business, social and medical subjects, including testator’s ailment from a scientific standpoint, that his affliction did not affect his mind, which was in all respects perfectly clear and normal. Dr. J. B. Kennedy, who had practiced his profession in Detroit for 36 years, had himself been cared for professionally by testator in 1917, found him “a well-informed gentleman,” with good mentality, and testified in part as follows:

“Q. Did you find that Dr. Lukaszewski was a man who could be easily influenced?
“A. No, I don’t think so.

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Bluebook (online)
194 N.W. 497, 223 Mich. 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lukaszewskis-estate-mich-1923.