In Re Moxon's Estate

207 N.W. 924, 234 Mich. 170
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1926
DocketDocket No. 98.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 207 N.W. 924 (In Re Moxon'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 Moxon's Estate, 207 N.W. 924, 234 Mich. 170 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Snow, J.

Aline Eugenia Moxon died on the 20th day of April, 1924, at her home in the city of Detroit. April 12, 1924 (eight days before her death), she signed what purports to be her last will and testament. *172 By its terms Fred J. Renaud, a cousin of the testatrix, who also lived in Detroit, was devised certain valuable real estate, and was also bequeathed personal property. Mr. Renaud offered the will for probate, and objections were made to it by Harvey Moxon, husband of testatrix, on the grounds of mental incompetency and undue influence. It was disallowed by the probate court, an appeal taken to the circuit court, and after a trial by jury again disallowed, the jury finding by its verdict in terms “that the deceased Aline Eugenia Moxon was not competent to make a will at the time the will in question was executed.” Such other facts as may be necessary to state in determining the questions raised upon the appeal to this court by proponent will be noted as we proceed. The question of undue influence was withdrawn from the jury by the trial judge, the only thing submitted being as to whether or not the testatrix was of sufficiently sound mind to execute the proffered will.

Proponent first complains that the court permitted to be answered questions as to whether or not, in the opinion of the witness, testatrix was competent to transact business on the day of the. execution of the will. While this is not the test of one’s mental capacity to make a will, there was no harm in giving an opinion as to her competency to transact business, when the correct test was given to the jury in the instructions of the trial judge.

The jury was instructed:

“It is not necessary that a person must have the same perfect and complete understanding as a person in sound and vigorous health of body and mind would have, and thus be required to know the precise legal effect of every provision contained in her will; but it must appear, in order to validate the will, that Mrs. Moxon understood essentially the nature of the act she was doing, that she understood and comprehended the extent of her property, her relations to others who may or naturally would be the object of her bounty, *173 the scope and the bearing of the provisions of her will; and she must have had sufficient active memory to collect, to assemble in her mind, without prompting, the elements of the business to be transacted, and to hold them in her mind a sufficient length of time to perceive, at least, their obvious relations to each other and be able to form some rational judgment in reference to them.”

The jury was further instructed in regard to being mentally competent to transact business as follows:

“You are not to determine whether upon April 12th, last, Mrs. Moxon was mentally competent to engage in any business, or to comprehend the elements of a. business transaction, or to understand the meaning of.' a legal document, except as these facts may have a. bearing upon the only question of fact you are to decide, namely, was she, on April 12th, last, of sufficiently sound mind to validate this instrument.”

The jury was in no way misled, but, from the plain instruction given by the court, must have fully understood the test to be applied in determining one’s mental competency to execute a will.

Proponent takes exception to the court permitting lay witnesses to express opinions as to the mental incompetency of the testatrix. We find nowhere in the record that this was done excepting where the witness first testified to facts inconsistent with sanity and based the opinion on those facts. Then, too, this was fully explained to the jury by the charge of the trial judge in his instructions, as follows:

_ “Nov/ the law does not place any limit upon the kind of witnesses, who may thus be called for your enlightenment; it does not require that medical witnesses, or expert witnesses may not necessarily be called; it does not require that only expert witnesses or medical witnesses may be called; no; 'but in its wisdom, the law provides that any witness, lay or expert, medical or nonmedical, who has any knowledge which might throw enlightenment upon the present issue here, namely, upon the 12th of last April, did *174 Mrs. Moxon have the necessary soundness of mind to make this instrument — any witness who can throw light upon that question may be received and heard; that is to say, persons who had the opportunity to observe and to talk to her may announce for your benefit the results and the impressions formed, they may testify to occurrences had with her; persons designated in the law as nonexpert witnesses can and have here testified to the observations, to conversations with her, and basing their conclusions upon such observations and on such conversations, they have been permitted to give you their opinion, whether or not she possessed at the time in issue, the necessary testamentary ability to execute Exhibit 2.”

This instruction is also complained of, but we find nothing erroneous therein.

The next assignment of error of proponent relates to the instructions of the court as to the law governing the execution of a will. There was a dispute in the testimony as to whether or not both witnesses signed in the presence of the testatrix, and in the presence of each other, the contestant claiming one of the witnesses failed to do this. That portion of the charge complained of is as follows:

“So, if one desires to make a will, he must sign the instrument himself, he must do it in the presence of two witnesses who are to act as subscribing witnesses, and then the testator, having signed the will, these two attesting witnesses must likewise sign it in the presence of each other, and also in the presence of the testator.”

The question of fact in dispute was not whether the testatrix signed in the presence of the subscribing witnesses, but whether they signed in her presence, and in the presence of each other. On this question the court properly instructed the jury as follows:

“It is the claim of contestants that at least one of these subscribing witnesses did not conform to these statutory requirements, and the claim is made that at *175 least one of these subscribers — as witnesses — did not sign either in the presence of the testatrix, or did not sign in the presence of the other subscribing witness.
“Now, as to this phase of the case, members of the jury, those who offer the will, namely, the proponents, must establish to your satisfaction by a fair preponderance of the evidence, that Exhibit 2 was executed in the exact manner required by the statute, namely, that Mrs. Moxon signed the instrument herself, that thereafter it was signed by the subscribing witnesses, Mrs. Fraleigh and Mr. Flowerday, and that these two subscribing witnesses attached their names in the presence of each other and in the presence of Mrs. Moxon. If the proponents have satisfied you of those facts, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, then Exhibit 2 was validly executed. If they have failed in this respect so as to satisfy you, then the will was not validly executed and is invalid and should be disallowed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 N.W. 924, 234 Mich. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-moxons-estate-mich-1926.