In re Shepard's Estate

126 N.W. 640, 161 Mich. 441
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1910
DocketDocket No. 38
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 126 N.W. 640 (In re Shepard'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 Shepard's Estate, 126 N.W. 640, 161 Mich. 441 (Mich. 1910).

Opinion

Blair, J.

David Shepard died March 16, 1904, at his residence in Battle Creek, at the age of 83 years and 5 months, leaving a will. His estate was inventoried by the special administrator at $33,500. Two sons, Freedom G. Shepard, the proponent of the will, and Alfred Shepard, the contestant, survived him. His wife died in 1898. In the course of his business career as a manufacturer of [443]*443threshing machines and by judicious investments he accumulated a property of over half a million dollars in value. The bulk of this property he had from time te time turned over to his two sons, so that on August 2, 1902, he had in his possession and under his control, according to contestant’s brief, $78,552 of notes, bonds, stocks, mortgages, etc., of which contestant claims one-half belonged to him by previous gift from his father. On July 29, 1902, testator deeded to proponent his homestead, valued at about $15,000. On or about August 2, 1902, he transferred to proponent the above-mentioned personal property and executed the following writing:

“Whereas I have heretofore deeded my house and premises where I now reside to my son Freedom G. Shepard, and whereas I have this day made certain transfers of stocks and property to said Freedom G. Shepard, this is to certify that the same is done by me without any suggestion from said Freedom G. Shepard, and that he had no knowledge or intimation of the making of said deed until after same was made and executed, and no knowledge of the assignment or transfer of said stock and notes till this day when he was informed by me of my intentions so to assign the same, and to deliver the same to him. I further state that he has never at any time requested me to make any of the said transfers and has never sought to influence me in regard to the same, but all the same are made by me on my own motion and being the final disposition I desire to make of the said property.
“David Shepard.”

On August 13, 1902, he executed the will in question, giving to proponent the residue of his estate after the payment of his debts, and appointing him executor. The third paragraph is as follows:

“ I make no bequest in this, my last will, to my son Alfred Shepard, for the reason that I have heretofore given and delivered to him the portion and part of my estate that I desire him to have, and all of which he has before this time carried away with him. I make this suggestion for the reason that I have heretofore made some assignments of stock, notes and other choses in action to him with the then intention of at some future [444]*444time completing the transfer by delivering the same to him, but which were never delivered to him, and which assignments I have revoked and annulled before delivery and before completing the transfer. And I further state that all stocks, notes and other property which I have ever delivered, either directly or indirectly, to my said son, Alfred Shepard, have been taken possession of and carried away by him before this time.”

Contestant filed objections to the probate of the will upon the grounds that the testator was mentally incompetent to make it; that it was the result of an insane delusion; and that proponent procured its execution by fraud and undue influence. From the order admitting the will to probate contestant appealed to the circuit court, where the will was disallowed, the jury finding, in response to special questions, that the testator was incompetent to make it, and that it was obtained by undue influence. Proponent has appealed to this court, urging, among other points, that there was no evidence to support the special or general verdict.

Mental Incompetency. Mr. Fred M. Wadleigh, a lawyer of standing and good repute, who drew the will, testified that Mr. Shepard was mentally competent to execute it, and that the statements contained in the third paragraph were the substance of the testator’s instructions to him. The wholly disinterested friends and neighbors of testator, his business associates and fellow directors, and officials of important corporate institutions, testified to facts and opinions based thereon which, if believed (and they were undisputed), conclusively demonstrated his mental competency to execute the will in question. As an illustration of the character of this class of testimony, we refer briefly to the testimony of Mr. E. C. Nichols, president of Nichols & Shepard Company, who had from boyhood known David Shepard, and been for many years connected with him in business. He lived near him on the same street and had frequent talks with him. He had an interview with him a short time before going to Europe on May 22, 1902, and another after his return, [445]*445August 28, 1902, very soon after the execution of the will. A portion of his testimony is as follows:

“He was vice president of the new company, and acting president, being vice president, the president having died prior to that, of the old company. I called upon Mr. Shepard to talk about my going away and to learn from him if there was any reason or cause why I should not go. We felt, among other reasons, that it was leaving the Nichols & Shepard Company and the old company without any official head except Mr. Shepard himself, and our conversation turned upon the propriety of my going away, and the general interests of the business; about the conversation you would naturally expect among two men who were partners for a good many years, and one thinking of going off upon a long three or four months’ European trip. At that time I discussed with him the business of the company quite fully. I should say the interview continued an hour and a half or two hours. * * *
“After my return on the 28th of August that year I saw David Shepard very soon. In the course of not more than a week I made a special visit to Uncle David’s house and had a long and pleasant little visit with him, talking over the business of the year and the general conversation— about the ordinary conversation that would occur between two men situated as we were. I remember particularly how we felt about the fire, which occurred about a week or ten days after I left here. I talked with him about the fire and the excitement we would naturally have over the burning of a large building in the middle of an important season. He spoke especially of how well the force at the works organized themselves and managed it, resurrecting a lot of old burned machinery, got it going, and built a roof over it. He seemed very much pleased over the action of the workingmen who had made so much out of the situation in spite of its embarrassments. He seemed to indicate an acquaintance with what had been done, entirely so. We had two or three strange calamities while I was away, and they were referred to by both of us; one was the striking of the smokestack of our building there by lightning. This was while I was away. Another was that my house was struck by lightning during the same fall. He appeared to be cognizant of those facts. I remember we both felt that it seemed to be a sort of calamity upon us. * * *
“At no time on these occasions early in 1902 when I [446]*446saw Mm did I discover in David Shepard any evidence of unsoundness of mind. I did not discover anything in his conversation that was not connected, rational, and intelligent.

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Bluebook (online)
126 N.W. 640, 161 Mich. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-shepards-estate-mich-1910.