Lawrence v. Prentice

4 P.2d 251, 117 Cal. App. 163, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 384
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 1931
DocketDocket No. 7957.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 P.2d 251 (Lawrence v. Prentice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence v. Prentice, 4 P.2d 251, 117 Cal. App. 163, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 384 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

ARCHBALD, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from an order denying proponents’ petition to probate a will.

Decedent, Andrew J. Jones, had conducted a hotel and restaurant business for many years, bought and sold homes and engaged in the real estate business until he became financially independent, although unable to read and write, and since 1912 had largely been occupied in taking care of his own properties. He was interested in church work and he and his wife saw much of proponent Bessie E. Prentice in their charitable work, and apparently they became warm friends. In 1923 decedent suffered a serious attack of rheumatism. In 1924 his wife died, the proponent Mrs. Prentice visiting the wife sometimes two or three times a week during her last illness, and when the wife passed away she aided in the funeral arrangements. In the latter part of 1924 decedent, being then about seventy-two years of age, had further trouble with his rheumatism, whereupon he sold two houses *165 belonging to him, including his residence, and on October 2d started to visit his nephew, Edgar Lawrence, husband of contestant herein and decedent’s only living relative. He first visited some hot springs in Wyoming and later went to the home of his nephew in Colorado, where he arrived about January 7, 1925. Inducing his nephew to come to California with him, he returned to Los Angeles about January 14th, of the same year. The nephew lived with decedent and took care of him until about February 20, 1925, at which time the latter was taken to a hospital on account of a severe burn, occasioned by his using a lighted lantern in bed for heating purposes. While in the hospital, and on February 2'lst, he made a will which gave all of his property, except the sum of $100 cash bequeathed to a church in which he was interested, to contestant’s husband, and stipulated that in the event of the latter’s death prior to his own such share was to go to a son of his deceased wife’s brother. Decedent was later taken from the hospital to a house which he rented, where he lived with his nephew until March 24, 1925, when he moved to the home of proponent Prentice. While living there, and on April 4, 1925, the will which was denied probate herein was executed. The latter part of April decedent and proponent Prentice and her husband moved into a home on East 52nd Street, Los Angeles, which decedent had just purchased, where they resided until August 19, 1928. At about the time decedent moved to the home of Mrs. Prentice and her husband he gave his nephew $200 to tide the latter over until he could get a job, after which decedent relied upon Mrs. Prentice to care for him, instead of the nephew.

Contestant alleged in opposition to the probate of the will filed by proponent trust company that decedent was incompetent to make a will at the time the last one was executed; that at such time he was so weakened in body and mind that he was easily influenced by those having his care, and that proponent Prentice and the attorney who drew the will, who acted as guardians and custodians of his person and property and who were constantly with him and upon whom he was entirely dependent for the care and attention he needed, had and exercised a controlling influence over his mind and will and were able to and did dictate to him what he should do with his property, and that the will *166 in question was the result of such influence and not the result of decedent’s free and voluntary act.

The findings of the court are that the allegations of the contest are true, except as to the allegation that said attorney influenced the execution of the will in question in any way. Appellants contend that there is no evidence to support either the finding that decedent was incompetent at the date of the execution of the challenged will or that the same was the result of undue influence on the part of Mrs. Prentice.

If there is any substantial evidence supporting either finding the judgment must be affirmed, as also it must if there is a conflict in the evidence supporting such finding.

Some thirteen witnesses, including the nephew mentioned, since deceased, testified for contestant. One of them, W. J. Cudger, who the record shows was an intimate acquaintance of decedent, testified that the latter was a religious fanatic, but that he “would not consider him insane”. Two others, Estelle M. Porter and Carrie Lawrence, the latter being the wife of the nephew, Edgar Lawrence, and the first being superintendent of the hospital to which decedent was taken when he burned himself, did not express any opinion as to decedent’s soundness of mind. The other ten each said that in their opinion decedent was of unsound mind. Two of such witnesses were physicians, one being a friend, and the other eight qualified as intimate acquaintances. Edgar Lawrence, the nephew and only heir, gave as his reason for such opinion that decedent was “full of rheumatism; he could not walk”; that he was “notionable”—meaning, as he expressed it, that “he wanted everything his way”; that he wanted the house overheated; that he put a lighted lantern in his bed and burned himself. The witness testified, with reference to the latter incident, that he, the nephew, lit the lantern and gave it to decedent when requested so to do, and that that was the first time he, the witness, made up his mind his uncle was of unsound mind. Yet the record shows that after that the witness was in the room at the hospital when decedent made the will in the former’s favor. Lawrence also testified that decedent did not know he was burned—that he had a pain but “didn’t know what it was”; that he was disagreeable to get along with and did not want to stay in the hospital; that he *167 transferred the bank account on which the witness could draw checks into the name of decedent’s trusted attorney, Mr. Dellamore, and “kept Mr. Dellamore over me”; that after the witness and decedent had been at “Mother Felix’s” home (after leaving the hospital) a few days “he became cranky” and would not let anybody be in the room; that while decedent was in the hospital “he told me to go and look and see if I could get a house. He suggested it first. He didn’t want to stay in the hospital. He wanted to rent a house and instructed me to go out and rent one. Pursuant to those instructions we were searching three or four days. We kept reporting back to him. He seemed to grasp what it was all about.” According to the understanding of the witness, a man could be said to be of unsound mind who “is not capable of doing Ms own business”.

Cyrus Simpson, decedent’s chauffeur, testified that decedent was a degenerate—explaining that he was “immoral”; that he went to the hot springs in Wyoming, in the winter time; that he belonged to almost every Christian organization in Los Angeles; that he was “notionate” at times and “irrational all the time I knew him”; that he was “irrational when he was running his restaurant business” (the witness did not specify any acts which he denominated “irrational”); “He didn’t do the right thing by me.” The witness complained because he was not paid as he thought he should have been for his services and was not remembered in decedent’s will.

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Hopkins v. Hopkins
29 P.2d 249 (California Court of Appeal, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
4 P.2d 251, 117 Cal. App. 163, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-prentice-calctapp-1931.