Maescher v. Sammann

248 P. 537, 78 Cal. App. 189, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 223
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1926
DocketDocket No. 5618.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 248 P. 537 (Maescher v. Sammann) 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
Maescher v. Sammann, 248 P. 537, 78 Cal. App. 189, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 223 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment denying probate to an alleged will of Louis J. Maescher, deceased, which judgment was rendered upon a verdict of a jury that said will was executed by Maescher while acting under the undue influence of Mrs. Lottie Logan, one of the beneficiaries thereunder.

As appellants contend that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict of the jury and that their motion for a nonsuit made at the conclusion of the contestants’ evidence should have been granted, we shall state the facts herein rather fully with emphasis upon testimony supporting the verdict.

Louis J. Maescher married in 1902 and lived with his wife in Los Angeles, until 1912, when he left her, saying he would not return. Mrs. Maescher gave no cause for this action on his part, but, on the contrary, was a de *192 voted, industrious wife and was heartbroken when her husband left her. The year before Mr. Maescher left his wife, he met appellant Lottie Logan and about a month after meeting her told her he was a married man. She went about with him to public places of amusement and during this year he would frequently return to his wife’s home at 3 and 4 o’clock in the morning. Shortly after leaving his wife Maescher went to live at the home of Mrs. Logan, where he lived until the time of his death, in July, 1923. During a part of this time Mrs. Logan also had other boarders, but during the latter years of Mr. Maescher’s life her household consisted of Mr. Maescher, herself and an infant that she had adopted and who was also a beneficiary under the purported will and is an appellant here. During the ten years or more that Mr. Maescher lived at the home of Mrs. Logan there was no definite sum paid by him for his board and lodging. Mrs. Logan testified that she purchased much of his clothing and charged it to her account and paid her own accounts and that when she needed money he would give it to her. On several occasions he gave her large amounts of money and on one occasion gave her bonds of the value of $9,000. During a part of the time that Mr. Maescher lived with Mrs. Logan he occupied a sleeping porch off her bedroom and was obliged to pass through her room to reach the bath. At the time of his death Mr. Maescher was living with Mrs. Logan in a four-room house owned by her.

At various times during the relationship of these people Mr. Maescher was seriously ill and during the last three months of his life he declined very noticeably and no longer attended to business duties. During this period he was almost constantly with Mrs. Logan. Neighbors who saw him daily testified that during the last few weeks of his life he failed both physically and mentally. About a week prior to his death he spent the night with a neighbor and appears to have become hysterical or mentally unbalanced during the night. Mrs. Logan was sent for and took him to her home. Several days later, on Saturday, June 16, 1923, Mrs. Logan went to the home of this neighbor, Mrs. Langworthy, to use her telephone. Mrs. Langworthy and other persons present on this occasion testified that Mrs. Logan was greatly distressed and excited and stated that this was because she had just learned that Mr. Maescher had not made a will; *193 that she had thought he had provided for her and the baby. She telephoned to the attorney who afterward drew the will and not being able to reach him, she telephoned to Mr. Sammann, the business manager for Mr. Maescher. She also failed to find him in his office, but left word for him to come to her home. During the conversation between Mrs. Logan and Mrs. Langworthy the latter suggested to Mrs. Logan that Mr. Maescher was incompetent to make a will and instanced the recent occurrence at her home when he had been mentally unbalanced. Mrs. Logan agreed to this, but1 said that Maescher’s brothers were not aware of his condition. It is admitted that late that afternoon Sammann and the attorney came to Mrs. Logan’s home and the contents of the will were discussed with Maescher.

On June 19, 1923, Mr. Maescher was taken to the office of the attorney by Mr. Sammann and there he signed the will which contained the provisions he had directed upon the previous Saturday, according to the testimony of the attorney. Under its provisions $5,000 was left to the wife of testator with the condition that if she contested the will she was to receive but $5. Twenty thousand dollars was left to Mrs. Logan and the balance of the estate of the value of nearly $150,000 was left to Lois Frances Logan, the adopted child of Mrs. Logan.

The contest over the probate of the will was instituted by the brothers and sisters of deceased and the jury found that the will was executed under the influence of Mrs. Logan. The facts we have set forth herein are outstanding ones in the record, but they by no means include all the matters ■which the jury might well have considered as fortifying their conclusion. The record shows that at the time of Maescher's death Mrs. Logan had succeeded in accumulating a fortune of over $100,000; that he had given her real property, bonds, money, jewelry, and his insurance policies. Their relations were certainly most confidential and she had constant opportunity during the last few weeks of his life when he was weakened mentally and physically to influence his actions. It has repeatedly been held that opportunity and inclination to influence a testator are not in themselves sufficient showing of undue influence, without some participation by the person having such opportunity and inclination in the mMino- of Me will. But we have in the record before *194 us the testimony of several disinterested witnesses regarding Mrs. Logan’s concern and excitement when she learned no will had been made by Maescher, her statement that she thought a will had been made providing for her and her child, her attempt, on July 16th, to communicate with Mr. Young, the attorney, and with Mr. Sammann, Mr. Maescher’s manager, who afterward assisted her in her efforts to probate the will, the arrival of these two persons at her home on the afternoon of that day and the conference with Maescher about his will, which resulted in its execution three days later, which was about ten days prior to his death. There are additional facts and circumstances indicating that the testator’s state of mind shortly before his death and while free from the influence of Mrs. Logan was opposed to the disposition of his property made in his will and indeed to the making of a will at all. In conversation with his wife’s relatives he revealed his desire to provide for his wife, and to avoid making a will, thus allowing his property to go to his heirs at law.

The foregoing evidence was sufficient to entitle the contestants to submit to the jury the issue of undue influence and was a substantial basis for the jury to find in their favor upon that issue.

“ Questions involving motives, and inferences to be deduced from circumstances, are, within reasonable bounds, exclusively within the province of the jury, or the trial court when sitting without a jury, and under the rules regarding the granting of a nonsuit, they must all be resolved, so far as possible, in favor of the contestants.” (Estate of Arnold, 147 Cal. 583, 589 [82 Pac. 252].) “In many cases it is utterly impossible to prove the exercise of the infhience directly upon the testamentary act, but this is not necessary.” (Estate of Snowball,

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 537, 78 Cal. App. 189, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maescher-v-sammann-calctapp-1926.