Matheson v. Redfern

208 P. 1072, 64 Mont. 49, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 154
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1922
DocketNo. 4,707
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 208 P. 1072 (Matheson v. Redfern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matheson v. Redfern, 208 P. 1072, 64 Mont. 49, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 154 (Mo. 1922).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE COOPER

delivered the following opinion:

This action was brought to revoke the will of William J. Redfern upon the ground that he was suffering from an insane delusion. He was more than eighty years old when the will was executed. The heirs consisted of a son, the defendant, and the plaintiff. The wife of deceased died at the birth of defendant, the plaintiff then being a year and [53]*53a half old. The two children were brought up in the neighborhood by relatives of the father, with whom the plaintiff lived until she was twenty years of age, when she moved to Helena and worked as a cook for something like ten years. She then moved to Seattle, "Washington. In 1910 she met Donald Matheson, and was married to him. They lived in Seattle until 1913. In the latter part of 1911 the testator visited his daughter at her home, and remained there for a period of three months. His health improved so much during his visit that he concluded to sell his property in Montana and return to Seattle to live. In February, 1912, he so returned, but instead of selling his property wrote the plaintiff suggesting that she and her husband come to Montana and rent and operate his farm. They decided to accept the offer and came to the home of the deceased in Madison county. Soon after their arrival they rented the farm, and later signed a written lease therefor. On the ranch they lived until about the 1st of August. They then sold the lease to another person and Matheson went to work in a mine near by. For a period of three weeks thereafter the plaintiff remained on the ranch and acted as housekeeper for the family to whom the lease had been transferred. From there she went to the home of her uncle, where she stayed until the September following. In the summer of 1913 the deceased suffered from frequent headaches. In September of that year, accompanied by a neighbor, he drove a horse and buggy to the neighboring town of Laurin for the purpose of attending the funeral of an acquaintance of the family. In getting out of the rig at Laurin deceased fell unconscious to the ground, and was taken to a hotel and put to bed, where the plaintiff found" him on her arrival half an hour later. At the suggestion of the defendant the plaintiff accompanied her father to his cabin, a distance of about half a mile from his ranch, and nursed and eared for him during his illness, which lasted for a period of something like three months and a half. One morning during this period she set before him [54]*54some apple jelly she had made some time previous, upon the top of which sugar had crystallized. Deceased picked up the glass, looked at it, and asked the plaintiff what was in it. Upon her telling him it was sugar, he immediately pushed it from him, remarking that it had strychnine in it. To convince him of his mistake, she skimmed off the crystallized portion, spread it upon a slice of bread, and ate it in his presence. He nevertheless persisted in his refusal to eat it in her presence. After he had somewhat recovered from his illness, and the plaintiff was living on the ranch of Mr. Moran in the neighborhood, she made some doughnuts upon which she sprinkled granulated sugar. She took them to his cabin, but he refused to eat them, saying it (referring to the sugar) looked like poison. To convince him that it was not poison, she ate one of the doughnuts in his presence, but he still refused to eat them, telling her at the same time to take them away, which she did. Before the accident she took him milk to drink every night and morning, and, because of headaches, and his inability to cook for himself, made soups and took them to him at his cabin. The plaintiff lived with her husband upon the Moran ranch from January to the latter part of March, when they left for Butte, going from thence to Portland and later to San Francisco. From that time to his death she wrote occasionally to her father. He answered her letters in a friendly tone, giving no evidence of resentment on account of her supposed attempt to give him poisoned food. She also testified that they sold the lease and left the ranch because conditions had been misrepresented to them—by whom she was not asked—and because they could make nothing out of it; that she took no part in the controversy between Matheson and deceased over the signing of the lease, and that her father displayed no ill feeling toward her in consequence of these differences over the ranch; that after he had recovered from his illness, and was able to leave the house, she cooked articles of food for him and took them to his cabin. These he did not eat in her presence.

[55]*55Esther Rudy Widner, a neighbor, testified that she was thirty-one years of age, had resided near the deceased all her life, and had known him for seventeen years; that in the month of December, 1913, after he had somewhat recovered from his illness, he came over to her house, and during his visit, in a general conversation, remarked that children “were all right when they were little, but when they grow up you want to look out for them.” She then asked him, “How is that?” to which he responded, “That they don’t try to poison you like Lida did me” (referring to the plaintiff). She further testified: “Q. What else did he say? .A. I answered, ‘Why, she did not try to do that, Mr. Redfern,’ and he said, ‘Indeed she did.’ ” She testified further that in August, 1917, she asked deceased where the plaintiff was, and that he stated in response to her question, “She is down on the coast some place,” he guessed, and he, “hoped she stayed there, for he felt safer when she was a long ways off.”

In answer to the inquiry of counsel as to when she first learned of the terms of the will, the plaintiff stated that her brother told her in a letter. This letter the plaintiff offered in evidence upon the issue of the delusion, supplemented by an oral explanation given by the defendant soon after the commencement of the action. The letter was ruled out upon the ground that it was immaterial, ■ irrelevant and incompetent, hearsay, and the declaration of a third party, the court remarking that it was hearsay, but that the facts could be proven by the defendant himself, who was present in court. The defendant was not sworn as a witness. The will was executed January 2, 1918. The testator died March 7, following. The will was admitted to probate, and on April 23, Martin Johnson, one of the defendants, was appointed executor.

The material portion of the letter excluded is as follows:

“Father had Johnson come up to the cabin some time last winter and make his will. Some time after he showed me the will. He left you $2 and everything else to me. I told him [56]*56then that he ought to leave you more than that. He answered me and said that I did not know everything. Later he told me why. He told me what yon tried to do. I must say it was hard to believe. I can write no more.

“Your brother,

“John.'”

The court also excluded plaintiff’s offer to show by the plaintiff that the defendant, John C. Redfern, in a conversation had with.him at Laurin, Montana, during July or August, 1918, in the presence of her lawyer, H. P. Beckett, that the deceased had told him that the reason he left his daughter a bequest of only two dollars was that his daughter had tried to poison him.

At the close of the evidence for the plaintiff, defendant’s motion to instruct the jury to return a verdict in his favor was sustained because the plaintiff had failed to make out a prima facie case. From the judgment and order denying a new trial, the plaintiff has appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
208 P. 1072, 64 Mont. 49, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matheson-v-redfern-mont-1922.