Matter of Estate of Hastings

347 N.W.2d 347
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1984
Docket14105
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 347 N.W.2d 347 (Matter of Estate of Hastings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Estate of Hastings, 347 N.W.2d 347 (S.D. 1984).

Opinion

347 N.W.2d 347 (1984)

In the Matter of the ESTATE OF Jesse HASTINGS, Deceased.
Lucille LENIUS, et al., Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
Lillian BRADNER, Defendant and Appellant.

No. 14105.

Supreme Court of South Dakota.

Argued October 24, 1983.
Decided April 18, 1984.

*348 A. William Spiry of Farrar & Spiry, Britton, for plaintiff and appellee.

C.W. Hyde, B. Elizabeth Ganje, Aberdeen, for defendant and appellant.

WOLLMAN, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment denying probate to three wills of Jesse Hastings (Jesse). We affirm.

Jesse was eighty-five years of age when he died on May 29, 1982. He was survived by two sisters, Lillian Bradner and Lucille Lenius, and several nieces and nephews. Jesse had executed three wills dated March 25, 1963, January 19, 1976, and June 1, 1981. Lillian, proponent, was named the primary beneficiary in the three wills. She petitioned the circuit court to admit Jesse's 1981 will to probate. Lucille and several nieces and nephews filed an objection on the ground that Jesse was of unsound mind and was under undue influence at the time he executed the will.

Jesse, who had a seventh grade education, had lived on a farm with two bachelor brothers. One of the brothers, Joe, had a mental problem that eventually required his being placed in an institution. Jesse cared for Joe in addition to helping the other brother, Charley, with farm work. Charley was the only one who handled the business affairs.

Charley died on March 6, 1963. There then developed a family rift concerning who should care for Jesse, who moved in with Lillian. On March 30, 1963, Lucille executed a petition alleging that Jesse was incompetent to handle his financial affairs and praying for the appointment of a guardian over his estate. Letters of guardianship over Jesse's estate were issued to the First National Bank of Aberdeen on April 13, 1963. On December 13, 1978, Jesse was admitted to a nursing home in Aberdeen, South Dakota, from which he was released on May 17, 1981. From that time until the time of his death he stayed with Lillian or one of her daughters.

On a Sunday morning in April of 1963, Jesse's brother Sam called attorney L.R. Gustafson in Britton, South Dakota, about bringing Jesse to Mr. Gustafson's office for the purpose of making a will. Mr. Gustafson acceded to this request and met in his office later that morning with Sam and Jesse (according to Mr. Gustafson's recollection, Sam had picked Jesse up on the road inasmuch as he did not have direct access to him). Mr. Gustafson, who was aware of the guardianship of Jesse's estate, made inquiries of Jesse concerning a guardianship over his person. Mr. Gustafson then asked Jesse some questions about his property for the purpose of preparing a will. In Mr. Gustafson's words:

I then asked him how many sections of land he had, and I got no response. I then asked him how many acres he had. I got no response. I asked him how many quarters of land he had. I got no response. I asked him where his land was from his home buildings that he was living in. I got no response.

When Mr. Gustafson questioned Jesse regarding his relatives, "I again could not get direct responses from him, but he would smile and turn to Sam." After attempting to converse with Jesse for approximately one-half hour regarding these and other matters, Mr. Gustafson concluded that he would not prepare a will for Jesse because the answers that Jesse had given him had not satisfied him that Jesse knew what property he had and what he wanted to do with it. In a word, Mr. Gustafson formed the opinion that Jesse was not of sound mind at that time.[*]

*349 Elmer Thurow, the attorney who drafted Jesse's three wills, had no recollection of the signing of the March 25, 1963, will. He recalled the signing of the 1976 will, testifying that Jesse "was—well, just another person who wanted to sign a Will, dressed in ordinary neat clothes, and talked intelligently as far as I could tell." Mr. Thurow also testified that although he had not read the entire 1976 will to Jesse, he had either read or explained to Jesse the paragraph stating Jesse's intention to leave everything to Lillian. Mr. Thurow testified that Jesse indicated that he understood that provision of the will and desired to leave everything to Lillian because she had always done so much for him, or words to that effect.

The 1981 will contained a section identical to one in the 1976 will stating that Jesse had a living brother. Jesse, however, did not have a living brother in 1981. Mr. Thurow testified that he may have copied this section from the former will and that its inclusion in the 1981 will may have been his fault.

On December 27, 1978, Mr. Thurow, who was unaware of the 1963 guardianship, executed a petition on behalf of Lillian requesting that the circuit court appoint her as guardian of Jesse's person and estate. An order so appointing Lillian was entered on December 29, 1978.

Dr. A.C. Vogele, who had treated Jesse since August of 1963, testified by deposition that he did not remember noting any mental problems in Jesse prior to 1972. On June 5, 1972, Jesse was hospitalized in Aberdeen because he was becoming contentious and confused. At the time of his admission Jesse was not oriented as to time and place. Dr. Vogele's diagnosis was "Organic Brain Syndrome, Senile, associated with Arteriosclerosis." Jesse was discharged on June 8, 1972, and sent home with Lillian after showing marked improvement. He was readmitted to the hospital on October 17, 1972, again disoriented as to time and place and unable to respond to normal stimuli. The diagnosis was "chronic brain syndrome with confusional states." Jesse was discharged from the hospital on October 30, 1972. Jesse was again admitted to the hospital on December 8, 1978, because of sleeplessness and lack of control of his behavior at home. He was discharged on December 13, 1978, and admitted that same day to the nursing home referred to above. According to Dr. Vogele, Jesse was definitely confused and disoriented when he was placed in the nursing home but later recovered to his normal condition and appeared to know what he was doing and to know his family and the doctor.

The psychologist who examined Jesse during his hospitalizations in 1972 estimated that Jesse's intellectual level was within average as opposed to retarded ranges. He also testified that at the time of discharge from two 1972 hospitalizations, Jesse "was in good contact with reality, he knew who he was, where he was, what he was doing." The psychologist also testified, however, that Jesse had indicated that he owned cattle. The cattle had in fact been sold in 1963. The psychologist testified that at the time of his last visit with Jesse, December 8, 1972, Jesse's major difficulty was memory function as a result of the organic brain syndrome.

The director of nursing at the nursing home in which Jesse resided testified that at the time of his discharge from the nursing home Jesse was unaware of time and place and was mentally disoriented. In her opinion, Jesse was not of sound mind at that time.

Dan Fritz, an Aberdeen attorney who had served as a trust officer with the First National Bank, met with Jesse some half dozen times during the period from late 1966 to 1970 in connection with the guardianship of Jesse's estate. Mr. Fritz testified that Jesse was always accompanied by his brother Cyril and that he, Mr. Fritz, "only communicated through Cyril. I never communicated *350

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