Mitchell

174 A. 38, 133 Me. 81, 1934 Me. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 24, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 174 A. 38 (Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell, 174 A. 38, 133 Me. 81, 1934 Me. LEXIS 52 (Me. 1934).

Opinion

Dunn, J.

The exceptions relate to the matter of the official proof of a writing offered in probate as the last will of Emma J. Loomis, late of Skowhegan, deceased. The Probate Court, from jurisdictional and other evidence, determined that the instrument was what it purported to be. A sister and two nieces, of the next of kin of the decedent, alleging themselves aggrieved, appealed to the Supreme Court of Probate, the Superior Court being, by statute, such tribunal. The reasons of appeal comprised that the document was not the will of the decedent, that it had not been executed as required by law, that the maker was without requisite intellectual capacity to make a will, and that execution had been produced by fraud and undue influence.

Trial of cause was de novo on appeal.

The person named as executor in the will was its proponent; he had the burden of proving, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, that statutory formalities had been observed, and that the woman was of sound mind. Gerrish v. Nason, 22 Me., 438; Robinson v. Adams, 62 Me., 369; Thomson, Aplt., 92 Me., 563, 43 A., 511; American Board of Commissioners, etc., Aplts., 102 Me.,72, 66 A., 215. Only touching fraud and undue influence, were contestants obliged to make an affirmative demonstration. O’Brien, Aplt., 100 Me., 156, 60 A., 880; American Board of Commissioners, etc., Aplts., supra. The burden of proof, in its technically proper sense, does not ordinarily shift, but remains as the law originally casts it. O’Brien, Aplt., supra.

[83]*83The appellate court, on deciding for the proponent, decreed admission of the will'to probate. Exceptions were allowed.

Exceptants, in oral argument, at the bar of the present court, -urged merely that the evidence was insufficient to show mental soundness constituting testamentary capacity. Their brief makes no other point. This is the sole subject for consideration in the contest.

The will is dated October 3,1932. It is sensible in its provisions, none sounding in folly. Testatrix, after directing the payment of her debts and charges, and the expenses of administration of her estate, designates where she wishes to be buried, and directs the erection of a headstone on her grave. She discriminates against the children of her sister Aurinda; mentions her sister Mary, and says she gives her nothing, “but if she not be living, I intentionally omit any children she may have.” The children of her brother Charles also are specifically omitted. The sum of three hundred dollars is bequeathed, in and upon trust, to accumulate until the death of her sister Martha, to defray her (Martha’s) burial expenses, including a monument; any excess is left to a cousin, Fred Loomis. The bequest was conditioned on the sister surviving testatrix. The residuary legatees are Fred Loomis and his wife.

The will was signed (sic) Miss J. Loomis.

Testatrix died January 18, 1933, aged seventy-six years. She had never married. Her most recent occupation had been that of a chambermaid; before that, she'had been a shoe factory operative. The amount of her estate was about four thousand dollars.

When the will was written, testatrix’ sister Mary, whose exclusion from bounty is of prior instance, was already dead. Her sister Martha, one of the exceptants, was a widow, in needy circumstances, eighty-eight years old. Besides this sister, and the two nieces also exceptants, testatrix had as relatives, a niece, nephews, and several cousins.

There had been a previous will, in 1928, or l930. The instrument appears to have been destroyed; the draftsman, who also drew the last will, was not certain as to the exact date of the antecedent one. He testified that the clause excluding Mary, or her children, was in the former will; further, that in its provisions, the last differed from the earlier in but two respects; first, an absolute legacy of [84]*84three hundred dollars to Martha Mitchell was changed to the trust before mentioned; second, in the stead of Fred Loomis alone, he and his wife were together named as residuary legatees.

The record does not seriously assert that the intellect of Miss Loomis lacked integrity, in testable aspect, when she defined the original dispositions. A will legally made stands until legally revoked. The destruction of a will by a person lacking testamentary capacity would not be a revocation of it. Rich v. Gilkey, 73 Me., 595. The fact testatrix had made the preceding instrument was admissible, on the question of her ability to execute that in issue, because of similarity, and tendency to show a steady purpose of disposal.

That testatrix did not sign her given name was apparently unnoticed until the paper to which the signature had been set was filed for probate. The error was seemingly regarded as of negligible consequence.

The subscribing witnesses, all whom the proponent swore, testified not only to the ceremony of the execution of the document, but to sanity, in the synonomous sense of soundness, of mind, in connection with the dispositive act. Such witnesses may, in addition to facts, give their opinion as to the state of the testator’s mentality. Cilley, Aplt., 34 Me., 162; Wells, Aplt., 96 Me., 161, 51 A., 868. Inquiry relates to the precise time of the execution of the will. Shailer v. Bumstead, 99 Mass., 112.

A physician who had regularly attended Miss Loomis, on being called to the stand, stated, in effect, that she had psychosis, or aberration, yet there was no perversion of judgment or reason. Touching infirmities of the mind, the doctor was not an expert; still he appears to have had adequate opportunity of observing and judging the intellectual faculties of his patient. Fayette v. Chesterville, 77 Me., 28; Hall v. Perry, 87 Me., 569, 33 A., 160.

Contestants offered witnesses who gave evidence based on the acts, conduct and language of the testatrix, to show that at the date of the execution of the will she was not of competency to make it.

Pernicious anemia was the attributed cause of Miss Loomis’ death. The disease was accompanied by a form of insanity due to senility, and association of a hallucination of hearing. She heard [85]*85profane language on the part of two men, and, when she quarreled with the men, laughter on the part of women. There was testimony she had said that she was aware the perception was purely imaginary.

An expert on mental and nervous disorders, sworn by the contestants, expressed, in answer to a hypothetical question, his opinion that, on the day of making the will, Miss Loomis was insane; that she was suffering from senile dementia, paranoiac type.

The analysis and classification of mental diseases is impracticable and unnecessary in legal science. In law, every mind is sound that can reason and will intelligently in the particular transaction; and every mind is unsound that cannot so reason and will. Johnson v. Maine & N. B. Ins. Co., 83 Me., 182, 22 A., 107.

“Senile dementia” is, however, as the words indicate, that diminution and weakness of mental endowment which results from old age. Graham v. Deuterman, (Ill.) 91 N. E., 61. “Paranoia” has been explained as being the synonym of “monomania”. People v. Braun, 158 N. Y., 558.

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Bluebook (online)
174 A. 38, 133 Me. 81, 1934 Me. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-me-1934.