Murphy v. Nett

116 P. 1004, 43 Mont. 353, 1911 Mont. LEXIS 35
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1911
DocketNo. 2,925
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 116 P. 1004 (Murphy v. Nett) 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
Murphy v. Nett, 116 P. 1004, 43 Mont. 353, 1911 Mont. LEXIS 35 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BRANTLY

delivered the opinion of the court.

On December 24, 1909, Anna E. Nett, defendant, filed a petition in the district court of Lewis and Clark county asking for an order admitting to probate a paper purporting to be the last will and testament of Edward J. Murphy, deceased, and to have been executed at Portland, Oregon, on December 12, 1908. The paper bears the signature of the deceased, attested by two wit[361]*361nesses pursuant to the form prescribed by the statute. On January 8, 1910, Mary Murphy, plaintiff, the mother of the deceased, filed her written opposition to the probate, alleging, in substance: (1) That, at the time of the execution of the paper, Edward J. Murphy was insane and wholly lacking in mental capacity to make testamentary disposition of his property, and that the pretended will was not and is not his will; and (2) that the said instrument, if executed at all by the said Murphy, was procured to be executed by undue influence on the part of the defendant. Upon these allegations there was issue by answer. Upon a trial had to a jury, the following findings were returned:

“(1) Was the deceased, Edward J. Murphy, competent to make a last will and testament at the time of the signing of the instrument offered for probate as his will? Answer: No.
“(2) Was the mind of the deceased, Edward J. Murphy, at the time of the execution of the instrument offered for probate as his will, free from the undue influence of the defendant, Anna E. Nett? Answer: No.”

The court entered its judgment thereon, rejecting the will and declaring that the deceased died intestate. The defendant has appealed from the judgment and an order denying her motion for a new trial. The principal contention is that the evidence is insufficient to justify the findings. Before proceeding to examine the evidence, however, we may properly notice briefly some suggestions made by counsel for appellant touching the sufficiency of the allegations of fact by plaintiff, showing undue influence, and alleged inconsistency in the findings.

It is suggested that the ultimate facts showing how undue influence was exerted upon the mind of the deceased are not alleged, and hence that this ground of plaintiff’s opposition is vulnerable to a general demurrer. We understand that this suggestion carries with it the further suggestion that this ground of opposition is insufficient to sustain a judgment. We do not question the propriety of the rule invoked by counsel (Estate of Gharky, 57 Cal. 274; In re Sheppard’s Estate, 149 Cal. 219, 85 .[1] Pac. 312); but we find nothing in the assignments of error [362]*362in the brief on this subject. Counsel are therefore not entitled to have the suggestion in this behalf considered. (Hickey v. Kaufman, 34 Mont. 106, 85 Pac. 870; Delmoe v. Long, 35 Mont. 139, 88 Pac. 778; Lehane v. Butte Electric Co., 37 Mont. 564, 97 Pac. 1038; Foster v. Winstanley, 39 Mont. 314, 102 Pac. 574.) If it be conceded that this ground of opposition should be held insufficient as a pleading in point of law, yet, under the view we have taken of the case, the integrity of the judgment is in nowise affected. The allegation of want of testamentary capacity contained in the first ground of opposition is conceded to be, and is, sufficient to support the judgment, and no = serious contention is made that the finding in response to the issue tendered thereon is not sufficient.

But counsel say that the two finding’s are inconsistent, in that the one negatives the existence of the fact found in the other, in other words, that the finding that the deceased executed the alleged will under the impulse of undue influence exerted by the defendant, implied testamentary capacity. A person enfeebled in mind and body, though still retaining testamentary capacity, may be more readily swayed and influenced by those about him, than when in his normal condition; yet, in a legal sense, undue ,[2] influence cannot be exerted upon a person who is so far insane or unconscious as to be destitute of testamentary capacity. (Gwin v. Gwin, 5 Idaho, 271, 48 Pac. 295; Stirling v. Stirling, 64 Md. 138, 21 Atl. 273; 29 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 2d ed., 104.) When in this condition a person is without intelligent volition; he is for that reason not legally responsible for his acts, whether they are prompted by others or not. Undue influence imposes a restraint on the will of the testator, who, but for the restraint, would be free and responsible, so that his testamentary act is not the result of his own volition, but of the will of another. Therefore, the findings involve conclusions which cannot logically stand together, and in this sense are inconsistent; yet they are not inconsistent in the sense that each requires the ,[3] rendition of a different judgment and thus mutually destroy each other. This is the test by which must be determined [363]*363the question whether the judgment as rendered should be allowed to stand. The findings are not so intimately connected that error in the one implies error in the other. Hence, if either be supported by the evidence, and it does not appear that substantial error intervened affecting it, the other may be regarded as immaterial. (Dexter v. Codman, 148 Mass. 421, 19 N. E. 517.) In this case it was said: “It is a mistaken assumption that the issues as to sanity and undue influence, in a case of this kind, are necessarily so connected that error in a finding upon one of them implies error in the finding upon the other. In many cases, perhaps in most, they are very closely connected. In some the connection is slight and unimportant. Where there is a close connection, sometimes it is such that an error in relation to the former would almost certainly involve an error in regard to the latter, while an error in regard to the latter would not be likely to affect the finding upon the former. Sometimes a very important part of the evidence of undue influence is the mental condition of the testator, and sometimes the proof comes chiefly from overt acts of coercive tendency. In the same case there may be evidence tending to show insane delusions affecting the disposition which a testator seeks to make of his property, and evidence of undue influence which has hardly any relation to his mental peculiarity. How far the fact that a jury has gone astray in dealing with one issué shall be deemed important in considering a motion to set aside their findings upon another must depend upon the relations of these issues to each other in the particular case, the evidence introduced upon each, and any facts and circumstances which throw light upon the nature or probable cause of the jury’s mistake. And finally, each issue is to be dealt with by itself, in view of the evidence, and of all that has occurred in the course of the proceedings.”

The court should have directed the jury to omit an answer to the second interrogatory if they should answer the first'in favor of the plaintiff, and vice versa. But that this course was not pursued does not necessarily require a reversal of the judgment, if either finding is justified by the evidence. Moreover, this [364]*364contention, like the one first noticed, is made by way of suggestion during the course of the argument upon the sufficiency of the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 P. 1004, 43 Mont. 353, 1911 Mont. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-nett-mont-1911.