Patterson v. Nord

189 Wash. 33
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1936
DocketNo. 26203
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 189 Wash. 33 (Patterson v. Nord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Nord, 189 Wash. 33 (Wash. 1936).

Opinions

Beals, J.

John L. Landgren was a resident of Spokane county for many years. He died May 3,1935, after a lingering illness. At the time of his death, he was seventy-nine years of age, and had been failing for months and very ill since December, 1934. He suffered from high blood pressure, and had become weak and childish.

[34]*34Mr. Landgren was of Swedish, descent, and his only known relatives were four sisters and a niece residing in Sweden. About two years prior to his death, he made his will in favor of these relatives, at the same time giving Mr. Carl Swanson, his attorney, their addresses, so that they might be communicated with promptly upon emergency. Mr. Landgren owned a little home in the town of Hillyard, and when he became ill, engaged different persons to take care of him. He changed his attendants frequently, often accusing them unreasonably of neglect or even of theft.

Early in the winter of 1935, a neighbor suggested that Mr. Landgren enter Saint Joseph’s home for the aged, at the same time suggesting that he might with propriety leave his property to this institution. This latter suggestion Mr. Landgren repudiated, saying that he had left his property to his relatives in Sweden, but February 21st he did enter the home. While an inmate, he was attended by Doctor C. M. Do-land, who became familiar with the case.

After a few weeks, Mr. Landgren left the home, he having become dissatisfied and having accused some of the sisters who cared for him of having stolen articles of his property. After leaving Saint Joseph’s, Mr. Landgren entered the Sacred Heart hospital, and shortly thereafter was sent to the psychopathic ward of Saint Luke’s hospital, as a mental case for observation. A complaint having been filed, alleging that Mr. Landgren was mentally incompetent, he was, while at Saint Luke’s, visited by the members of the insanity commission of Spokane county, Doctors O’Leary, Heitman and Lien. A hearing was had, Judge Fred H. Witt, of the superior court, presiding, with the result that the man was not committed.

After this hearing, Mr. Landgren, aided by Mr. Swanson, his attorney, went to the home of Petra [35]*35Nord, a widow of Swedish extraction, residing in Spokane. Mr. Landgren had been acquainted with Mrs. Nord’s late husband, and had visited the home on several occasions. He went to Mrs. Nord’s late in the month of March, and remained there until April 19th, when he was removed to the Deaconess hospital at Spokane, where he remained until his death. Three days before leaving Mrs. Nord’s, he made a new will, bequeathing- his property to Mrs. Nord. Mr. Swanson did not prepare this will, and in it the testator is named as “John Lundgren.”

Shortly after Mr. Landgren’s death, the will which Mr. Swanson had prepared was offered for probate and admitted. Three days later, the second will, in favor of Mrs. Nord, was filed, indexed under the name Lundgren, and regularly admitted to probate. Mrs. Nord, who was named executrix of the second will, learned of the existence of the first will when she demanded of the trust company named as executor thereof the assets of the estate. This demand was refused, and nothing more was done until, within six months- of the probate of the second will, the beneficiaries named in the earlier will filed a contest:

The hearing upon this contest (the executor named in the first will having been made a party) resulted in an order establishing the second will, the trial court holding that there had been no undue influence, and that, at the time he made the same, Mr. Landgren enjoyed testamentary capacity. The court also held that the contest instituted by the beneficiaries of the first will brought both wills before the court, and that no question of res judicata, as presented by the admission of the earlier will to probate, was present in the case. From the order establishing the second will, the contestants have appealed.

The errors assigned amount to an attack upon the [36]*36ruling of the trial court holding that Mr. Landgren made the second will, in favor of Petra Nord, free from undue influence, and that at the time he made the same he was mentally competent to dispose of his estate. Appellants also contend that the order admitting the older will to probate amounted to res judicata, and that the earlier will should for that reason be given effect.

As we are of the opinion that the evidence preponderates against the finding of the trial court upon the question of mental competency, no other question need be discussed.

Some time prior to his death, Mr. Landgren had suffered a paralytic stroke, from which he had to some extent recovered. He was, however, suffering from cerebral arteriosclerosis, a disease which affects the brain and renders the sufferer mentally unstable, suspicious and irritable. He was also suffering from cataract, and his vision was very greatly impaired. There is medical testimony in the record to the effect that an examination of Mr. Landgren’s eyes disclosed a condition recognized by physicians as a symptom of high blood pressure in the brain. A recognized medical authority indicates that this condition may cause an altered personality, and that the patient may suffer from delusions and emotional instability. Other effects of the disease are also shown, symptoms of which were present in Mr. Landgren’s case.

The record contains disinterested testimony to the effect that Mr. Landgren was always particular that he be given his correct name, and that this was not to him a matter of indifference. The record also indicates that Mr. Landgren had a strong family feeling, and that he recognized the ties of kinship existing between himself and his sisters.

Prom the latter part of the year 1934, he required [37]*37an attendant, as he was utterly unable to care for himself, and apparently entirely indifferent to the condition of his person. He was a problem case, and his attendants found it difficult to get along with him. He often, without the slightest warrant in fact, accused them of stealing his property. Doctor Doland, who attended Mr. Landgren while in Saint Joseph’s home and in the Sacred Heart hospital, considering him a mental case and a sufferer from senile dementia, advised the filing of a complaint in an insanity proceeding. Senile dementia, as is well known, is incurable and progressive.

Doctor Doland and two members of the insanity commission who examined Mr. Landgren, together with Judge Witt, testified at the hearing before the court below. They explained that, because manifestly Mr. Landgren was not dangerous, and because his financial condition was good and he was able to pay for proper care and attention in a private institution, it was thought best not to send him to a state asylum for the insane. The three doctors and Judge Witt all testified that, in their opinion, Mr. Landgren, at the time they saw him, lacked testamentary capacity. In view of their testimony, the fact that the insanity commission failed to find that the patient should be sent to an insane asylum is of little consequence. He was not dangerous to be at large, and was being well cared for where he was.

Insanity and testamentary capacity are two entirely different things. A man may be insane and properly confined in an institution, and yet have lucid intervals during which he may enjoy testamentary capacity, and may make a will. On the other hand, a man may be entirely lacking in testamentary capacity, but for good reasons not be a proper subject for commitment to a state asylum.

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Bluebook (online)
189 Wash. 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-nord-wash-1936.