Peace v. Peace

1931 OK 293, 299 P. 451, 149 Okla. 123, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 26, 1931
Docket20483
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 1931 OK 293 (Peace v. Peace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peace v. Peace, 1931 OK 293, 299 P. 451, 149 Okla. 123, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 196 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

ANDREWS, J.

This cause is here on appeal from the judgment of the district court of Osage county, admitting to probate the last will and testament of Paul Peace, an adult restricted Osage Indian. The trial in the district court was de novo on appeal from the comity court. For convenience the *124 parties will be referred to as proponents, contestant, and testator.

The contestant, wbo was tbe wife of the testator, presents nine assignments of error under four contentions, which we will consider separately.

The. first and principal contention is that the testator did not have testamentary capacity to execute the will.

The record shows that the testator was about 50 years of age at the time of his death; that the will admitted to probate was executed on December 16, 1926; that at the time of his death he was, and for a long time prior thereto he had been, a resident of Fairfax, Osage county; that he married Olara Nash, an Osage Indian, and three children were born to them; that one of those children died; that the other two, Joseph Peace and David Peace, minors, survived him; that they are the proponents of the will; ¡hat in 1915, his wife obtained a divorce from him and a settlement of property rights was made; that he. conveyed his inherited one-half interest in his deceased child’s land to his two children,, Joseph Peace and David Peace; - that he was addicted to the use of intoxicating liquors and to the use of peyote, a narcotic; that in 1919, the county court of Osage county appointed a guardian for him after determining him to be an incompetent, and that in 1920, while under guardianship, he married Thersa Peace, the contestant herein.

If testator’s mental condition, evidenced by a finding of the court of incompetency and the appointment of a guardian, was such as to show him lacking in testamentary, capacity on December 16, 1926, it must show want of testamentary capacity in October, 1924, when the former will was executed, and want of capacity to marry in 1920, at the time he married the contestant.

The testator remained under guardianship until February, 1926,, when, upon a petition of himself and the contestant, the county court of Osage county made an order of restoration after finding that he was sane and that his habit of becoming intoxicated had ceased.

In 1922 the contestant filed a petition for divorce, charging the testator with abandonment and with extreme cruelty. That proceeding was abandoned and the testator returned to their home. In September, 1923. the testator filed a petition for divorce, charging cruelty in threatening to shoot him and threatening to poison him. That action was abandoned and the testator again returned home. During their married life the testator and contestant repeatedly had domestic trouble.

On December 16, 1926, the day the will was prepared and executed, testator went to the home of Magella Whitehorn in Hominy, Okla., and requested her to take him. to Pawhuska and to help him attend to some business. Magella Whitehorn, the driver, the testator, and his mother left Hominy about 9 o’clock in the morning and drovfe to Pawhuska, where they stopped near the Indian Agency. Testator got out of the car and went to the Indian Agency,, but soon returned and directed them to drive to Robert Stuart’s office. He went to Stuart’s office, but did not find Stuart. They then drove to the courthouse, where testator and Mag-ella Whitehorn got out of the car and went into the courthouse. He did not find Stuart, but saw A. W. Comstock. He told Comstock he wanted him to prepare him a will. Com-stock directed them to his office. They went there and Comstock soon joined them. Testator told Comstock that testator’s wife had had him make a will before, but that that will was not right and he. wanted to make a will and not to leave her anything; that he wanted to give it all to the boys, and gave him the names of the boys. Comstock explained to testator that it would be necessary to give his wife one-third in order to make the will legal. Testator then agreed to give his wife one-third. Testator spoke the Osage and English language and, under testator’s instructions, the will was drawn and read over to testator, who said it was as he wanted it. It was signed by him and at his request it was witnessed by Magella Whitehorn and Paul Comstock. Paul Com-stock drew the will.

Testamentary capacity of a testator must be determined as of the time of the making and execution of the will. In re Estate of Wah-Kon-Tah-He-Um-Pah, 108 Okla. 1, 232 Pac. 46. That question, as well as the questions of duress, menace, fraud, and undue influence, are questions of fact and not of law. In re Estate of Wah-Kon-Tah-He-Um-Pah, supra; In re Estate of Hart, 106 Okla. 180, 233 Pac. 227. If the testator understood the nature and consequences of bis acts and was free from duress, menace, fraud, and undue influence at the time of the making of the will, he had testamentary capacity. In re Estate of Hart, supra. In determining that question, prior and subsequent acts have bearing only to the. extent of helping to determine mental status at the time of the execution of the will. In re Estate of Wah- *125 Kon-Tah-He-Um-Pah, supra; In re Wah-Kon -Tah-He-Um-Pah’s Estate, 109 Okla. 126, 234 Pac. 210; Bilby v. Stewart, 55 Okla. 767, 153 Pac. 1173; and Dickey v. Dickey, 66 Okla. 269, 168 Pac. 1018. Undue influence such as will invalidate a will must be something which destroys the free agency of the testator at the time the instrument is made and which, in effect, substitutes the will of another for that of the testator. It is not sufficient that the testator was influenced in the ordinary affairs of life or that he was surrounded by relatives and friends in confidential relationship with him at the time of its execution. In re Estate of Hart, supra; In re Chopper’s Estate, 112 Okla. 25, 239 Pac. 592; in re Will of Swartz, 79 Okla. 191, 192 Pac. 203; and Kindt v. Parmenter, 83 Okla. 116, 200 Pac. 706. In determining the mental status of the testator, presumption of sanity must be indulged and, where a will appears to be a rational act performed in a rational manner, such presumption and such apparently rational act amounts to evidence of testamentary capacity. The fact that a testator has been adjudged incompetent to manage his property and business affairs and that a guardian has theretofore been appointed are no more than evidences of incompeteney which may be overcome by other evidence that testator was mentally competent at the time of the execution of the will. In re Estate of Wah-Kon-Tah-He-Um-Pah, supra.

The proceedings to admit the will to probate were equitable in their natuie, and this court will weigh the evidence and will not reverse the judgment of the trial court unless the judgment is clearly against the weight of the evidence. Youngblood v. Rector, 126 Okla. 210, 269 Pac. 579.

In this case the finding of the trial court as to his testamentary capacity and want of undue influence is not against the clear weight of the evidence. While there is some evidence tending to show want of testamentary capacity at various times, the clear weight of the evidence is that on the date of the execution of the will in question there was no want of testamentary capacity as defined by this court. This record shows that the testator was fully capable of understanding the nature and effects of his acts on that-date and that at the time of the.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 293, 299 P. 451, 149 Okla. 123, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peace-v-peace-okla-1931.