Plunkett v. Nosek

201 N.W. 884, 229 Mich. 559
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1925
DocketDocket No. 79.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 201 N.W. 884 (Plunkett v. Nosek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plunkett v. Nosek, 201 N.W. 884, 229 Mich. 559 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Steeke, J.

This proceeding involves a contest over the will of Frances (or Fanny) Nosek who died at her home in Detroit on January 27, 1920, at the age of about 86 years, leaving a last will and testament dated June 19,1913. Her estate consisted of real and personal property valued at over $30,000. Appellants are her surviving daughters and sons, Julia Plunkett, Mary Benwig, Edward and Joseph Nosek. When the case was tried Julia was 61 years old, Mary 58, Edward 53 and Joseph, her youngest child, was 42 or 43 years. Appellees, Mabel and Frances Nosek, are testator’s granddaughters, women approaching middel age and children of her deceased son, Emil Nosek, who, if living at the time of the trial, would have been 65 years of age. The parties to this litigation are all who would have been her legal heirs had testatrix died intestate. All are beneficiaries under her will, appellees being left $500 each and the balance of her estate is divided among her sons and daughters except $200 left to her son-in-law, Herman Benwig, “for the kindness he had shown to my husband and myself.” Claiming that they should have their “one-fifth” as representatives of their de *561 ceased father, the granddaughters contested the will on the ground that it was not executed in conformity with formalities required by statute and deceased was unduly influenced in the disposition of her estate by the other beneficiaries. At the close of the proofs appellants’ counsel moved for a directed verdict in their behalf on the ground there was no competent testimony to carry either issue to the jury. This was refused and the court submitted both questions to the jury under a lengthy charge with instructions to answer the following special question: “Was the will executed according to the formalities required by law?” To this the jury returned the answer “No” in connection with their general verdict “in favor of the contestants and against the proponents.” Motion for judgment non obstante was duly made for appellants and denied, followed by a motion for a new trial on various grounds, including the claim that the verdict was against the great preponderance of evidence, which was also denied. Judgment was entered on the verdict May 29, 1923.

The will was prepared by John C. Tobias, an attorney of Detroit, who was well acquainted with deceased and had served the family from time to time in his professional capacity for many years. It was admittedly signed by deceased, is in regular form with proper attestation clause reading as follows:

“Signed, sealed, published and declared by the said Fanny Nosek as and for her last will and testament in the presence of us who, at her request and in her presence and in the presence of each other, have subscribed our names as witnesses thereto.
(Signed) “Mrs. J. E. Stubensky,
258 Maybury,
“John Edward Stubensky,
258 Maybury Grand Avenue,
“John C. Tobias,
58 Cadillac Square,
Detroit, Michigan.”

*562 Testatrix and her husband, Joseph Nosek, had spent most of their long married life in Detroit. Just when they came there or when they were married is not clearly shown. It is indicated they came from Germany. Their second daughter, Mrs. Benwig, testified that she was 58 years old and born in Detroit. It was shown that her mother spoke English, German and Bohemian. Joseph Nosek, testatrix’s husband, was in the grocery and saloon business in Detroit for many years, with the saloon or bar in a room back of his grocery and the family living in rooms above. He prospered until the panic of 1893 but, as a result of it, became financially embarrassed to an extent that he soon thereafter failed in business and lost all his accumulations, leaving the family in comparatively straitened circumstances for several years entirely dependent for support on his wages as a night watchman and earnings of the children yet living at home.

While he was yet in business and about the time of his financial reverses he and his son Emil had a serious quarrel in which the latter loudly denounced and disowned his father and mother, and became entirely estranged from the rest of the family. His father had helped him to a better education than the other children received and at the time he quarreled with his father he was a married man living near by in a house of his own with his wife and children, the two contestants here, who were then respectively about four and five years of age. Shortly thereafter he moved with his family from the vicinity of his parents to a distant part of the city. The estrangement continued until his death in 1894, when the whole family attended his funeral and manifested themselves as friendly to his wife and contestants, but for some 17 years thereafter the latter kept apart from the rest of the members of the family and did not visit their grandparents though living in the same *563 city, until their grandfather was in a hospital for a serious operation at an advanced age they visited him and were kindly received by him and their grandmother. They thereafter occasionally called upon their grandparents during the remainder of their lives and were friendly with the other members of the family when they met.

Testatrix’s husband never fully recovered from bladder trouble for which he underwent an operation, when over 80 years old, and was an invalid thereafter until his death, on May 19, 1913, when 86 years of age, leaving a will and some estate, how much and who were the beneficiaries is not shown. Some years after her husband’s failure in business testatrix inherited certain property in Detroit from a, relative, including a modest house on Maybury avenue into which the family moved and where the parents thereafter resided as long as they lived. During the later years of their life the family at home consisted of testatrix and her husband, their son Edward, by trade a machinist and tool maker, who never married and always lived with his parents, weekly paying his mother for his board as long as she lived, and an incompetent sister of testatrix whom she cared for.

Aside from Emil, who drew away under the circumstances stated, it is shown that the family relations of the parents with their children while at home and later were pleasant and congenial. In 1910 a place adjoining theirs was for sale and the old people persuaded Mrs. Benwig and her husband, Herman, to purchase it and live there to be near them, which they did. Herman, who is the first mentioned in the will, was a conductor on the Michigan Central railroad and stated he had known his father-in-law, whom he called a “grand man,” for between 40 and 50 years. He was very attentive to him after the latter became an invalid, often acting as a nurse for him.

*564 When testatrix’s husband died in 19Í3 their real estate stood in their joint names as husband and wife by entireties, and she became the sole owner. She was then less than 80 years old, in good mental and physical condition for her age, except some lameness from rheumatism, yet able to care for and manage her household affairs. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
201 N.W. 884, 229 Mich. 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plunkett-v-nosek-mich-1925.