Potter v. Jones

12 L.R.A. 161, 25 P. 769, 20 Or. 239, 1891 Ore. LEXIS 70
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 12 L.R.A. 161 (Potter v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potter v. Jones, 12 L.R.A. 161, 25 P. 769, 20 Or. 239, 1891 Ore. LEXIS 70 (Or. 1891).

Opinion

Lord, J.

— This was a proceeding instituted in the county court of Clackamas county by the contestant to have the order admitting to probate the will of her father, Cyrus W. Jones, deceased, vacated and annulled, and the will set aside and declared void. The will was executed on the 19th day of January, 1887, and the testator died on the 20th day of August, 1887, leaving several children, to whom he devised his property, with the sole exception of the contestant, who was excluded from its bounty. The proceeding resulted in a decree vacating the order, and setting aside the will as void, which was affirmed on appeal by a decree of the circuit court, and from which this appeal is taken. The theory upon which the will is alleged to be void is, that the testator, though conceded to be of sound mind upon all other subjects, was laboring under a delusion in relation to the legitimacy of his daughter, the contestant, causing him to entertain a violent hatred or insane aversion toward her, which rendered him wholly incapable of doing any legal act in which her interest was involved, and which so affected [241]*241and influenced him at the time of the execution of his will as caused him to deprive her of all benefit in his estate.

The record discloses that the testator was married to his wife on the 10th day of May, 1835, in the state of Ohio; that a few years thereafter they emigrated to Missouri, where they continued to reside until 1861, when they emigrated to Oregon, having at this time a family of ten children, and settled in Marion county, on what is commonly known as Mission Bottom.” Here they continued to reside until 1865, when they started on a return trip to Missouri, taking with them two of their boys and three of their girls, one of whom is the contestant, and going by the way of California, where they stopped for a short time, and where the two hoys concluded to remain. The parents, with their three daughters, went on to Missouri, and after their arrival there his wife and the contestant, of their own choice, left him and went to Ohio, where they remained and never lived afterward with him. The testator returned to Oregon in 1867, with the other two girls. He bought another farm in Marion county; where he resided for a few years, and then purchased the farm in Clackamas county, to which he moved and where he was living when the will was executed and until his death. In 1872 he obtained a decree of divorce from his wife on the ground of desertion and cruel treatment.

The evidence shows that the testator was a man of sensitive disposition and of a nervous and jealous temperament; that early after his marriage, and especially while he and his wife resided in Missouri, he became suspicious of her chastity, and entertained the belief that she was intimate with a man who met her near a certain spring for adulterous purposes, and that two of the children, the contestant and Calvin Jones, were the offspring of such adulterous embraces. He also expressed the belief that another person in Oregon, while they lived together here, was on intimate terms with her, and at one time sought to chastise him for his supposed conduct. This belief, however, in the infidelity of his wife and the illegitimacy of two of [242]*242his children, was not proclaimed from the housetop, or to every one, but, with few exceptions, and those intimate friends, it was only communicated to his brothers. His daughters who lived with him and are now married never seem to have heard of the matter or knew he entertained such a belief until the commencement of this suit. They knew there was an estrangement between their parents, and that they did not live happily together, but they never supposed the cause of it was due to any morbid delusion involving the chastity of their mother or the illegitimacy of any of the children.

To avoid prolixity, we shall say our conviction from the evidence is, that his wife was a chaste woman and faithful to her marriage vows, and that the two children named were not the spurious product of her adulterous embraces with another man; but the fact remains, according to the testimony of those to whom he confided his domestic troubles, that he always furnished some grounds for his belief. He identified the party and place, and described the clandestine manner by which their improper meeting was effected. That such things could occur or have occurred under less probable circumstances, will not be denied. They are only rendered improbable in the present instance by the absolute confidence expressed in her marital fidelity by her acquaintances. While, therefore, we shall regard this suspicion or belief of her infidelity to her marriage bed with its attendant circumstances as unjust and unworthy of belief, we cannot disregard the fact that there was the opportunity for the parties to have met at the spring, and it might have occurred in reality for perfectly proper and innocent purposes, or without evil design or any concert of action, yet? to a man of the testator’s sensitive and jealous disposition, a trifling circumstance of this kind or a slightly imprudent act would incite his distrust and fill him with jealous suspicions. Whether there was any such visits to the spring near his residence, surreptitious or otherwise, by his wife and the suspected party while they lived in Missouri, there is [243]*243nothing shown by the evidence except his declarations to the persons already referred to, that he had often seen such party go to the spring, when his wife would don her bonnet and go clandestinely to the same place. The evidence of those whose testimony leads to the conviction that his suspicions or accusations were unjust and unfounded, rest not upon any knowledge of the facts one way or the other, but on their knowledge of her character and confidence in her chastity as inconsistent with such conduct. Mr. Sampson Jones and his wife, people of excellent character, and whose testimony is entitled to credit, to whom the testator perhaps talked and gave vent to his insinuations and suspicions with more freedom than any other, regarded his accusations of unchastity as unjust and untrue, and the circumstances which gave rise to them as too inconsistent with her character to be worthy of belief, and express the opinion that she was faithful to her marriage vows and the duties of a wife, and that in view of his conduct, the testator was laboring under a delusion upon this matter.

Stress and importance has been given to this phase of the case, and the evidence, as it is the main starting point of his domestic woes and infelicities, of his suspicions of his wife’s infidelity and the illegitimacy of his two children, the contestant and her brother Calvin Jones. It is true that while they lived in Missouri, and in Oregon between 1861 and 1865, their married lives were embittered by estrangements. Much of the time they refused to speak with each other or to conduct themselves in a way calculated to resume confidence and affection; and it was doubtless during some such period, when the cup of their domestic unhappiness was overflowing, that the testator was disposed to give vent to his feelings and indulge in unjust accusations against his wife’s chastity in the manner described by some of his relatives. It was about this time when the testator and his wife were estranged and not on speaking terms, although living together as husband and wife, that the conversation with Northcutt took place in which that witness represents him [244]*244as inveighing with great temper and acrimony against his wife’s marital infidelity.

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Bluebook (online)
12 L.R.A. 161, 25 P. 769, 20 Or. 239, 1891 Ore. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-jones-or-1891.