Purdy's Administrator v. Evans

160 S.W. 1071, 156 Ky. 342, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 434
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 9, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 1071 (Purdy's Administrator v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purdy's Administrator v. Evans, 160 S.W. 1071, 156 Ky. 342, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 434 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hannah

Reversing.

Thomas C. Purdy, on September 11, 1855, married Miranda Shreve. This wife bore him one child, Miranda; and died in July, 1858. This daughter was born September 29, 1856; and Married Joseph Evans in October, 1872. She is the contestant herein.

In January, 1860, Thomas C. Purdy married Mary Dean, the only offspring of this second marriage being A. D. Purdy, the contestee herein, who was born in October, 1860. This last wife died June 23, 1907.

On April 14, 1873, said Thomas C. Purdy made and published his last will and testament. He procured Ex-governor Proctor Knott to prepare same. It was signed by him, and witnessed by his brother-in-law, W. P. Dean, and by Gov. Knott. This will devised all his property to his then wife, Mary, for life, with remainder to his son, A. D. Purdy (who was then in his thirteenth year); with the further provision that should there be other children thereafter born to said testator and his wife, they should share equally with said A. D. Purdy.

Appellee, Mrs. Evans, at the time of her mother’s death was about 21 months old. She passed into the custody of her maternal grandmother, and remained with her until she married. She went to the home of her father on one occasion when she was about nine years of age, remaining some two or three months, attending school; and returned to her grandmother’s when the school term was completed. Later, when she was about 14 years of age, her father asked her to come and live with him, but she declined, saying she preferred to remain with her grandmother. She went to her father’s home once after that; and she testifies that because she refused to go and live with them, her step-mother told her not to return, and her father joined in this request; and that thereafter, her father would not speak to her in passing. This was a short time before her marriage. She married at the age of sixteen and her father vio[344]*344lently objected to her marriage; and after said marriage would not speak to her, to her husband, or to any of her children. In answer to the question: “Did you ever seek a reconciliation with your father, of any type, kind or character, Mrs. Evans?”; she answered, “No, sir.”

The will of Thomas C. Purdy was probated in the Marion County Court on April 10, 1911, and because of the fact that she took nothing thereby, and conceiving that the conduct of her father toward her was such as to constitute grounds for invalidating his will, she appealed from the order of the Marion County Court probating same, to the Marion Circuit Court seeking to have same set aside, upon the ground of insanity of the testator, and undue influence exercised by his last wife and son, A. D. Purdy, in obtaining the execution thereof. Upon the trial in the circuit court, a jury found the instrument probated not to be the last will of said Thomas C. Purdy; and from the judgment thereupon entered, setting it aside, this appeal is prosecuted. At the close of contestant’s evidence, appellant asked a peremptory instruction, which was refused. He now contends that it should have been given. The court gave the usual instructions on undue influence and mental capacity.

It will be seen that at the date of the execution of the will in question, the contestee was but little past 12" years of age; and, therefore, was not chargeable with the exercise of undue influence over his father. There was no evidence whatever of a direct nature, connecting the wife with the making of the will, or suggesting that it should be so made, nor made at all. As to the undue influence attributable to the wife, appellee relies on the simple fact that she being the wife of the testator, was in position to influence him; and that she on one occasion said that she did not care for the daughter having her mother’s things, but that “the remainder of the stuff we mean for Alfred to have.”

Both the claim of insanity of the testator, as well as the charge of undue influence exercised by the second wife, inducing the execution of the will in contest, really rests upon the conduct of the testator toward his daughter; and the asserted inference therefrom of an insane delusion with respect to her. There is no claim of mental incapacity in any other regard; in fact all of the proof goes to establish that the testator, while of a [345]*345reticent temperament, was a man of more than ordinary business ability and mental capacity.

Upon the claim of insanity of the testator, the only direct proof was that of Dr. Milton Board. He was asked this hypothetical question “Assuming that a testator was born about the year 1830; that he was twice married, his first marriage occurring in 1855; that there was born to this union in 1856 one child, a daughter (the contestant in this case); that shortly after the birth of this child, the testator gave her to her maternal grandmother, and saw her only occasionally until she was about eight or nine years of age, when she spent a few months at her father’s home, attending school in the neighborhood; that when this child was about fourteen or fifteen years of age, and able to do manual labor, the testator requested her to return to his home and live with him, this being the first request of this kind that he ever made of his daughter; that the daughter refused to accede to his request, and shortly thereafter, when she visited at her father’s home she was treated coldly during- the day and when she started to leave for her grandmother’s home, she was told by her father, the testator, not to come back there to his home any more; that a year or two after this event, the daughter became engaged to marry a young man in the neighborhood, who, while poor, came of respectable parentage, and whose habits were reasonably good; that this young man with his brother, went to see the testator to ask for the hand of the daughter in marriage; that as soon as they had stated the purpose of their coming, the testator flew into a violent passion, seemed to lose control of himself, talked excitedly and vehemently, managing, however, to say that he had rather that his daughter would marry a negro or a dog, and continued this violent language until the suitor for the hand of his daughter, with his brother, departed, leaving the testator still talking and gesticulating; that the testator said that he would rather that his daughter would marry a negro than her husband; that the daughter, however, married the said suitor, this event occurring in October, 1872; that from the day when the testator told his daughter not to come back to his home, he never spoke to her; and later, when children, nine or more in number, were born to her, he never spoke to any of them; that when he would meet his daughter, he would either turn his back, or drop his head, or if he had opportunity, would run or walk fast and hide either in some building or in some convenient vegetation; that although his daughter lived [346]

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 1071, 156 Ky. 342, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purdys-administrator-v-evans-kyctapp-1913.