Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Myers

7 R.I. Dec. 221
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 4, 1931
DocketP. A. No. 1142
StatusPublished

This text of 7 R.I. Dec. 221 (Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Myers, 7 R.I. Dec. 221 (R.I. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

CHURCHILL, J.

This is an appeal prosecuted by the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company, executor and trustee, from a decree of a Court of probate admitting to probate an instrument in waiting purporting to be the will of John Johnston, of Woon-socket, R. I.

The principal questions raised by the reasons of appeal are, the capacity of John Johnston to execute a will, and, whether the will was procured' by undue influence.

The testator was about eighty years of age. He sustained a fracture of his hip on Tuesday, November 6, 1928, was taken to the Woonsocket Hospital the same day and remained there until the afternoon of Tuesday, November CLS, 1928, when he was taken to his home. The instrument in question was prepared on the morning of November 14, 1928, by P. Francis Cassidy, a [222]*222member of the Bar. The instrument was executed at about 10:00 A. M., the testator’s mark being affixed thereto. He died about 11:40 A. M. the same day.

John Johnston was of Scotch ancestry, and a man of force of character and resolution. His wife had died some years previously and his immediate family consisted of twin children, Isabella and John. They were about 50 years of age, unmarried, and lived at the home with the father.

The testator had been engaged in the shuttle business during the greater part of his life, and owned two valuable pieces of rental property situated in Woonsocket; the Johnston Block and the Gilbert Chambers. These properties were mortgaged.

The relations between the children and the father were not harmoniozzs. The son was addicted to drink and apparently possessed little business capacity. The father took exception to the persons with whom his daughter associated. No effort was made on the part of the proponent to show that the father’s disapproval of the conduct of his children was not well founded.

Moved by these considerations, and after consultation and advice, the testator on February 26th, made a will providing for the disposition of his property in trust for the benefit of his two children. This instrument named the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company as his executor and trustee. Provision was made for the payment of the mortgages on the property, for their operation and management, and the net income was, subject to the redemption of the mortgages, to be paid two-thirds to the son and one-third to the daughter. The matters of marriage of the children, survivorship and issue of the children were adequately dealt with. The Ballou Home was given a bequest of $1,000.00.

There is abundant testimony showing that up to October, 1928, the testator expressed his satisfaction with the disposition which he had made of his property by his will of February 26th, 1924, and that he felt it wise to protect the interests of his son and daughter by the arrangement which he had made.

There is some testimony on the part ' of Isabella and of John, and of Mrs. Bener B. Park, of conversations in which the father discussed the possibility of a different disposition of his property, whereby the property would be left in equal shares to the son and the daughter.

On the weight of the evidence, however, I find that the testator had a well-matured, carefully prepared plan for the disposition of his property as embodied in his will of February 26th, 1924, and that there is affirmative testimony that he remained satisfied with the scheme of disposition as laid out in the will of 1924 up to October, 1928, and that there is no reliable testimony showing that he entertained a serious desire to make any substantial change in the testamentary disposition made by him in 1924, at least up to the time he entered the Woonsocket hospital on November 6th, 1928.

At this point it is pertinent to examine the terms of the instrument executed by him on November 14th, 192S, and now offered for probate.

Edward L. Myers, his attending physician after he left the hospital, was made executor; the bequest to the Bal-lou Home was increased to $1,500.00; all the rest of the estate was given share and shaz-e alike to John and Isabella outright.

With this background we come to the facts bearing on the capacity of the testator and the circumstances surrounding the execution of the instrument of November 14th, 1928, now propounded for probate.

The testator was taken to the Woon-socket Hospital on Tuesday, November 6th, 1928, after an X-ray photograph had been taken. He had suffered “an [223]*223infra capsular fracture of the thigh, fracture of the femur inside the capsule * * * * very close to the (hip) joint,”- to use the words of his attending physician, Dr. Elisha D. Olarke. Dr. Olarke also testified that Johnson had a “chronic heart condition,” and that on the following Wednesday he was not “taking his nourishment well.”

Erom the time he entered the hospital until he was taken away at 3:45 P. M. on Tuesday, November 13th, 1928, he grew weaker, physically and mentally. His mental condition was characterized by fits of violence and great excitability, on one occasion the nurse describing him on the hospital chart as “irrational.” This condition was varied by periods of sleep or unconsciousness. The proponent ascribes his mental condition to the effects of morphine and to the discomfort caused by the fact that his leg was confined in a plaster cast. But whatever the cause, the fact remains that his condition, phy- - sical and mental, underwent a progressive impairment.

His daughter Isabella insisted that he be removed from his hospital to his home. This was done against the advice of Dr. Olarke, who was of the opinion that such a change was dangerous to the patient. He was, nevertheless, removed to his home on the afternoon of Tuesday, November 13th, 1928. His condition at this time is a fact of importance, since he died within less than twenty-four hours and the will was signed during that interval.

Dr. Olarke saw him at 2:00 P. M. for the last time. The patient was lying in bed with his mouth open, breathing heavily and noisily. He had the characteristic pinched look around his nose, and his heart was working badly. Dr. Olarke diagnosed his condition as “comatose” and testified that he was “too near death to be transacting business.” The chart, kept by the nurse, Miss Donaldson, at the hospital, shows that at 12:00 o’clock (it) “seems hard for him to swallow.” 1:00 o’clock, “Asleep;” 2:00, “Dr. Olarke visited and advised against taking him home.” 3:45, “Taken home in ambulance against advice. Condition very poor.” Miss Donaldson testified that he was semi-conscious at that time and that he was in the weakest condition she had seen him in since his arrival at the hospital.

Dr. Edward L. Myers, the physician attending the patient after he arrived home and under whose care he was during the time when the will was prepared and executed, is in substantial agreement with both the attending nurse and Dr. Olarke respecting his condition on removal to his home. He had seen him at the hospital previous to his removal and testified finally ithat his mental condition at times while in the hospital was very much impaired, and that in his opinion his condition on Tuesday, the 13th, was such that he would not live twenty-four hours after .his removal unless his treatment was changed.

As bearing on the reliability of Dr.

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7 R.I. Dec. 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhode-island-hospital-trust-co-v-myers-risuperct-1931.