Robinson v. Robinson

53 A. 253, 203 Pa. 400, 1902 Pa. LEXIS 735
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 13, 1902
DocketAppeal, No. 16
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 53 A. 253 (Robinson v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Robinson, 53 A. 253, 203 Pa. 400, 1902 Pa. LEXIS 735 (Pa. 1902).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Dean,

Letitia Robinson died November 23,1900, in her eighty-fourth year. She had been confined to her bed by a severe illness for about three weeks before her death; on the 13th of the same month, ten days before her death, she made her will, the writing in dispute. She was the widow of William O. Robinson, a lawyer of Allegheny county, Pennsylvania, who had died many years before, leaving her with five sons, William, James, Alexander, John and Eccles, to survive. Up to the date of the will, all had died except John B., this plaintiff. Of the other sons, Eccles alone left children, these three contestants, Anna R., Gerald O. and Mary P. Robinson. Eccles married twice ; Gerald O. and Anna R. are children of the first wife; Mary Parker is a child of the second wife; the mother died when the daughter was an infant, and she was taken by her uncle John B. and reared as one of his family. Some years after her husband’s death, the testatrix, Letitia Robinson, continued to live in Pittsburg, but in 1879, she went to her son, John B., at Media, and made her home with him until her death, a period of about twenty years. Her husband had left her property of the value of about $100,000. On January 10, 1876, she conveyed the whole of her estate to George W. Guthrie in trust for herself during life. In this conveyance she was joined by her son John B., who added'to the trust as a further provision for his mother, property to the value of about $10,000. In February, 1889, her brother Eccles Robinson died, leaving her an estate worth over $400,000. In the eleven years following, up to the date of her death, she expended, approximately, $300,000 of her estate, but that part of the property coming to her from her brother Eccles, much of which was real estate in the city of Pittsburg, had largely appreciated in value after she took possession. By her will, with the exception of some jewelry and household articles, the entire residue of her estate, approximately worth $200,000, was devised and bequeathed to her son John B. She had made provision in the will for a monthly payment of $125 to her son James during [414]*414his life, but as he died, eight months before her, the property which secured the monthly payment fell into and became part of the residuary estate devised to her son John B.

On December 12, following her death, the will was tendered for registry before the register of wills; this was met by a caveat, filed by contestants against probate. After a lengthy preliminary hearing in the orphans’ court, that court certified the case to the common pleas for an issue, which court, after further hearing, directed an issue devisavit vel non. The questions framed to be submitted to the jury were these:

1. Whether the signature to the said paper writing is the signature of said Letitia Robinson?

2. Whether the said paper writing was executed by said Letitia Robinson?

3. Whether the said Letitia Robinson was of sound and well-disposing mind, memory and understanding at the time said paper writing is alleged to have been executed by her?

4. If the said paper writing were executed by her, the said Letitia Robinson, whether the execution thereof was procured by duress, imposition and undue influence, exercised over the mind of said decedent?

5. Whether the said will was procured by the undue influence of John B. Robinson?

It was ordered, that the parties to the issue should be John B. Robinson, who sought to probate the will, plaintiff, and Anna R. Robinson, Gerald O. Robinson and Mary Parker Robinson, the latter represented by her guardian, William J. McClure, defendants. The cause came on for trial on October 19, 1901, when a jury was sworn. The plaintiff, having called Charles H. Thomas and T. Speer Dickson, the subscribing witnesses to the will, who testified to the execution-of it by the testatrix and the circumstances attending the execution, read the will and rested his case in chief; the defendants then adduced evidence, tending to negative the first three interrogatories and to affirm the last two; the plaintiff then by evidence undertook to rebut defendant’s averments. The trial lasted about four weeks. At the close of the evidence the court, peremptorily, instructed the jury to answer the second and third interrogatories “Yes”; as to the first he instructed them to find, that testatrix made her mark to the will; as to whether [415]*415she also affixed her signature he left that as a question of fact to them. To understand this last instruction, it should be noticed, that the signature was “Letitia mark X her Robinson.” The two subscribing witnesses testified, they saw her make the mark; there was conflicting evidence as to whether the name “ Letitia Robinson ” had been written by her; it was not written in the presence of the subscribing witnesses. As to the last two interrogatories, the court submitted to the jury the conflicting evidence bearing on them. The jury found for plaintiff on the first three and for defendants on the last two; that is, they found, that the signature was that of the testatrix ; that she executed the will, and that at the time she was of sound and disposing mind, but that John B. Robinson had procured the will to be made by undue influence. There was no motion for a new trial and the court entered judgment on the verdict; plaintiff now appeals, preferring 583 assignments of error. Many of them are trivial, suggesting no error worth discussing; many others are repetitions of the same avermentin a different form of expression. We shall endeavor, first, to state the controlling principles applicable to the issue on the evidence before us and then to pass more particularly, on such of the assignments, as seem to us, to require special notice.

The verdict here was against the will and the court entered judgment upon it. To reverse this judgment, in a stronger sense than is commonly applicable to a disappointed suitor, the laboring oar is on appellant; for under the 41st section of the act of March 15, 1832, directing the issue, there is in effect, an approval of the verdict by the court. Here the learned trial judge after the testimony taken before the orphans’ court and after a further hearing before him, directed and framed the issue, then, after a prolonged hearing of all the evidence on both sides with the parties and witnesses before him, he enters the judgment, which appellants now argue, should be reversed, because the evidence to sustain it is insufficient. “ The issue is of right when the fact arising and in dispute is substantial, unless the whole evidence of the fact be so doubtful and unsatisfactory, that a verdict against the validity .of the will ought not to be allowed to stand: ” Schwilke’s Appeal, 100 Pa. 631. Again in Wainwright’s Appeal, 89 Pa. [416]*416220, “ If upon the whole evidence such a verdict (against the will) ought not to be allowed to stand, an issue ought not to be awarded.” Then further, “ The test to be applied is, would the trial judge, after a careful review of all the testimony, feel constrained to set aside a verdict against the proponents of the will, obtained upon a fair and impartial trial as contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence: ” Graham’s Appeal, 61 Pa. 43; Knauss’s Appeal, 114 Pa. 10; Levis’s Estate, 140 Pa. 179. To the same effect are a large number of other authorities. The orphans’ courts of the commonwealth are especially bound to discourage litigation of this kind unless based on credible evidence of material facts, by refusing an issue.

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Bluebook (online)
53 A. 253, 203 Pa. 400, 1902 Pa. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-robinson-pa-1902.