Roblin v. Shantz

311 P.2d 459, 210 Or. 371, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 267
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 311 P.2d 459 (Roblin v. Shantz) 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
Roblin v. Shantz, 311 P.2d 459, 210 Or. 371, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 267 (Or. 1957).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by Charles Dana Boblin, contestant, from a decree of the Circuit Court for Marion County which dismissed proceedings he had instituted to contest the will of his father, Charles Ernest Boblin, and which ordered that the will be admitted to probate.

*373 Charles Ernest and Ollie M. Roblin, both now deceased, were the parents of the appellant, Charles Dana Roblin, and of a daughter, Ruth Emily Shantz, proponent and respondent. For convenience we will refer to the elder Charles Roblin as Mr. Roblin and to the younger as Charles.

The family resided for many years in Salem. When Ruth married Carl Shantz they took their residence in Milwaukie, Oregon. Charles became a peripatetic, but during summer months returned to Salem for extended visits in the family home. In 1950 Mr. Roblin left the family home and made his abode in a Salem hotel. Ruth testified that he left in aggravation over his wife’s conduct in sending money to Charles and paying his bills. In 1951 Mr. Roblin suffered a stroke and shortly repaired to a nursing home in Salem.

In the fall of 1951, Ruth, at her father’s instance, arranged for him to undergo an eye operation in Portland. In that period he resided with Ruth and her husband for seven months. After he had recovered from the operation he returned to the nursing home where Ruth visited him every two weeks. Mrs. Roblin also called upon him from time to time, being driven to the nursing home in the Roblins’ car by Charles. The latter, however, did not enter the home. Upon an earlier occasion when he attempted to visit his father, the latter ordered him out of the room in no unmistakable language.

Mrs. Roblin executed a will on July 3, 1953, and died five days later. Her will bequeathed all of her property equally to both children. Its terms were operative on property appraised at $1,581. But Charles received, in addition to his half of that sum, property worth $12,301.06 which was not part of the estate *374 proper. This greater amount represented accounts and chattels the title to which was in Charles and the mother jointly, and to which he survived.

On either the evening of July 8 or the morning of July 9, 1953, Ruth visited her father in the nursing home and informed him, perhaps in response to his inquiry, that her mother had left everything to Charles except a diamond ring. Immediately Mr. Roblin ordered Ruth to obtain for him a lawyer. Ruth suggested a Mr. Steelhammer who was her husband’s cousin. The suggestion was acceptable to her father, he having known Mr. Steelhammer through their mutual membership in the Salem Elks Lodge. On the morning of July 9 Mr, Steelhammer went to the nursing home and conversed in privacy with Mr. Roblin, who directed him to prepare a will, leaving Charles one dollar only and the remainder to Ruth. The father also requested Mr. Steelhammer to prepare a petition for a conservator-ship of the father’s property with Ruth as conservator. That afternoon, Ruth, upon Mr. Steelhammer’s request, drove him to the nursing home. When they arrived, the attorney alone met with the testator, who then executed his will, with Steelhammer and the operator of the home as witnesses. The will nominated Ruth as executrix and left to her everything except one dollar which was bequeathed to Charles. The petition for conservatorship was filed on July 20. Mr. Roblin died September 6, 1953, aged 83.

Charles has attacked his father’s will with these three contentions: (1) the father lacked testamentary capacity; (2) the instrument represents the undue influence of Ruth in that it is her will and not the father’s; and (3) the statement of Ruth to her father that Charles got everything except a ring from the mother’s estate amounted to fraud.

*375 The last will of Mr. Roblin was properly executed with all the formalities required by law. It is rational on its face. "We need not, however, indulge in presumptions in order to establish the testator’s testamentary capacity, for the record convinces us that such capacity existed. Mr. Roblin fully understood the nature of the testamentary act. He requested of Mr. Steelhammer that his will be drafted and was explicit as to its contents. At its execution, he expressed satisfaction with it. The record so clearly evidences that Mr. Roblin recognized the natural objects of his bounty and their relationships to him that this requisite of testamentary capacity requires no discussion.

The contestant’s principal evidentiary support for an assertion that the testator lacked capacity for will-making lies in the testimony of the draftsman, Steelhammer. When the testator and his attorney discussed the contents of the will about to be drafted, Mr. Roblin referred specifically to only three items of his property — his home place, an arrowhead collection and an elk’s head which he desired the Elks Club to have. He referred to his home place as “about his only possession, as far as that is concerned.” The file of the Estate of Charles E. Roblin contains no complete Inventory and Appraisement, nor Report to the State Treasurer, so we do not know which of his possessions were not discussed that day. The home place certainly constituted the major item of his estate. Contestant contends that the absence of any discussion of insurance payable to the estate evidences a lack of capacity. We do not agree. Very likely few testators recite an inventory of their belongings before executing their wills. This testator, in his first conversation with Steelhammer, alluded to three tangibles of particular interest to him. If anything, this is affirmative evidence that he com *376 prehended the nature and extent of his disposable assets.

The rule is most frequently stated in Oregon decisions that, in order to possess testamentary capacity, the testator must understand and appreciate the nature of the testamentary act, the natural objects of his bounty, and the nature and extent of his property. Re Phillips’ Will, 107 Or 612, 213 P 627; In re Estate of Verd Hill, 198 Or 307, 256 P2d 735. Perhaps a more precise expression of the rule is that of In re Walther’s Estate, 177 Or 382, 163 P2d 285; that is, the testator must understand the nature of the testamentary act, and possess the ability to know and appreciate the natural objects of his bounty and the nature and extent of his property. Under either expression, the mental faculties of Mr. Eoblin qualify.

That the testator, on the day on which he executed his will, requested the appointment of a conservator does not persuade us that he lacked testamentary capacity. Quite clearly, the request flowed from an understanding of the responsibilities attendant upon the management of his income properties and a realization that such responsibilities could best be discharged by another. After Euth was appointed conservator, her father expressed to her suggestions and requests with respect to the management of his affairs. This is no evidence of an absence of testamentary capacity. Lack of desire to manage one’s affairs inter vivos and the ability to direct lawfully the disposition of one’s property after death are different from one another.

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Bluebook (online)
311 P.2d 459, 210 Or. 371, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roblin-v-shantz-or-1957.