Rynn v. Rynn

181 A. 289, 55 R.I. 310, 1935 R.I. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 1, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 181 A. 289 (Rynn v. Rynn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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
Rynn v. Rynn, 181 A. 289, 55 R.I. 310, 1935 R.I. LEXIS 31 (R.I. 1935).

Opinion

*311 Capotosto, J.

This is a probate appeal involving the admission to probate of the will .of Patrick J. Rynn, who died *312 in Providence, Ñovember 9, 1933. The will is dated May 5, 1931. After a long trial in the superior court, the jury returned a verdict sustaining the will. A motion for a new trial was denied by the court, at which time it said: “if an opposite conclusion had been reached, the court would have felt it necessary, without the slightest hesitation, to have granted a new trial.” The case is now before this court on appellants’ exceptions to rulings at the trial and to the denial of their motion for a new trial. '

At the hearing before us, counsel for the appellants relied principally upon the facts and urged that the record clearly showed the legal in competency of the testator when the will was executed. The subject of undue influence was not pressed and the exceptions taken during the trial were treated as of secondary importance. The transcript of the evidence, which is in three large volumes, has received our careful attention.

The testator was married in 1893. Both husband and wife were industrious people of limited education and means. Three children were born of the marriage, Joseph P., Aloysius R. and Mary F. Rynn, the appellants in this case. The son Joseph lived with the family until 1918, when he married and, after being away for a few years, settled in East Providence. Aloysius remained at home until 1929, when he married Sarah Rynn, the executrix in this case, and moved to a house he built near his parents’ property. About 1932 he became estranged from his wife and has remained so ever since. He was childless at the time the will was made, although a daughter was born some time later. Mary never married. She stayed with her father and mother. After her mother’s death she remained with her father for a short time and until he left the house to live by himself. In addition to his immediate family, the testator had a niece, Mary Wren, the daughter-of a brother, who lived in Connecticut. The mother died March 20, 1931. The testator died of pneumonia at the Hope Hospital, November 9, 1933.

*313 His estate consisted of five parcels of rental property in the city of Providence, with a total assessed valuation of $20,300; a deposit in his own name of less than $100 in the Old Stone Bank, and a joint account in the same bank of a little over $5,000 standing in the name of himself and Sarah Rynn.

By his will, dated May 5, 1931, the testator gave "Five dollars to each of my two sons, Joseph P. Rynn, East Providence, Rhode Island, and Aloysius R. Rynn, of Providence, Rhode Island, and no more of my estate;” he devised to his daughter Mary two parcels of his real estate, which had an assessed valuation of $9,220 or nearly one half the assessed value of all his real estate; a third parcel he left to Sarah Rynn and another to his niece, Mary Wren, of Danbury, Connecticut. After a devise of $100 to his granddaughter, he gave the residue of his estate to Sarah Rynn, whom he also named executrix.

A general review of the numerous and conflicting details given at the trial can be better attempted if we divide the testimony into three periods. The first includes the family life of the Rynns up to the death of the mother on March 20, 1931; the second starts with this date and ends November 9, 1933, when the testator died; and the third extends from this date to the time when an appeal was taken to the superior court from a decree of the probate court of the city of Providence admitting the will to probate.

In the first period, no serious incidents are related by the appellants, who were practically the only persons to testify concerning intimate household matters, until about 1912. From this time on, according to their statements, the family life of the Rynns was an unbroken series of quarrels and disturbances. The father was pictured by them as a man of violence, of morbid and unhealthy thoughts about his wife and children, of unclean habits and of foul speech, who neglected his family to save money and to buy real estate. They all said the same thing about their father in language that was both bitter and unreserved, but they exculpated *314 themselves, either by direct denial or failure of recollection, from any contributing fault or censurable conduct. The testimony clearly shows that the children acted with diminishing tolerance towards their father as the years rolled by.

Although the appellants admitted that up to about 1918 the testator worked steadily as freight handler, pipe-fitter's helper, night watchman and similar occupations, they said that after that time he spent his time in the house or around the property in idleness and silence, or in groundless accusations and abusive cpnduct towards the family. The only person he showed any liking for in later years, according to them, was Sarah Rynn, the wife of Aloysius. The testimony shows that Sarah would sit and talk with him from time to time, or bring him an ice cream cone now and then, or take him for a ride, or occasionally do his washing. The appellants further claimed that their father allowed his real estate to fall out of repair and that this fact, joined with his disagreeable attitude towards the tenants, resulted in untenanted property and consequent loss of rents..

A fair consideration of all the evidence, however, does not support in many instances the bitter and extreme accusations that the children made against their father. Those who came in contact with him as friend, employer or neighbor saw little, if anything, wrong with his conduct, dress or speech. A number of apparently disinterested persons testified that he attended church regularly, that he was always occupied in working either around his own property or for others, that he was careful with his money, and that he appreciated any kindness shown him. The inference is strong that the testator was a man who would not tolerate interference by his family in the conduct of his own affairs and who expressed his thoughts in this regard by resorting to behavior and language that was neither restrained nor polite.

The evidence further shows that at times the testator helped his sons materially and they then gladly accepted his *315 help in spite of what they now say was his constant meanness and uniformly unbalanced mind. Notwithstanding an unfortunate incident in 1913 when Joseph violently quarreled with his father and to which he, Joseph, pointed with pride at the trial, his father, sometime before 1930, made him a gift of $2,000 which Joseph accepted and testified that it was given to him “to sort of compensate me, as he called it, for what he had done for Al.”

About 1928, the testator suggested to his son Aloysius, who was commonly called “Al,” that he build a house for himself and gave him $1,000 as a gift to buy the land. He thereafter helped him by working at a number of odd jobs and without compensation in the construction of the building. Later he loaned him $2,000 on his unsecured note and without interest to finish the top floor of the house. This note has not been paid.

The daughter Mary has been employed for a number of years.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Estate of Ann Marie Picillo
99 A.3d 975 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2014)
In Re Estate of Picillo
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2011
Lawton v. Higgins
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2008
Romano v. Reopell
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2006
Bajakian v. Erinakes
880 A.2d 843 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2005)
Pollard v. Hastings
862 A.2d 770 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2004)
Roe v. Gelineau
794 A.2d 476 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2002)
Tavernier v. McBurney
308 A.2d 518 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1973)
People's Savings Bank v. Rynn
190 A. 440 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 A. 289, 55 R.I. 310, 1935 R.I. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rynn-v-rynn-ri-1935.