Simoneau v. O'Brien

40 N.E.2d 1, 311 Mass. 68, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 657
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 N.E.2d 1 (Simoneau v. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simoneau v. O'Brien, 40 N.E.2d 1, 311 Mass. 68, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 657 (Mass. 1942).

Opinion

Dolan, J.

This is an appeal from a decree, entered in [69]*69the Probate Court, denying the respondents’ motion that issues be framed for jury trial in the matter of the petition for probate of an instrument purporting to be the last will of William E. Brooks, late of Framingham, deceased.

The issues sought to be framed were (1) whether the instrument was executed according to law; (2) whether the decedent was of sound mind at the time of its execution; and (3) whether its execution was procured by the fraud or undue influence of Nellie Ambrose Brooks. The motion for jury issues was filed October 22, 1940. On November 20, 1940, the petitioner filed a motion that the respondents specify “as to what matters are objected to by them” and that they specify “all matters which they claim give rise to the issues of fact as set forth in their 'Motion to frame issues for jury trial.’” This motion was allowed on February 25, 1941. Following the allowance of this motion the respondents filed their specifications as “containing matters which they offer[ed] to prove” in support of their motion that issues be framed for jury trial. That motion was thereafter heard on these specifications of the respondents and upon a “Statement of Facts” by counsel for the petitioner.

The respective parties appear to be in accord as to the following facts: The decedent, who last dwelt in Framing-ham, died on August 29, 1940, leaving as his heirs, his widow, two brothers, Henry and Arthur Brooks, and a sister, Lillian B. O’Brien. The sister and Arthur are the respondent appellants. The decedent executed the instrument propounded for probate on May 20, 1940. Under its terms his entire estate of about $40,000 is bequeathed and devised to his widow.

The respondents’ offer of expected testimony may be summarized as follows: In 1913 the decedent received a serious head injury in an accident when he was about twenty-eight years of age. (The petitioner stated that the accident occurred in 1913.) He was unconscious for many days and thereafter never was able to carry on business or employment independently, and did little even under the supervision of others. He had been for years prior to his [70]*70death under continuous medical care for alcoholism which had so impaired his memory, judgment and will, in the opinion of two alienists of long experience who had examined him and treated him over a long period, as to render him incapable of exercising any independent judgment or independent exercise of his will, and after the death of his first wife, Alice Brooks, in March, 1937, his mental collapse was complete. For five years prior to his death he was the subject of “mental treatment.” During that time he had been examined at various times by alienists of repute, and was declared by them a fit subject for commitment to an institution for mental diseases. Instead of having him committed, his brothers and sister arranged to have him treated in private institutions where he voluntarily went on four different occasions, the last of such treatments lasting thirteen months, from July 1, 1938, until August 10, 1939. As to this the petitioner stated that the deceased was a patient at the Brattleboro Retreat in Brattleboro, Vermont, during that period, but that it was in pursuance of a plan by his guardian and “some of the contestants” to secure his admission to some institution. A nephew of the decedent was appointed the guardian of the decedent as a spendthrift in December, 1937.

. The respondents further stated that they expected to show by the testimony of witnesses that Nellie F. (Ambrose) Brooks, the widow of the decedent, a school nurse in the town of Framingham, “49 years of age,” had been a neighbor of the decedent for many years; that in the spring of 1938 she began to influence him against his “housekeeper, guardian, relatives and his own best interests”; that she knew of her own knowledge as a trained nurse that he was physically and mentally incapable of caring for himself, and she exercised undue influence upon him to procure his discharge from guardianship; that at that time she procured an attorney at law, the petitioner in this case, to represent him in procuring his discharge from guardianship; that the attorney represented to the guardian that, as attorney for the decedent, he was interested only in the happiness of his client; that “it was clear that someone had to assist and [71]*71guide . . . [him] in his personal and property affairs”; that being under guardianship interfered with his happiness,. and “because of the complete confidence which . . . [the' decedent] had reposed in him that with the guardianship removed, he, the . . . attorney, would cooperate with the relatives to the end that the best interests of . . . [the decedent] would be served”; and that he had known Nellie F. Ambrose (later the wife of the decedent) for many years and felt certain that she had no intention of trying to engage in a marriage with the ward. The respondents further stated that evidence would be introduced to show that in reliance upon these representations the guardian and other relatives of the decedent consented to the discharge of the guardianship on or about March 28, 1940 (sic), at which time a decree was entered to that effect.

The respondents further offered to show by expected testimony that shortly after the termination of the guardianship the decedent was taken to the Holden District Hospital in Holden in this Commonwealth, by Nellie F. Ambrose (now Brooks), where she had worked during her summer vacations. The petitioner’s counsel stated that on April 23,1940, the petitioner visited the decedent at that hospital and, as a result of a conversation with him, drafted a will which was executed by him on May 4, 1940, under the terms of which the decedent left $1 to his sister, the respondent Lillian, and a like sum to his brother “F. Henry,” his interest in the “Frank E. Brooks Realty Trust” to his brother Arthur, and the residue to Miss Ambrose, whom he later married.

It is not disputed that the present widow of the decedent procured a marriage license from the town clerk of Framingham, returned it filled out and made oath to it before him on May 6, 1940, shortly after the decedent went to the Holden District Hospital, and that a ceremony was performed uniting her and the decedent in marriage “outside of their own parish” on May 13, 1940. The respondents offered to prove that on the day following the marriage the decedent stated “that he did not know whether or not he had been married.” . ...................

[72]*72In connection with this marriage ceremony the petitioner’s counsel stated in substance that prior thereto a rumor had been spread through the neighborhood that the marriage was contemplated; that the guardian of the decedent communicated with the “parish priest” in Framingham and the latter sent for Miss Ambrose to discuss the matter with him; that she had a talk with him in the course of which she denied that there had been any talk of marriage between her and the decedent; that early in May, 1940, she decided to accept the proposal of the decedent for marriage, and returned to the same priest to arrange the marriage ceremony, which she did not wish performed in Framingham; that he informed her that he could not perform the ceremony at Holden and that she would have to take the matter up with the “local” priest; that she visited the latter who, after certain formalities had been complied with, performed the marriage ceremony on May 13, 1940, the day that the decedent was discharged from the Holden hospital.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 N.E.2d 1, 311 Mass. 68, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simoneau-v-obrien-mass-1942.