Sloan v. Sloan

197 S.W.2d 77, 303 Ky. 180, 1946 Ky. LEXIS 806
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 8, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 197 S.W.2d 77 (Sloan v. Sloan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sloan v. Sloan, 197 S.W.2d 77, 303 Ky. 180, 1946 Ky. LEXIS 806 (Ky. 1946).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Siler

-Reversing.

Esther Whetton, appellant, beneficiary of a $10,000 life insurance policy of Dr. V. J. Sloan, now deceased, was sued by Vernon J. Sloan, Dr. Sloan’s son, appellee, in an action seeking cancellation of that part of the insurance policy changing the beneficiary from the insured’s son, Vernon, to the insured’s unmarried consort, the appellant, the grounds of the requested cancellation being those of mental incapacity and undue influence. Prom a verdict of the jury and judgment of the trial court in favor of the appellee son; the appellant consort has taken this appeal.

The sum and substance of appellant’s ground of appeal is that she was entitled to a peremptory instruction on the trial.

By a companion suit, Dr. Sloan’s son contested the will of Dr. Sloan, which will likewise made a substantial provision for the said Esther Whetton, the ground of *182 contest being the testator’s mental incapacity. From a verdict of the jury and judgment of the trial court in favor of the son, that is against the will’s validity, the will’s executor, who represents the consort and all others benefitting from the will, has taken this appeal in this companion case.

The sum and substance of appellant’s ground of appeal in the companion will case is that the appellant, the will’s executor, was entitled to a peremptory instruction on the trial of this will case.

For the purpose of this appeal, the two cases have been consolidated, but they will be conveniently referred, to herein as the will case and the insurance case.

The consolidated record contains 22 volumes of pleadings and proof, much of it irrelevant, and this court has been given 5 voluminous, exhaustive but helpful briefs bearing on the legal questions presented for determination in this litigation now before us.

As indicated above, this is a contest between a decedent’s consort and his son over the decedent’s insurance and estate. The chief and ultimate issue turned out to be the mental capacity of the decedent. The consort asserted decedent’s mental capacity. The son denied it. The son won both cases. The judge and jury decided that the decedent was mentally incapacitated to execute either the beneficiary changeover of the policy or to execute his will upon the dates in question.

Dr. V. J. Sloan died in a Cincinnati hospital on September 24, 1942, from endocarditis. His life insurance consisted of a $5,000 policy in favor of his mother, a $15,-000 policy payable to the beneficial interest of his appellee son and a $10,000 policy, now in controversy, the latter having been made payable to his appellant consort by a change-of-beneficiary clause executed by the decedent in the last month of his life. His will gave two pieces of his real estate to the son and the remaining piece of his real estate to the consort. The will also divided the residue of the whole estate equally between the son and the consort.

In order to properly appraise this case it appears to be desirable to pick up some of the threads of this closed and broken life in order to ascertain what manner of *183 man existed in the person of Dr. V. J, Sloan, a Newport physician, who performed the principal role of the drama portrayed by the record of this case. He evidently burned the candle of life at both ends and then nonchalantly blew the last wisp of lingering smoke into a bold defiance of serious and sober convention. He married and subsequently separated from three women and finally began a consortium with appellant Whetton in a Cincinnati hotel under an assumed name. This consortium was later continued in Kentucky with ostensible representation to the public that Dr. Sloan and Miss Whetton were man and wife. The record shows that Dr. Sloan contracted a venereal disease, drank copious quantities of whiskey, spent his money freely, loved wine, women and song and at last became a physical wreck through a disability known as cirrhosis of the liver and its attending complications. Death overtook and overcame the doctor at the age of 44 years. In the course of his career, he became the father of two children, the appellee Vernon J. Sloan having been born of the doctor’s first wife and a daughter named Patty, now deceased, having been born of the doctor’s second wife. But on the other side of the picture, the doctor was a skillful physician, a generous man, a recipient of the firm confidence of many patients and he was a father of undoubted devotion to his two children and their welfare.

While there are many details in this record relating to events and incidents taking place in the doctor’s life between 1938 and 1942, yet we are not particularly interested in the bulk of them. But we are particularly interested in the life and conduct of the doctor from June 1, 1942, to September 24, 1942, this being the period that completely encompasses the will’s conception and execution and also encompasses the execution of the clause changing the insurance policy’s beneficiary from son to consort.

The Will Case.

On or about June 1, 1942, the doctor conferred with J. W. Heuver, a Newport attorney of skill, long experience and good standing, relative to preparation of a will. In that conference the doctor, who was then a busy man with Ms medical practice, told the attorney in detail what he wanted expressed in the will. The attorney ad *184 vised and counseled, upon that occasion, with the doctor as to the best methods to be used in carrying out the desired ends of the will. The will was prepared almost immediately. It was prepared in good legal form, signed by the testator on both of its typewritten pages, duly dated and witnessed. Neither the structure nor the intellection of the will has been attacked. After that first conference between the doctor and the attorney and after the preparation of the will around June 1, 1942, the doctor himself delayed the secondary conference for concluding this business until July 31, 1942. On the latter date, around 5 in the afternoon, the attorney went to the doctor’s office at the latter’s request and the previously prepared will was then and there deliberately read by the doctor, who thereupon signed it and acknowledged it in the presence of the attorney and Catherine Hoban as the witnesses. The testator and the two witnesses were the only persons present on the occasion of the execution of the will. The attesting witness, Catherine Hoban, an elderly lady, had been employed by the doctor for about 20 years. Neither of the attesting witnesses had any interest in the will and both appear to be worthy of our full faith and credit. Both attesting witnesses went into the details of this occasion at length. Not one thing was said or done by the doctor on this occasion, or during the entire day of July 31, 1942, so far as this record shows that may be calculated to throw a shadow of uncertainty upon the working intelligence of the doctor for the transaction of the business at hand, the making of his will. In support of the testamentary capacity of the doctor on July 31, 1942, we find that the records of a local pharmacy show that he gave 19 medical prescriptions on that day, none of which was subject to any criticism for any kind of inaccuracy. Of course, the appellees used some expert witnesses and propounded some hypothetical questions in waging war on the will.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 S.W.2d 77, 303 Ky. 180, 1946 Ky. LEXIS 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sloan-v-sloan-kyctapphigh-1946.