Stewart Will

47 A.2d 204, 354 Pa. 288, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 338
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 11, 1946
DocketAppeals, 82-84
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 47 A.2d 204 (Stewart Will) 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
Stewart Will, 47 A.2d 204, 354 Pa. 288, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 338 (Pa. 1946).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

This is an appeal from a decree setting aside the alleged last will of John Stewart, deceased, and revoking letters testamentary thereon, on the ground that the testator’s execution of the writing was procured by fraud and undue influence practiced upon him by the *290 proponents. Stewart died on August 5, 1943, resident in Philadelphia. The alleged will was probated before the Begister of Wills for Philadelphia County on August 16, 1943, upon offer thereof by the executors named in the will to whom letters testamentary were granted.

An appeal from the probate was taken to the court below by Andrew Stewart, the decedent’s surviving brother and sole next of kin. On the contestant’s further petition for an issue devismit vel non, the learned judge who took testimony in that matter concluded that, while the evidence was insufficient to justify a finding that the decedent lacked testamentary capacity, the attendant circumstances shown by the testimony with respect to the decedent’s physical and mental condition, the drafting of the will and its execution were such as to cast upon the proponents the burden of establishing affirmatively that the decedent’s execution of the alleged will was his own free and voluntary act and that, failing such proof by the proponents, the evidence would justify a finding that the will was procured by undue influence practiced upon the decedent by the proponents. Accordingly, the hearing judge awarded a conformable issue which was tried before him and a jury in the Orphans’ Court. The trial resulted in a verdict finding the will to be the product of undue influence as alleged. The proponents moved for judgment n. o. v. which was refused by the court en banc and the final decree from which the proponents now appeal was thereupon entered.

The appellants assign for error the trial court’s refusal of their point for binding instructions, the refusal of their motion for judgment n. o. v. and the entry of judgment on the jury’s verdict. However, the final decree which actually set aside the alleged will and revoked the letters testamentary is not assigned for error.

. The appellants contend that the will, being in due form as required by law, was presumptively valid and that nothing was shown by the testimony which required the proponents to fortify the presumption of validity *291 with affirmative proof as to the regularity of the testator’s execution of the alleged will.

The testimony on the trial of the issue, which was substantially the same as had moved the hearing judge to grant the issue, disclosed the following facts.

On October 10,1941, the date of the alleged will, the decedent, who was then seventy-five years old, was living alone in a first floor apartment of a house which he owned at 24 South 59th Street, Philadelphia. He had resided there many years with his wife who had died on September 25,1941,—just fifteen days before the alleged will was executed. The decedent’s only blood relatives were two brothers who lived in Ireland and whom he had not seen in forty years. However, he kept in touch with them by correspondence and sent them money from time to time, both of the brothers being in impoverished circumstances. Mrs. Stewart had two sisters who lived, in the suburbs of Philadelphia and also two nieces, viz., Mrs. Margaret J. Layton and Mrs. Isabella Logan Kruger, daughters of one of Mrs. Stewart’s sisters. She also had several grandnephews and grandnieces. The relations between the Stewarts and Mrs. Stewart’s relatives were friendly.

Mr. Stewart had been in poor health for many years. He suffered from a cardiac condition, diabetes and interstitial nephritis which required the regular attention of a physician who had visited the patient “on an average of one to four times a month for 17 years”. The death of Mrs. Stewart was an especially heavy blow to her husband. She had had the entire management of their affairs and was his nurse; “. . . her whole business in life [was] to see that he got the right diet for a diabetic”; “. . . she went to the doctor’s for him and described his condition, and had medicine given to her and she brought it home” (proponents’ testimony). After his wife’s death, the decedent was melancholy and dazed and frequently broke into crying. His physician, who visited *292 him on October 6,1941, and, again, on November 8,1941, testified that he was in bad health; that, while his mind was as good as it had been for years, he was never very alert mentally; and that his mental condition was “such that he could have been the victim of designing persons”.

A day or two before October 10,1941, John E. Layton, the husband of Mrs. Stewart’s niece, visited Stewart at his apartment for the purpose, as Layton testified, of consulting with Stewart, at the latter’s request, about the installation of an oil burner in his house. At the conclusion of that conversation, Layton inquired whether there was anything else he could do for him and Stewart said he would like to have a will drawn. Layton told him he should see a lawyer but Stewart answered that he did not want to go into town and get a lawyer. Stewart told Layton how he wished to dispose of his estate by will and Layton went to the office of a lawyer in mid-city who drew the will now in contest. If Stewart requested Lay-ton so to act, it appears only inferentially in the testimony. When the lawyer had drafted the will, Layton carried it home and the next morning took it with him, ultimately reaching Mr. Stewart’s apartment between ten and eleven o’clock. He had told Mrs. Layton before leaving home of his intended visit to Mr. Stewart and, when he arrived there, he found Mrs. Layton had preceded him. She testified that she had been summoned by telephone but, by whom, she did not say. The Laytons and Stewart sat at the dining room table. Layton handed the will to Stewart who immediately passed it back telling Layton to read it to him, which Layton did. Stewart then signed it. Mrs. Buckley, a part-time worker in the Stewart household, was in the kitchen. Layton called her in and she signed as a witness. She testified that she did not know it was a will; that no one told her it was; and that she signed at Layton’s request. After Mrs. Buckley had signed, Layton took the will upstairs to the apartment of Mr. and Mrs. Hammerslay both of whom also signed as witnesses. Hammerslay, who did *293 not know Layton except for having seen him possibly once or twice, testified that the paper was so folded that he could not see what it was and that Layton told him it was a power of attorney. Mrs. Hammerslay, who was an invalid, signed at the request of her husband without having talked to Layton. The Hammerslays had moved into the second floor apartment following Mrs. Stewart’s death and it is very doubtful from their testimony whether they knew Stewart’s signature. In any event, the decedent did not sign or publish the writing as his will in the presence of any of the subscribing witnesses; none of them signed in the presence of each other except for Mrs. Hammerslay’s signing in the presence of her husband ; and none of them signed at the request of Stewart.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A.2d 204, 354 Pa. 288, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-will-pa-1946.