Washburn v. Washburn

22 N.W.2d 512, 248 Wis. 467, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 237
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 N.W.2d 512 (Washburn v. Washburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washburn v. Washburn, 22 N.W.2d 512, 248 Wis. 467, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 237 (Wis. 1946).

Opinion

Barlow, J.

The only question involved on this appeal is whether the judgment of the county court that the testator had mental capacity to execute a will was against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence'.

George H. Washburn was born in Sturgeon Bay and lived there all of his life. He was employed in his father’s store for many years prior to 1932, when the store was sold, and continued to work for the new owners until April, 1938. • Pie died May 3,1944, at the age of sixty-seven years, and left surviving, as heirs and legatees, his widow, Lilyan Washburn, aged forty-nine years, his third wife, whom he married May 20, 1936; Genevieve Walker, a daughter, married’and living in Brazil, *469 South America, who had not visited her father for six years, although she had visited in this country three times during that period, aged forty years; Jane Lewis, a daughter, married and living in Michigan, who had not visited her father’s home since 1939, aged thirty-one years; Lawrence H. Washburn, a son, married and living in Milwaukee, and on friendly terms with his father, having a good job and a substantial income, aged twenty-five years.

Testator inherited all of the property which he owned from his father. By the will executed November 30, 1942, he gave $500 to his daughter Genevieve Walker, $500 to his daughter Jane Lewis, $1,000 to his son Lawrence Washburn, and the rest, residue, and remainder of the estate to his wife, Lilyan Washburn, if she survived him. Provision was made in the will that in the event of the death of the wife prior to his death, the residue of the estate was to go to Lawrence Washburn, and in the event of the death of any of his children prior to his death the share of such deceased child was to go to his wife, Lilyan, in the event she survived him, or to his son Lawrence in the event of testator’s wife’s death prior to his death.

In August, 1942, testator suffered a heart attack at Escanaba, Michigan, while returning from an automobile trip, and was confined to bed for three days, returning then to Sturgeon Bay. In October, 1942, he suffered a coronary attack and was confined in a hospital in Sturgeon Bay for ten days, leaving the hospital on the 24th day of October, 1942. The doctors who cared for him while he was in the hospital diagnosed his condition as being a general arteriosclerotic vascular disease that had affected his brain, heart, and circulation. The two doctors who cared for him testified that he was unable to carry on an intelligent conversation during that time,.could not remember things that had occurred two or three hours previously, and testimony was introduced to the effect that he would not stay in bed but would walk around the corridors without ample clothing, and could not remember dates and names of persons. *470 After leaving the hospital he made several trips there on the pretense of seeing persons who were not there and had not been there for some time.

Lay witnesses testified that he could not seem to think of what he wanted to say, talked slowly, stumbled over things,' and never remembered what he wanted to talk about. He had difficulty in remembering dates and names and had a “flight of ideas.”

The two doctors who cared for him while he was in the hospital in October, 1942, testified, in answer to a hypothetical question covering the foregoing facts in general, that testator was not a mentally normal individual on November 30, 1942, the date on which the will was executed, and that in their opinion at that time he did not have sufficient mental capacity to know and remember the nature, extent, and condition of his property and the identity and character of his natural heirs and beneficiaries so as to make an intelligent disposition of his property.

On November 9, 1943, nearly a year after the will was executed, a guardian was appointed for the testator by the county court of Door county. Testator testified as a witness at the hearing and was agreeable to the appointment of a guardian. Just prior to his death on May 3, 1944, he was sent to the state hospital for the insane at Winnebago, and returned to Sturgeon Bay where he died a few days later.

Witnesses on behalf of the proponent of the will consisted of several persons who were roomers in the Washburn home at the time the will was executed, and neighbors and friends of long acquaintance. The roomers testified that they talked with' him frequently after hfe returned from the hospital; that he appeared to be perfectly normal; talked with them about his children — knew their names and where they were living; discussed his property and the possibility of building a cottage; discussed politics and general subjects of interest; and they stated that in their opinion he was a normal individual during the period shortly before and after the will was executed.

*471 Neighbors and close friends testified that they had known him for many years and visited with him frequently, either at their homes or at his home; that he appeared to be normal, and they noticed no change over a period of years; that he was a gracious host; discussed his property and his family and the possibility of selling the large home he lived in and building a smaller home, and showed a keen, interest in the progress and success of his son, and likewise an interest in his daughters. He discussed with two of his close friends the fact that he intended to make a will, prior to making it, and informed them he had made a will after the will was executed. Most of the witnesses admitted that in the late spring of 1943 they noticed a change indicating a poorer state of health and mental condition, which was not noticeable prior to that time.

Dr. Millard Tufts, a practicing physician in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, who had known testator for forty years, and who was the physician testator usually consulted, testified that testator consulted him once in January, 1942, four times in August, 1942, and again in October and December, 1942. This is the physician he consulted after the heart attack at Escanaba, Michigan, which resulted in his hospitalization in Sturgeon Bay. He testified there was no change in testator’s mental condition prior to December, 1942; that he would know his relatives and he saw no reason why he should not know the nature and extent of his property, although he did not make any particular test of his mental capacity. There was no question in his mind about the mental capacity of testator at the times he examined him, and nothing unusual occurred at the times he saw him to raise any question in his mind. He testified that on March 24, 1943, when he examined him, his heart condition was improved.

The will was drafted by H. M. Ferguson, a former county judge of Door county, and a reputable lawyer, who had practiced law in Sturgeon Bay for. thirty-one years and had known testator for thirty years. Testator first talked to him at his office about making a will, and shortly afterwards mentioned *472 it when he saw him on the street. A few days later Ferguson called testator, informing him he would call at his home that evening to draft his will, which he did.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 N.W.2d 512, 248 Wis. 467, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washburn-v-washburn-wis-1946.