Weber v. Geissler

104 Wash. 452
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1918
DocketNo. 14541
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 104 Wash. 452 (Weber v. Geissler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weber v. Geissler, 104 Wash. 452 (Wash. 1918).

Opinion

Chadwick, J.

Agnes Geissler died January 27, 1916, in Adams county, Washington. She left a will which was admitted to probate on the 13th day of March, 1916. On the 29th day of September, 1916, Agnes M. Weber, daughter of the deceased, filed a [453]*453petition in the superior court asking that a citation issue to the executor and the heirs and devisees of her mother to show cause why the will should not be set aside and held for naught upon the ground that the will had been executed at a time when her mother was mentally incompetent to understand the contents of the will; that she did not sign it as her free and voluntary act, but at the dictation and under the menace, duress, fraud and deceit of Frank J. Geissler, her husband, to whom the property was all left, save a specific legacy of $50 to each one of her children, including the contestant.

The petitioner further alleged that it was the wish and desire and purpose of her mother, when in her right mind and in the full possession of her mental faculties, to distribute her community interest in the property among her four children, share and share alike. The facts will be argued in the body of the opinion. The first question confronting us is whether the case is properly before us, it being urged by counsel for the contestant, in whose favor judgment was entered, that counsel for the contestees did not save any exceptions to the findings made by the court. The history of this feature of the case is fully outlined in our opinion in In re Geissler’s Estate, 99 Wash. 452, 169 Pac. 822. It is there suggested that the question should be passed to the merits. Without further discussion we hold, in aid of our appellate jurisdiction and upon the showing made, that counsel for the contestees announced to the court, at the time findings were made, that they excepted to such findings ;■ this being not inconsistent with orderly practice, and counsel being experienced lawyers familiar with appellate practice. The showing on the other hand would indicate that, although it was announced that exceptions were reserved, counsel did not specify the particular [454]*454finding’s to which they excepted. This position is sustained in that the trial judge did not note the exceptions at the time. The conflicting certificates of the trial judge are referred to in our former opinion. This being the state of the record, and being disinclined to deny an appeal where we are convinced that both sides are sincere, and that the situation comes not from neglect or a selfish disposition to deny a right, but from a misunderstanding, we are inclined to hold that the case is properly before us.

The contestant produced the attending physicians, Dr. Ganson and Dr. Burroughs, who had been called in consultation on the day that the will was executed, as witnesses. As suggested in our former opinion, the casé was tried before a jury, which found in favor of the contestant. The trial judge adopted the findings of the jury, but also filed a memorandum of opinion in which he says that the testimony clearly preponderates in favor of the mental capacity of the deceased at the time the will was executed, if we are to reject the testimony of the physicians. Counsel for the contestees persistently objected to the admission of the testimony of the physicians, claiming that they came within the rule of privilege as declared by Rem. Code, § 1214.

It was held below that the contest of the will, being a matter in probate, was not a civil action within the meaning of the statute, and that the physicians were therefore qualified.

Much of the briefs is made up of an argument of this question, but being convinced that the facts preponderate in favor of the will, with as well as without the testimony of the physicians, we will pass that question and consider the case as if the physicians were unquestionably qualified.

. Mrs. Geissler had been sick for about a year. She [455]*455had gone to Spokane in the fall for an operation. When the doctors came to operate they found her condition to he such that the hope of benefiting her was abandoned and she was moved back to her home. The operation revealed a cancerous condition of the uterus, bladder, and pelvic organs, from which uremic poisoning developed. This condition, according to the testimony of Dr. Burroughs, brings on convulsions which are followed hy coma; that is, stupor and insensibility. It is in evidence, too, that the attending physician had prescribed morphine and hyoscin, and that these remedies would benumb the nervous system and impair the acumen of the mind and cause hallucinations and drowsiness when coming out from under the influence of the drugs.

Of her mental condition, the attending physician, Dr. Ganson, testified in a general way:

“She was usually able to recognize me. Her mental condition was quite misleading. At times I would think she was quite rational, and then she would go off to one of those periods of flightiness. She was conscious but delirious.”

The will was executed on the afternoon of December 22. The doctor says:

‘ ‘ She met Dr. Burroughs and shook hands and talked to him. She knew Dr. Burroughs and she knew'me, but I had talked to her in the morning and she was delirious at that time.”

To the direct question whether she was in such mental state as to know her property, her will, and the object of her bounty, Dr. Ganson says:

“I had no means of knowing positively as to whether she was under this influence or not. She knew part of what she said, and at the same time in the same conversation she would go off into a delirium, so it was impossible for me to tell whether she recognized these things or not.”

[456]*456And on cross-examination lie testified:

“Q. Doctor, do you think from what you saw of her at that time, do you think that, on the morning of the 22nd, she would be in such a condition of mind as to know her relatives and know what property she had? A. I don’t know. Q. You would not say that she was not in that condition of mind? A. I would not say that she was not. No, sir.”

To a like general question, Dr. Burroughs answered:

“A. I think that comes under the head of expert witnesses and I don’t know as I care to qualify as an expert. Q. We have both.expert and inexpert. Just simply give your opinion, Doctor, as to what the situation was. A. In my opinion, she was not.”

And upon cross-examination he testified:

“Q. But is there at any time a time in a patient who is in a state of uremic poisoning when the effect of it might pass off, and the mind be clear? A. There might be at intervals. Q. Would you say, on the morning of the 22nd of December, 1915, that Mrs. Geissler was not in a condition to know her children? A. I did not know her condition in the morning. I saw her in the afternoon. Q. From what you saw in the afternoon, state whether or not, in your opinion, she would be in such condition on the morning of the 22nd of December as to know her children? A. Probably she would' at intervals. Q. And her husband? A. She probably would. Q. And to know what she desired to do with that property? A. She might do that.”

On re-direct examination to the question, “That would be possible, but not probable, as I understand it?” Dr. Burroughs said.: “I guess that’s it.”

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Bluebook (online)
104 Wash. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weber-v-geissler-wash-1918.