In re Lowe
In re Lowe
Opinion of the Court
The testator, a bachelor 62 years of age, died 31 October, 1918, leaving neither brother nor sister, and by this will devised his property to his nearest living kin, Mrs. Jordan and daughters, one of whom was an invalid, and her son, with a family. He also left $1,000 each to two churches in the county, ■ of the communion to which he belonged, and $500 to the widow of another cousin. His other relatives were the children of other first cousins of whom there were eight, all of whom predeceased him, some of them having moved away, and some leaving no children. The testator lived much to himself, and for the last five or six years was not in good health.
The will was written by a member of the bar in good standing, whose testimony, together with that of a tenant who lived on his land a few hundred yards from him, if believed, showed the testator was entirely uninfluenced, and was possessed of a sound and disposing mind when he executed the will. He was taken ill on 29 September with pneumonia. On 17 October his physician informed him that he could not live, and suggested that he write his will, and thereupon he sent for a lawyer, who drew the will under his directions, and, according to the testimony, entirely without suggestion from any one. Testator died 31 October. The attack is made by collateral relations on the father’s side, Mrs. Jordan being his only living first cousin, and was on the mother’s’side.
There was conflict of evidence as to his competency to make a will, which the jury found in the affirmative. The sole allegation as to undue influence was that the physician who had attended him for years suggested to him that he should make a will, and was closeted with him with the doors shut for a few moments. There is no evidence to show that at any time the physician suggested to him any provision in the will, and he testified that he did not. The physician was not devisee in the will, but was designated therein as his executor. He was not present when the will was written.
There are many exceptions and voluminous testimony, but thé law involved is practically reduced to one point, which is that the court instructed the jury that if they should find that the physician merely suggested to the testator the making of his will, but did not suggest how he should make it, nor any of the provisions therein, that this would not be undue influence. If merely to advise a friend to make a will invalidates it, many wills will be made void.
“The influence which is exerted merely to induce the making of a will, while leaving the testator free from influence as to the provisions thereof, is not undue influence in the legal sense.” Struth v. Decker, 100 Md., 368.
After the fullest consideration of all the exceptions, we find
No error.
Concurring Opinion
concurring: I did not have the advantage of hearing the argument in this case, but as my brethren are equally divided, from necessity I must give the casting vote.
After a careful examination of the record and briefs, I am convinced that there is no evidence of undue influence. It is therefore immaterial whether his Honor erred or not in his instruction upon the first issue, the jury having found in response to the second issue that -the testator had mental capacity sufficient to execute the will. The contention is that' the undue influence was exerted by Dr. Smith in an effort to induce the testator to make a will. There is evidence that the physician advised the testator that he could not probably recover and pressed upon him the necessity of making a will, .and that the physician brought a lawyer to the testator for that purpose. There is not a scintilla of evidence that Dr. Smith exerted any influence whatever as to what disposition the testator should make of his property. Not a single devise appears to have been the result of even a suggestion upon .the part of the doctor. There is no evidence that the influence of the physician was of such an overpowering kind that it subjugated the mind of the testator and made him express the will of the physician rather than his own. It seems to be very generally held that advice or suggestion do not constitute undue influence unless they are so strongly urged that the testator is unable to resist adopting them. Yorty v. Webster, 205 Ill., 630; Herbert v. Long, 15 Ky., 427; O’Brien’s Appeal, 100 Me., 156.
This rule is especially true where the suggestion is directed only to the making of a will in general, and not as to what it should contain. It is not contended that Dr. Smith exerted his influence in favor of any particular. person. There is not a scintilla of evidence that he exerted any influence whatever in shaping the disposition made of the testator’s property. It is contended that when he urged the' testator to make a will that he was using his influence adversely to the interest of the heirs at law. I am not impressed with the force of this suggestion for the reason that the testator had a perfect right to devise his property to his
The testimony of Mr. Whedbee, who wrote the will, and who is a lawyer well known to be of the highest personal honor, indicates clearly that the testator knew to whom he was giving his property, and the extent of his benefactions. He remembered the churches that he was associated with and the parties nearest in blood and affection. The relatives to whom he gave his property, as soon as they heard of his sickness, came from a distance and braved the dangers attendant upon his disease. They stayed with and nursed him, though one of them was herself an invalid. These objects of his bounty were not with him at the time, and never knew of the execution of the will until after it was made.
I am of the opinion that the judgment should be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: It is not possible for me to assent to the last proposition stated in the opinion of the Court, 'that where the execution of a will is caused by undue influence it does not invalidate it, unless also it extends to the provisions of the instrument, and I do not think that the authorities cited by the Court sustain the principle now distinctly asserted, for the first time. Although the undue influence may be confined to the mere making of the will, it must be seen at once that the provisions in it would not have been made had its execution not have been induced wrongfully. The prejudice is to those heirs, who, by the destruction of the course of descent, are disinherited by the will. If the testator had made the will by reason of fraud or duress, the principle must be the same as if it had been by undue influence. Any difference must be in kind, and not in degree, the result being the same. ‘ A man may make a will under duress, or the fear of physical injury threatened by another if he does not, and may provide therein only for particular persons, not being induced to favor them by any special undue influence exercised for the purpose of having the particular devise, or bequest, made, when the testator did not want to make a will at all, but wanted his heirs to have-his property. In such a case, his act is not voluntary. He chose to make it as he did because he was compelled to make a will, and yet if he had been allowed to follow his own inclination there would have been no will, and consequently no devise. The heirs are just as surely deprived of their inheritance wrongfully as if the wrongdoer had coerced him to make a particular disposition of his property. Any other doctrine would be an extremely dangerous one. A man should be perfectly free in the entire process of disposition. This case is a striking illustration of the correctness of my position. The testator here was not satisfied with the will, and so stated himself, and expressed his sorrow
In the New 7orle case, cited by the Court (37 N. Y. Suppl., 496), there was no undue influence exerted to have the testator make the will; he merely requested the making of the will by the testator, but not unduly. The head-note is thus: “A will is not open to the objection of having been executed under undue influence because, at the request of beneficiaries named therein, a person asked testator to make a will, nothing-being said by them tb such person, or by him to testator, as to what the will should contain.” And the same was the ruling in the Maryland case (100 Md., 368), as the influence employed to induce the making of the will was'not undue, because undue influence is a coercion produced by importunity, or by a silent, resistless power, which the strong will often exercise over the weak and infirm, and which could not be resisted, so that the motive was tantamount to force or fear; whatever destroys free agency, and constrains the person whose act is brought in judgment to do what is against his will, and what he would not have done if left to himself; that which overpowers the will without convincing the judgment ; an influence which acts to the injury of the person who is swayed by it, or of those whom he would, if left to himself, have benefited. 39 Cyc., 681-682. We said of this undue influence, that to constitute such influence it is not necessarily required that there should exist moral terpitude, or even an improper motive; but if a person, from the best of motives, having obtained a dominant influence over the mind of the grantor, thereby induces him to execute a deed or other instrument materially affecting his rights, which he would not have made otherwise, exercising the influence obtained to such an extent that the mind and will of the grantor is effaced or supplanted in the transaction so that the instrument, while professing to be the act and deed of the grantor, in fact and truth only expresses the mind and will of the third person, the actor .who procured the result. Myatt v. Myatt, 149 N. C., 137, 141; 62 S. E., 887. Undue influence exists wherever, through weakness and dependence, or implicit reliance by one on the good faith of another, the latter obtains an ascendancy which prevents the former from exercising an unbiased judgment. Caven v. Agnew, 186 Pa. St., 134, 328; In re Douglass, 162 Pa. St., 567, 569. There can be no fatally undue influence without a person incapable of protecting himself as well as a wrongdoer to be resisted. Latham v. Udell, 38 Mich., 238, 242. Undue influence means wrongful influence. But influence secured through affection or persuasion is not wrongful. Sears v. Vaughan, 230 Ill., 572, 589; Dowie v. Sutton, 227 Ill., 183, 197; Burt v. Quisenberry, 132 Ill., 385, 399.
Tbe effect of tbe ruling here will be to say that if a man makes bis will while under tbe control of undue influence, it will not be set aside, if tbe influence did not govern him in tbe disposition of bis property, when, if be bad not made tbe will at all, tbe heirs would not be deprived of their inheritance, because no disposition of bis property would have occurred. It follows that tbe undue influence indirectly caused tbe particular disposition of bis property to be made, and this being both logically and practically true, bow can it make any difference whether tbe disposition of it was caused directly or indirectly by' tbe wrongful influence.
Tbe judge charged tbe jury against tbe view I have taken of tbe matter, when there was evidence to show undue influence in procuring tbe execution of tbe will alone, and in this there was error prejudicial to the caveators. I do not mean to imply that there was no evidence of undue influence exerted to control tbe provisions of tbe will in favor of certain persons, for I think there was, and strong evidence of such wrongful and illegal conduct, but I have sought to confine myself to tbe instructions as to tbe making of tbe will itself without regard to its contents or tbe special disposition of testator’s property, for tbe court charged plainly and emphatically that such influence would not be undue and would not vitiate tbe will. This, in my opinion, was palpable error, because tbe result was tbe same even if tbe physician did not go beyond this and unduly induce tbe testator to will bis estate in a particular way. I am so sure in my mind of this being tbe law, that I might well stop here and rest my dissent solely upon this ground. There is evidence that tbe testator bad persistently pleaded to have tbe will returned to him that be might destroy it, as be regretted that be bad made it, showing that be was unwilling that bis property should go as tbe will directed, and even if be wished only to change it, as propounders contend, bow, and in what way, did be wish to change it. He could, not even change it very-well unless be gave a different direction in bis will, that is, to bis last desire as to tbe disposition of bis property. Morphine was ad
It will better illustrate my view if I make reference here to some of the outstanding facts in this very important case:
Milton E. Lowe, the testator, died on 31 October, 1918. At the time of his death he was a bachelor, 62 years of age. Practically all of his life he had lived alone, having hardly had any association with others. During the last five or six years of his life he had been in extremely feeble health; suffering from Bright’s disease, a dilated heart, and fainting spells, and lapses of memory, and being in a generally debilitated condition. On 29 September he was stricken down with pneumonia, which shortly afterwards was complicated with gangrene of the lungs, and he was “from the first as sick a man as ever died.” During the whole period of his sickness he was very weak, and grew progressively worse, being unable to raise himself in bed, and speaking to those about him only occasionally when aroused temporarily for some purpose, or' to make some request. On 17 October he was informed by the doctor, who had been his confidential physician for years, and who attended him during his last illness, that he was bound to die. This greatly excited the testator, and his whole soul and mind seemed to be concentrated with fear and anxiety upon the hereafter, without further thought of earthly things. On the same day the doctor, having administered professionally to the needs of the testator, came out of the sick room on to the porch, and inquired of testator’s nurse and male attendance if he ever made a will. Being informed that he had not, the doctor then inquired who were his nearest relatives, and" having been misinformed that the Jordans, the propounders, were his nearest relatives, requested the attendants to remain away from the sick room as he wished to have some talk with the old man. The doctor then returned to the sick room, and, contrary to his usual custom, closed the door, presumably so that they on.the porch could not hear. He remained in the sick room on
This recital of only some of the facts, there being others which reinforce them, shows how necessary 'it was that the charge of the judge should have been given with careful and clear discrimination, and how fatal to the caveators was the instruction as to undue influence, which was merely exerted in securing the making of the will.
Lastly, let me say, that testimony of the doctor as to the mental capacity of the testator, and relevant to that issue, was permitted, by inadvertence, of course, to be used on the issue as to undue influence, and evidence as to undue influence was permitted to be given by him, when he was an incompetent witness, all against the objection of the caveators. It is difficult sometimes to separate the testimony and assign each part of it to its proper place and function, but it must be done, else the jury will be free to decide the issues upon incompetent evidence. What the. person, whose mental condition is in question, says may be considered by the jury as evidence of such condition, although it is not competent as evidence of the truth of what he says, and the court should carefully discriminate between the two, but the evidence should be admitted, as to the state of his mind and his capacity to make a will, deed, or contract, or to commit a crime (capax doli), even though his statements may be self-serving, or otherwise incompetent as evidence of their truth. Sometimes, and very generally, the falsity of them is the very thing that indicates aberration of the mind or impaired mental faculties. If it is expert testimony that is resorted to for the purpose of showing mental condition, the witness must be allowed freely to state not only what the subject stated to him, but what he did, so that the value of his opinion may the more clearly appear. This is elementary learning, and hardly calls for the citation of authority. Rogers on Expert Testimony (2 ed.), pp. 479, 480; especially the opinion of Justice Washington in Lessees of Hoge v. Fisher, 1 Peters’ C. C. (U. S.), 163. The value of the expert’s opinion depends very largely upon his opportunities for seeing and conversing with the person whose mental condition is the subject of inquiry, as appears in the authorities cited, and as common sense suggests, but while this is true, the judge should most carefully instruct and caution the jury not to consider the testimony in the light of evidence as to facts detailed by the witnesses, but only as bearing upon the question of mental condition. These principles are strongly supported by the clear and emphatic language of Chief Justice Smith in McLeary v. Norment, 84 N. C., 235, a case which has been much cited and approved by this Court. He said: “The conversation offered was
, There are other exceptions to evidence and to tbe charge deserving attention, but to consider them in detail would extend this opinion far beyond its proper limits. Tbe principal error is tbe instruction we have already fully considered as to undue influence merely in tbe making of tbe will.
Tbe testator at tbe time be signed tbe instrument bad been greatly wasted by disease, which bad well nigh sapped bis vitality. He was entirely too weak even to resist persuasion or importunity, and certainly not strong enough to overcome tbe dominating influence of one who bad all bis faculties unimpaired, both mental and physical, and who bad been bis attending physician. He was verily fast approaching tbe shadow of death, almost in its immediate presence, as be bad been advised, and was much agitated and unnerved by bis sudden knowledge of it. He was in no condition to act with a proper sense of bis duty to those who were entitled to favorable consideration in tbe disposition of bis estate. His declaration that be did not want to make a will, and bis call for tbe will that be might destroy it, or even change it, showed plainly that undue influence bad done its work, and that bis free agency
I am greatly perplexed to understand how it can be successfully asserted, or maintained, that there is no evidence of undue influence to make the will, when the record is replete with such evidence. , It cannot be said that the making of the will was not unduly influenced and procured. His Honor assumed that there was evidence of it when he gave the instruction. There is not only ample, but abundant evidence of it, and the cries of the testator that the paper be restored to him, so that it might be canceled or destroyed, is not the least of it. It was not by any means a mere suggestion to the testator to make the will, but far more -than that. Many wills have been set aside upon far less evidence. Of course, the testator could will his estate to his heirs, but he did not do so, and if he had done so, they would still take as heirs, as if by descent. He willed it to some of his heirs, but not, in a natural way, to those in the paternal links, who would have taken it, had he not made a will, as it would have gone to those who were of the blood of the first purchaser, his father, and they have been prejudiced. By undue in-' fluence in procuring the making of the will, that line of descent has been ignored.
Suggestion, or fair persuasion, which does not subject the testator’s will to thdt of a third person, making it the will of the latter and not that of the testator, will not, of course, do. That is not this case, but a very different one. The declarations of the testator show what influence had been exerted upon him. Nothing could manifest it more surely.
The effect of the instruction is that, if the execution of the will was “unduly influenced” by the physician, and he was appointed executor by reason of it, his appointment would be void, but the will would still be valid, if the disposition of the testator’s property was not unduly influenced, which was exactly the same as saying that, if the making of the will was obtained by undue influence, the will would nevertheless be valid unless the particular disposition of his property came under the same influence and was induced by it, except as to the executor’s appointment.
My conclusion is that there should be another trial of the case for the errors pointed out.
Reference
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- In re Will of MILTON R. LOWE
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