Mahoney v. Bailey

Crosby, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying a motion to frame a jury issue respecting the testamentary capacity of George E. Bailey. All other issues presented in the motion were waived by the contestants. The' motion was heard upon oral statements presented by the contestants and the petitioner respectively as to the nature of the evidence each expected to be able to present. No witnesses testified. The motion was denied and the case is before this court upon the contestants’ appeal from the denial of the third issue as to the soundness of mind of the deceased.

The decedent died on October 29, or 30, 1930, when he was about thirty-five years of age and was unmarried. He left surviving him as his heirs at law and next of kin three brothers. It appeared from the contestants’ statement of expected proof that from the time the decedent was about seventeen years of age he became addicted increasingly to an excessive use of alcoholic liquors and this habit continued up to the time of his death; that on an average of five or six times a year he approached “the extreme state of intoxication known as delirium tremens,” and was frequently treated on account of that condition by the family physician; that several witnesses who were neighbors of the decedent would testify that for five years before his death he always exhibited marked eccentricities and peculiarities; that he talked in a childish, disconnected, incoherent and random way, and was childish to the extent that it was a simple matter to persuade him to do almost anything that one might wish; that preceding the three to five years before his death he suffered somewhat from apparent lapses of memory, being unable to recall matters which had been talked about within a very short time; that he suffered from delusions respecting his health and personal safety; that he laughed and talked to himself; that he had fainting spells; that for a period of two *14or three years before his death he imagined that his life was in danger, and for at least a year before his death he carried with him almost all the time a shot gun; that he had suicidal tendencies and talked with a neighbor during the last year or two before his death respecting different ways by which he could end his life; that in October, 1930, less than five months after the alleged will was executed, he shot and killed himself by one of the methods he had frequently referred to.

It appeared further from the contestants’ statement of expected proof that an attending family physician would testify that in his opinion the decedent was not of sound mind in June, 1930, and for a long period before that time; that he considered “that he was childish, simple-minded in the extreme, and did not possess the ability to grasp of understand a proposition such as the disposal of his property by will would entail.” There was other evidence which need not be referred to which, if believed, would indicate a want of testamentary capacity.

The competency of statement of expected proof of declarations by a deceased physician as to his opinion of the mental condition of the deceased has not been argued. As to this see Little v. Massachusetts Northeastern Street Railway, 223 Mass. 501; Tenney v. Foss, 268 Mass. 69. See also Brady v. Doherty, 253 Mass. 518, 524.

It is manifest that, in view of these statements and especially of the expected testimony of the family physician of the deceased, a real and true question of fact proper for judicial inquiry was presented, and that the opposition to the will was not unfounded in law and did not rest on the disappointment or anger of a dissatisfied heir. Fuller v. Sylvia, 240 Mass. 49. Smith v. Brewster, 247 Mass. 395. New England Trust Co. v. Folsom, 268 Mass. 342. Sheppard v. Olney, 271 Mass. 424. See Berry v. Leonard, 273 Mass. 409.

- The first, second and fourth issues set forth in the motion were rightly denied. The order denying the third issue respecting the testamentary capacity of the deceased was erroneous. As to that issue the order is reversed, and order is to be entered framing that issue.

Ordered accordingly.