Estate of Abel v. Hitt

By the Court,

Sweeney, J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment and order denying a motion for a new trial rendered in the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Nevada, in and for the County of Elko, in a will contest wherein W. T. Hitt, proponent and executor of the estate of Mary Abel, deceased, was successfully sued by J. D. Abel, contestant and respondent in this action.

It appears from the record that Mary Abel died on or about the 13th day of March, 1904, at Elko, Nevada, leaving an estate in said county consisting of real and personal property. At the time of her death she was 67 years of age, and had been married to her husband, now 83 years of age, since 1873. There were no children born to them. The appellant, W. T. Hitt, four days after the death of the deceased, filed in the said District Court of Elko County what purported to be the last will and testament of Mary Abel, and duly petitioned the court to probate the same. Within due time the husband, respondent in this action, filed a contest against the probate of said will, in which it was alleged that the purported will was not the last will and testament of the deceased, because as alleged at the date said will was signed the deceased was mentally incompetent to make a will; that the execution of said will was procured by undue influ*99ence of E. C. McClellan and his wife, witnesses thereto, and of Margaret Sheldon, a sister of the deceased. Upon the issues made by the petition for probate and the objections filed by the contestant, the canse came on regularly for trial on the 12th day of January, 1905, before the court, with the aid of a jury. Numerous witnesses were called and sworn, the cause was argued, the jury instructed, and under instructions given by the court returned a general verdict in favor of the contestant.

Nine special issues were submitted to the jury, with instructions to return answers to the same. They were as follows:

(1) Did Mary Abel sign the instrument which has been offered in evidence as her last will and testament? A. Yes.

(2) Did Mary Abel sign said .instrument in the presence of B. C. McClellan and Eleanor A. McClellan? A. Yes.

(3) Did Mary Abel, at the time she signed said instrument, if she did sign it, say it was her will? A. Yes.

(4) Did B. C. McClellan and Eleanor A. McClellan sign said instrument in the presence of Mary Abel, as witnesses. thereto? A. Yes.

(5) Was Mary Abel of sound mind and disposing memory at the time the proposed will was signed? A. No.

(6) Was Mary Abel acting under undue influence at the time the proposed will was made? A. Yes.

(7) Did Mary Abel, at the time of signing the alleged will, if she did sign it, have sufficient mental (Gr. S. B.) .capacity to recollect the property she intended to dispose of? A. No.

(8) Did Mary Abel, at the time of signing the alleged will, if she did sign it, have sufficient mental capacity to recollect the people who were the natural objects of her bounty? A. No.

(9) Was any of the property mentioned in the proposed will the separate property of Mary Abel at the time of her death? A. Yes.

Upon the rendition of the verdict by the jury, judgment was entered by the court decreeing that the instrument was not the last will and testament of Mary Abel, deceased, and refusing to admit the same to probate.

Appellant urges that a new trial should be granted, *100assigning many alleged errors, a number of which we deem harmless, even though conceded to be errors, but which apparently counsel have abandoned, and for these reasons we will not refer to them in this opinion, confining our attention solely to the main alleged errors urged. Appellant contends that the testimony was insufficient to support the verdict as to undue influence, and contends that there is no testimony tending to support the special finding that Mary Abel was acting under undue influence when she executed the will.

A careful review of the testimony in this case leads us to conclude that the court and jury had ample evidence, though conflicting in certain respects, upon which to base their verdict. It appears from the testimony that the deceased was under the constant care and attention of physicians, and confined to her home for more than six months prior to the execution of the will; that her condition was so precarious as to require the care of a number of nurses; that the deceased was an elderly woman 67 years of age, weighing over two hundred pounds,- and during the latter months of her sickness was almost constantly under the influence of' opiates for the purpose of allaying the intense pain to which she was subjected; that the disease with which she was afflicted had caused her limbs to become so swollen that it became necessary to split them open with a surgeon's knife. Her husband, the contestant, who was assisting in her care during her last sickness, and was almost constantly in attendance upon her, and who had lived with her for nearly forty years, testified that her mind was apparently blank at times, and that she was unable to recognize him, and during the latter months of her life her mental condition was failing and very bad all the time; that the expression on her face was very simple, at times-idiotic, and that her mind seemed a blank.

Another witness who rented a small house from the deceased adjoining her house and who during January, the month the alleged will was executed, saw the deceased two or three times a day, testified that deceased was insane on the 15th of January, and that on the date the will was executed she was no better mentally or physically; that at the time the will was executed and for some time prior thereto she was always in *101a stupor, and used language which indicated that she was mentally unbalanced. This evidence is supported by the testimony of Mrs. Keith, Mrs. Haywood, and Mrs. Watkins, and contradicted to a limited extent by a few reputable witnesses for the appellant. Other witnesses in behalf of the proponent testified in effect that while she was ailing physically and mentally, yet she had a clear mind and disposing memory; but from all the testimony on both sides it appears plain that the mental condition of deceased was very weak at the time she executed the will, and that the jury and judge who passed judgment in this ease were thoroughly warranted in finding that at the time of the execution of the alleged will Mary Abel was not of sound mind and of disposing memory.

It appears from the testimony that the purported will was prepared by ,E. C. McClellan, a notary public, some three or four days before" the date of the execution of the same; that Mr. McClellan and his wife were the only persons present at the time of the execution of the will, and that Mrs. McClellan had urged the deceased to make a will; that the McClellans were intimate friends of Mrs. Sheldon, who is charged in part with the procurement of this will in her favor; that the McClellans lived about ninety feet from the home of Mrs. Abel, and were social and intimate friends and called daily on the deceased; that on the day when the will was executed - Mrs. McClellan waited with Mrs. Sheldon until the nurse and Mr. Abel had left the house, and there was no one present at the home save Mrs. Sheldon, who, during the time the will was being executed, was out on the porch and had Mr. McClellan bring over the typewritten will which he had prepared for execution; that there was no one present at the time of the execution of the will save Mr. McClellan and his wife, who signed as witnesses to said will; that there was not a word changed in the typewritten will by Mrs. Abel, and the signature to said will discloses a signature which, if not connected with the will itself, would be impossible to recognize as the signature of Mary Abel; that the deceased was either so weak mentally or physically that she did not know how to spell her own name correctly.

Many exhibits were introduced showing the signature of Mary Abel to cheeks and letters which were submitted to the *102jury for comparison with that of the signature attached to the purported will'. These checks and signatures were written at different periods just prior to the execution of the will. It appears from the evidence that it was her custom to sign in a plain, firm hand, and all her signatures prior to a couple of months before the execution of the will were in a firm, plain hand; that her signatures to different exhibits written after January 7,1904, evidenced physical, if not mental, decay, and that the jury assumed from the signature to the will, which did not even spell her name properly, omitting one of the letters in the last name, that physically and mentally she was in such a condition that she did not know what she was doing and did not possess the requisite ingredients of mind necessary to dispose of her property. The evidence submitted to the court and jury upon the mental weakness of the deceased was sufficient for them to have'found, notwithstanding the conflicting testimony, that the deceased was incompetent and of unsound mind at the time of the execution of the Vill.

On the day the will was executed, Mr. McClellan testified that he was home all day, and that his wife had informed him that the respondent and the nurse had left the Abel house; that he knew that Mrs. Abel had been sick for six months before she signed the will, and that he had prepared the will upon the information of, and solicitation by, his wife, Mrs. McClellan, who the evidence discloses was the intimate friend of Mrs. Sheldon, the beneficiary under the will; that he had this typewritten will prepared for several days before it was signed; that -he was intimately acquainted with Mrs. Sheldon, who often visited his home, and nearly always talked about the proposed will; that Mrs. Sheldon was at the Abel house when he went there, and on the front porch of said house when he left after the alleged execution of the will; that he never told Mr. Abel, the contestant, anything about the will; that Mrs. Abel never gave him any instructions about the contents of the will, and that after it was executed he delivered it to Mrs. Sheldon; that at the time of the execution of the alleged will Mrs. Abel said nothing about any of her other relatives.

This condition of affairs existing, and the circumstances *103under which the will was prepared, and the execution of the same, were facts which also warranted the court and jury in finding that Mary Abel at the time the alleged will was executed was acting under undue influence, and that she did not have sufficient mental capacity to recollect the property she intended to dispose of, nor to recollect the people who were the natural objects of her bounty, and was otherwise mentally incompetent to execute a will. There are many respectable authorities holding that in will contest cases, when the question as to the correctness of the verdict in view of the evidence is raised in the appellate court, the verdict will not be set aside unless there is clearly a legal insufficiency in the evidence to sustain the verdict. (Smith v. Henline, 174 Ill. 184, 51 N. E. 227; Harp v. Parr, 168 Ill. 459, 48 N. E. 113; White v. Cole, 47 S. W. 759; Coates v. Semper, 82 Minn. 460, 85 N. W. 217; Crossan v. Crossan, 169 Mo. 631, 70 S. W. 136; In re Watson, 131 N. Y. 587, 30 N. E. 56; In re Voorhis’s Will, 125 N. Y. 765, 26 N. E. 935; In re Ulmer’s Will, 88 Hun, 290, 34 N. Y. Supp. 406; Robinson v. Robinson, 203 Pa. 400, 53 Atl. 253.)

And particularly, has this been held to be the rule when the trial court has declined to interfere. (Petefish v. Becker, 176 Ill. 448, 52 N. E. 71; In re Allison’s Estate, 104 Iowa, 130, 73 N. W. 489; Gardner on Wills, p. 332.)

However, in this ease the record discloses no such showing for appellant. But this court has repeatedly held that, where there is substantial evidence to support a judgment or verdict, even though the evidence to a degree be conflicting, it will not disturb such verdict or judgment, and in the present case we believe the transcript discloses that such substantial evidence exists, and hold accordingly.

Appellant further urges as reversible error misconduct of the jury. It appears from the affidavits of three of counsel for appellant that during the progress of the trial, but not after the jury were instructed and placed in the custody of an officer to consider the verdict, some of the jury became separated, and were not in the custody of the officer. It is not claimed by the appellant that the jury was allowed to sepárate after the instructions of the court had been given and while they were considering their verdict, nor is it shown *104or claimed by said affidavits that at the times said jurymen were separated or out of the custody of the officer that any juryman had been tampered with or improperly influenced, or at all, or that any effort had been made to prejudice the rights of appellant, nor is it claimed or maintained that because of such separation any of the rights of appellant were prejudiced, nor because of this separation that they were damaged in any way. While there are some authorities, in criminal cases, which hold that this would be proper ground for reversal, we are unable to find any which would . make this reversible error in a civil case, under the circumstances of the present case, where it. is not claimed that because of a mere separation of the jury any injury or damage was suffered by appellant. When, during the trial of a case in the lower court, the court enters an order that the jury remain together, they should do so, and the jurymen should not be allowed to become separated, even before the instructions are given by the court and the case put into their hands to consider their verdict; but, under the circumstances of the present case, where no damage is alleged to have arisen from such separation, nor where it is not shown that the jurors were tampered with or improperly influenced, or at all, and none of the circumstances indicate any rights were violated or damage suffered, we do not believe it to be reversible error. (17 Ency. Law, 2d ed. 1227, 1228.)

The authorities cited by appellant are not in point, for the reason that those cases wherein judgment had been reversed, because of the separation of the jury, applied to cases where the jury had retired after being instructed by the court to consider the verdict. In another case cited by appellant a judgment was reversed because of an improper separation during the trial of a criminal action, wherein, during the progress of the trial, a juryman became separated from the jury, and without the custody of the sheriff; the court holding that the mere fact of his separation in such a case, as distinguished from a civil case, was ground for reversal, unless the presumption is sufficiently rebutted that the juror was not improperly influenced or tampered with, or that the appellant’s rights were prejudiced or suffered harm. (17 *105Ency. Law, 2d ed. 1227.) At any rate, in the present case, it being an action wherein a verdict of a jury is merely advisory,, the court was not bound by the verdict. The court in the present case could either have accepted the findings of the jury, and accepted its verdict, or set them aside and acted on its own judgment, as it saw fit. In the present case the court saw fit to accept the verdict and findings of the jury and entered judgment against the proponent. (Comp. Laws, 2803, 2805, 3038, 3067; 16 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 1042-1043.)

This same observation with reference to the jury being improperly influenced or prejudiced is equally applicable to the error assigned by appellant’s counsel of certain improper language and argument alleged to have been used by Attorney Massey, one of the chief counsel for contestant, in his argument before the jury. The court evidently, in passing its own judgment, did not consider the language complained of sufficiently harmful or injurious to warrant a judgment otherwise than he rendered. (Lake v. Tolles, 8 Nev. 285; Duffy v. Moran, 12 Nev. 97; Van Vleet v. Olin, 4 Nev. 95, 97 Am. Dec. 513.)

In other jurisdictions where the verdict of a jury is merely advisory in a will contest, as it is in the present case under consideration, the rule prevails, as in this state, that the verdicts of juries are merely advisory, and can fee totally disregarded or accepted as a trial court decides. (Bryant v. Pierce, 95 Wis. 331, 70 N. W. 297; In re Jackman’s Will, 26 Wis. 104; Chafin Will Case, 32 Wis. 569; Wright v. Jackson, 59 Wis. 584, 18 N. W. 486; Loughney v. Loughney, 87 Wis. 101, 58 N. W. 250; Fay v. Vanderford, 154 Mass. 498, 28 N. E. 681; Newell v. Homer, 120 Mass. 277; Hudson v. Hughan, 56 Kan. 152, 42 Pac. 701.)

After a careful review of the transcript on appeal, the bill of exceptions, and authorities presented, we are of the opinion that the judgment should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.