Santry v. France
Decision Date | 07 March 1951 |
Citation | 327 Mass. 174,97 N.E.2d 533 |
Parties | SANTRY v. FRANCE. |
Court | United States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court |
J. P. Cassidy, Lowell, G. N. Moushegian, Lowell, for petitioner.
J. C. Johnston, Boston, for contestant.
Before QUA, C. J., and LUMMUS, SPALDING, WILLIAMS and COUNIHAN, JJ.
On a motion to frame issues for trial by jury in the matter of the probate of an alleged will of Albion C. Taylor, late of Lowell, the Probate Court framed the following issue: 'Was said Albion C. Taylor of sound nind at the time of the execution of the instrument which is now propounded as his last will?' Eleanor B. Santry, the person named as executrix, appealed.
Albion C. Taylor was born on June 6, 1865, and died on December 9, 1949, leaving as heirs three first cousins living in New Jersey. They included the appellee, and he had no acquaintance with any of them. His alleged will, dated September 24, 1949, when he was eighty-four years old, gave all his property to George F. Santry and Eleanor B. Santry, who are husband and wife. The motion to frame issues was heard on statements of counsel as to their expected evidence, without any testimony except that of a nurse named Esther J. Goldman. Cook v. Mosher, 243 Mass. 149, 152-153, 137 N.E. 299; Beal v. Davis, 251 Mass. 175, 146 N.E. 354; Cranston v. Hallock, 281 Mass. 182, 183 N.E. 351.
The classic statement of the mental soundness which a testator must have is that contained in the charge of Mr. Justice Charles Allen in Whitney v. Twombly, 136 Mass. 145, 146, 147, quoted in Ronan v. Moroney, 313 Mass. 475, 477, 478, 47 N.E.2d 933, and recently confirmed and restated in Goddard v. Dupree, 322 Mass. 247, 250, 76 N.E.2d 643, 645, in these words:
The deceased was unmarried. He was an intelligent and successful man of business. The Santrys were much younger than he, but were intimate friends, and performed valuable services for him in his business affairs. The will was a natural one for him to make, and it is hard to believe that he intended to give anything to his heirs. Nevertheless the burden was on the proponent of the will to satisfy the tribunal of fact by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the deceased was of sound mind and testamentary capacity when the instrument was executed. Claffey v. Fenelon, 263 Mass. 427, 430, 161 N.E. 616; Goddard v. Dupree, 322 Mass. 247, 76 N.E.2d 643. The presumption of sanity has effect only until evidence of want of capacity appears. McLoughlin v. Sheehan, 250 Mass. 132, 137, 145 N.E. 259. See also Epstein v. Boston Housing Authority, 317 Mass. 297, 302, 58 N.E.2d 135.
In the winter of 1948, when the deceased was living with another old man in Lowell, he fell in the snow during a blizzard, and was helped into the house by neighbors, who put him to bed. The upper story of the house was not heated except by the heat from a gas oven in the lower story. The house was dirty and disorderly. After that experience, his mind began to deteriorate. He went about with his trousers unbottoned. He limped, and his leg began to turn back. A physician sent him to a hospital on January 20, 1949. His body was in a filthy condition, with dirt encrusted on it. In the hospital he was senile, irrational and incoherent. He asked that notice of his condition be given to his parents, who had been dead for many years. On January 26, 1949, his leg was amputated below the knee. On February 2, 1949, he had an apoplectic shock. The Santrys then engaged a lawyer, who prepared a petition for conservatorship on the ground of advanced age and mental weakness, supported by the certificate of a physician who is one of the attesting witnesses. The appointment was made, Eleanor B. Santry being appointed. The appointment of a conservator has a tendency to show weakness of mind. Clifford v. Taylor, 204 Mass. 358, 360, 361, 90 N.E. 862. The mental condition of the deceased became worse from January to June, 1949. The same...
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