Supreme Court of Canada
Rogers v. Davies et al., [1932] S.C.R. 407
Date: 1932-02-24
In the Matter of
the Estate of Franklin David Davis, Deceased
Mary Jane Rogers (A
Defendant) Appellant;
and
Helen Elizabeth
Davis (Plaintiff) and Others (Defendants) Respondents.
1932: February 24.
Present: Duff, Rinfret, Lamont, Smith and
Cannon JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Appeal—Will—Testamentary capacity—Concurrent
findings of two courts below on questions of fact.
The appeal was from the judgment of the Court
of Appeal for Ontario, affirming judgment of Rose, C.J.H.C., declaring that
certain purported testamentary dispositions constituted deceased’s will.
Appellant contended that no part of the last of the documents in question
should be held to form part of the will, as it was not shewn that deceased, at
the time of the making and execution of it, was of sufficient mental capacity
or of a disposing mind, or understood or appreciated the document, or that it
was the expression of his desires.
Held, that, as
there was nothing to indicate that the trial judge misdirected himself, or that
either he or the Court of Appeal failed to appreciate the facts, and as, in the
courts below, there was nothing that could be described as a miscarriage of
justice or a violation of any principles of law or procedure, this court should
refuse to examine the evidence in order to interfere with the concurrent
findings of the two courts below on what was a pure question of fact. (Robins
v. National Trust Co., [1927] A.C. 515, at 517-518).
The principle laid down in Perera v. Perera,
[1901] A.C. 354, at 361, as to extent of capacity required on executing a
will prepared in accordance with instructions previously given, held
applicable.
[Page 408]
APPEAL from the judgment of the Court of
Appeal for Ontario, affirming the judgment of Rose, C.J.H.C., declaring that
certain documents dated respectively November 16, 1926, January 20, 1930, and
October 4, 1930, and purporting to be the last wills and testaments of Franklin
David Davis, deceased, and a codicil to the first of such wills, except
paragraphs 1 and 2 of the will dated October 4, 1930, constitute together the
last will and testament of said deceased, and ordering that the proper court in
that behalf do admit to probate the last will and testament of said deceased,
so constituted.
The appellant contended that no part of the
document dated October 4, 1930, should be held to form a part of deceased’s
last will and testament, on the ground that the evidence did not shew that deceased,
at the time of the making and execution of said document, was of sufficient
mental capacity or of a disposing mind or understood or appreciated the
document, or that it was the expression of his own desires.
J.H. Rodd K.C. and Roy Rodd for the appellant.
Gideon Grant K.C. and A.H. Foster for the
respondent Helen Elizabeth Davis.
Gideon Grant K.C. and E.W. Haines for the
respondent Annie M. Davis.
J.B. Aylesworth for respondents Ada A.
Guppy and others.
J.M. Baird for the Official Guardian,
representing certain infant respondents.
On the conclusion of the argument of counsel for
the appellant, the Court retired to consider the case, and, on returning to the
Bench, without calling on counsel for respondents, delivered judgment
dismissing the appeal, costs to be payable out of the Estate.
DUFF J.—We are satisfied, Mr. Grant, that
it is unnecessary to call upon you.
The principle of procedure by which we are
governed is laid down by Lord Dunedin in the case of Robins v. National
Trust Company, and I
quote a few sentences from his judgment:
[Page 409]
This raises in a quite distinct way the
question of whether their Lordships will examine the evidence in order to
interfere with the concurrent findings of two Courts on a pure question of
fact. Whether a man at the time of making his will had testamentary capacity,
whether a will was the result of his own wish and act or was procured from him
by means of fraud or circumvention or undue influence, are pure questions of
fact. The rule as to concurrent findings is not a rule based on any statutory
provision.
Then he says it is a rule of conduct, and a rule
of conduct for the Empire, and “will be applied to all the various judicatures
whose final tribunal is this Board”; and proceeds (pp. 517-518):
Being, as has been said, a rule of conduct,
and not a statutory provision, the rule is not cast iron; but it would avail
little to try to give a definition which should at once be exhaustive and
accurate, of the exceptions which may arise. It will be sufficient to quote
what has been said on this subject in the past:—
In Moung Tha Hnyeen v. Moung Pan
Nyo, Lord
Hobhouse, delivering the judgment of a Board which included Lord Macnaghten and
Lord Lindley, said: “There has been nothing to show that there has been a
miscarriage of justice, or that any principles of law or of procedure have been
violated in the Courts below. This case is one which very decidedly falls
within the valuable principle recognized here and commonly observed in second
Courts of Appeal, that such a Court will not interfere with concurrent
judgments of the Courts below on matters of fact, unless very definite and
explicit grounds for that interference are assigned.”
In Rani Srimati v. Khajendra
Narayan Singh, Lord
Lindley repeated the view: “The appellants have failed to show any miscarriage
of justice, or the violation of any principle of law or procedure. Their
Lordships, therefore, see no reason for departing from the usual practice of
this Board of declining to interfere with two concurrent findings on pure
questions of fact.”
Now, we can see nothing to indicate that the
trial judge misdirected himself; that either he or the Court of Appeal failed
to appreciate the facts; still less, that there has been anything that could,
by the widest stretching of the scope of the words, be described as a
miscarriage of justice or a violation of “any principles of law or procedure.”
To repeat Lord Hobhouse’s words—no “definite and
explicit grounds,” within the meaning of these judgments, have been brought
before us for interfering with the judgment of the Court of Appeal. I might
also add that this is a case for the application of the principle laid down by
the Privy Council in Perera v. Perera, where the Judicial Committee accepted this
statement of the law by Sir James Hannen in Parker v. Felgate:
[Page 410]
If a person has given instructions to a
solicitor to make a will, and the solicitor prepares it in accordance with
those instructions, all that is necessary to make it a good will, if executed
by the testator, is that he. should be able to think thus far: “I gave my
solicitor instructions to prepare a will making a certain disposition of my
property; I have no doubt that he has given effect to my intention, and I
accept the document which is put before me as carrying it out.”
The appeal will, therefore, be dismissed.
(The question of costs was then discussed
between the Court and counsel.)
DUFF J.—We think that, considering all the
circumstances of this case, the costs should be payable out of the estate.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitors for the appellant and for the
respondent Genevieve Rogers: Rodd, Wigle, Whiteside & Jasperson.
Solicitors for the respondent Helen
Elizabeth Davis: Fleming, Drake & Foster.
Solicitors for respondents Ada A. Guppy
and others: Bartlet, Aylesworth & McGladdery.
Official Guardian (on behalf of certain
infant respondents): McGregor Young.
Solicitors for the respondent Annie M.
Davis (and solicitors on the record for certain respondents not appearing in
this appeal): Haines & Haines.