Tipper v Moore [1911] HCA 42;
[1911] HCA 42
At a glance
Source factsCourt
High Court of Australia
Decision date
1911-09-15
Before
O'Connor JJ, Barton J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (11 paragraphs)
Tipper v Moore [1911] HCA 42; (1911) 13 CLR 248 (15 September 1911)
Tipper Caveator, Appellant; and Moore and Another Respondents, Respondents.
The rule as to the way in which an appeal based on the argument that the Judge below has come to an erroneous decision on a matter of fact has been so often laid down that it is not necessary to repeat it. It is not necessary to say whether we should have arrived at the same conclusions as the learned Judge. It is sufficient to say that the conclusions to which he came were obviously warranted by the evidence. It is suggested that the execution of the will was obtained by undue influence. The only ground for that suggestion is, in short, that the principal beneficiary is the husband. Then it is said that the testatrix was not of testamentary capacity because she suffered from delusions. But, as was said in [], referred to by my brother , delusions are only material to the question of testamentary capacity if they are connected with the dispositions of the will. A number of matters have been referred to in this case which are said to have been delusions of the testatrix. At one time she thought that she was pregnant when she was not. At some considerable time before she made her will she sometimes used to believe that men were trying to poison her in order to get her property. She also said that she had visions, in one of which she saw a procession of men passing before the Virgin Mary. She used to consult fortune tellers and believed what they told her. When she was a widow she used to imagine that a number of men wanted to marry her, All those things are irrelevant to the question of testamentary capacity.