87 Mo. 480 | Mo. | 1885
This is a proceeding commenced in the circuit court of Marion county to contest the validity ■of the will of John Bush, deceased. The will was dated October 10, 1876, and a codicil was made January 1, 1877. On the trial, the defendants, proponents of the will, offered as evidence the will and codicil, and . proved its. execution and attestation by the subscribing witnesses. Also introduced testimony tending to prove testamentary capacity of the testator, and closed.
Plaintiff’s testimony disclosed the following facts: That the testator had been married twice, and had five children living by his first wife, and four grandchildren, who were the children of a deceased daughter of his first wife. That at the date of the will, his second wife and three children of that marriage were alive. To each of the children of his first wife, and his grandchildren he bequeathed one dbllar, having given to his sons by his first wife each about fifteen hundred dollars and provided
After the making of the will, about the last of December, 1876, Mrs. Baynum, the testator’s daughter by his first wife, went to see her father, who was supposed-to be in a critical condition, and stayed there two or three weeks ; on the .day before the codicil to the will was made, she testified that she and Laura, Rosa and Mrs. Ellis were by Mrs. Bush invited out of the room in- ■ which Mr. Bush was confined. It was but a short time after that Laura and Rosa were invited back by Mrs, Bush. Then Mrs. Baynum went to the door to go into-the room, but was pushed back by Mrs. Bush and not permitted to enter. The next day Mrs. Bush proposed to Mrs. Baynum that the latter should go to Mr. Whaley’sbut she said she did not wish to go, but Mrs. Bush and Rosa insisted, and witness went over to Mrs. Whaley’s,. and spent the day. She again visited her father in May, 1877, and he inquired if her brother William had sent him any word, and witness told him that William told her to say to him that he, William, had been keeping his-brother Jim as long as he could, and he wanted the others to help. Laura got angry and said that witness had come begging, that they were always after something. That we had got all we would ever get. Her father did not hear what was said, but seeing witness crying, asked her what was the matter, and she told him that Laura had mistreated her, but Laura denied it all.
Plaintiffs offered to prove by one Jno. B. Lewis, that the testator in September, 1876, had stated to him that he had to do as his wife and younger children told him, in order to have peace. That, he was getting old and feeble and had not long'to live. That he was not satisfied with the way they wanted to fix his business and property for'
At the close of the testimony, the court instructed the jury that, “ The plaintiffs having failed to offer any evidence tending to show that°the said John Bush was mentally incapable of making said will, and having failed to show that the execution of said will by said John -Bush was produced by any undue influence exercised ■over the mind of said Jno. Bush by the defendants or ■either of them, they will find the issue submitted for the ■defendants.” The verdict of the jury was in accordance •with this instruction, and from the judgment thereon this appeal is prosecuted.
The court did not err in excluding the testimony offered to prove the declarations made by the testator, ■either before or after the making of the will. This question was considered in the case of Gibson v. Gibson, 24 Mo. 227, and it was held by the court, in a very able opinion delivered by Judge Leonard, that such evidence
Nor was any error committed in the exclusion of the testimony as to the declarations of Rosa made to Mrs. Baird. There is no charge in the petition that Miss Rosa exercised any undue influence over her father to procure the making of the will. The charge is that Mrs. Bush and Franklin and Laura Bush procured him to-make it by exercising undue influence over him. We think, however, that the court erred in its instruction to the jury. There was evidence tending to prove that the will was procured by the exercise of undue influence over the mind of the testator. Whether sufficient to invalidate the will, we will not determine; but it should have-been submitted to the jury. It devolved upon defendants, after the testimony of plaintiffs was adduced, to overcome that testimony and the inferences which might reasonably be drawn from it, by their own testimony, or such other as might have been at their command.
We have not deemed it necessary or proper to comment on the testimony. That portion which, we think, had a tendency to prove that defendants, by the exercise of undue influence over the testator, procured the-making of the will, will be noted by one carefully exam