EARL FIELDS, MURIEL HAZEL FIELDS and PEARL FIELDS KARSTEN, by SAMUEL L. REYNOLDS, Their Attorney in Fact, and SAMUEL L. REYNOLDS v. E. CHESTER LUCK, Executor, and E. CHESTER LUCK and JULIA O. PEARSON, Appellants
74 S. W. (2d) 35
Division One
July 17, 1934
Counsel for respondent also insist that defendant has shifted its position in now urging that James Jenkins is not entitled to recover because his mother, representing a preferred class, is living and takes to the exclusion of others. Unfortunately for the aged mother counsel for plaintiff utterly ignored the well-established Federal rule previously announced on this subject, and injected reversible error in the case which is beyond our power to cure. The objections, which we hold were sufficiently made and preserved by defendant‘s counsel as to this incompetent evidence, demonstrate that defendant‘s theory was contrary to plaintiff‘s theory on this feature of the case, and defendant has not shifted its position on appeal.
For the reasons above stated the cause is reversed and remanded for a new trial. All concur.
Frank Yeoman and Louis A. Laughlin for appellants.
The testatrix, Margaret Luck Roff, was a resident of Kansas City. She died at Research Hospital, in that city, March 11, 1926. The day preceding her death she executed the will in contest whereby she bequeathed all her property to the defendants, E. Chester Luck and Julia O. Pearson, who are brother and sister and children of Mrs. Roff‘s former husband, Robert L. Luck, “to be divided between them share and share alike.” Mrs. Roff never had any children and the plaintiffs in this action are all of her collateral heirs. Plaintiff Samuel L. Reynolds, is her half brother and the other plaintiffs are the children of John Fields, deceased, who was her brother. The contested will was admitted to probate by the Probate Court of Jackson County on March 20, 1926; the plaintiffs filed this action February 24, 1927. The grounds of contest specified in the petition are undue influence and testamentary incapacity. The trial court
Margaret Luck Roff was sixty years of age at the time of her death. She was somewhat frail in appearance but very active and energetic. In 1894 Margaret Rogers (the testatrix) was a widow. She owned no property except personal effects of small value. She had no income other than the wages she was earning as a waitress in a boarding house in Kansas City. At that time Robert L. Luck was a widower. He had two children, the defendants herein; the son Chester being then eighteen years of age and the daughter Julia fourteen years of age. Luck advertised for a housekeeper. Margaret Rogers applied for the position and was employed. When she had worked several months as housekeeper in the Luck home in Kansas City she and Luck were married. After the father‘s marriage to Mrs. Rogers, Julia remained at home for three years and until her marriage when she went to her own home and Chester continued to live at his father‘s home for eight years and until he married and established his own home. The evidence is uncontradicted that during this period and in fact until after the death of the father and husband an affectionate and parental relationship at all times existed between the stepmother and the children. They addressed her, and spoke of her, as their mother and she referred to them as her children. Mr. and Mrs. Luck continued to live in Kansas City for some time and then moved to a farm in the State of Kansas which Luck purchased and where he died in 1913. By his will Luck devised his real estate to his children on condition they pay their stepmother $3600, and bequeathed all his personal property to his wife. She was also the beneficiary in an insurance policy for $1000. The terms of the will were complied with; the defendants paying their stepmother the amount specified, $3600, whereupon she executed a quitclaim deed conveying to them all her interest in the real estate. The personal property was sold for $1000 so that the total amount received by the widow, including the insurance, was $5600. After the death of Luck the widow returned to Kansas City and resided for several months at the home of defendant E. Chester Luck. Later she lived alone and leased a number of rooms or apartments which
The will was executed about, or shortly before, nine o‘clock. Following the signing of the will, Mrs. Roff gave Mr. Luck a list of the various stocks she owned. Miss Dean and Mr. Norvell left the hos
The subscribing witness Miss Dean having related the facts and circumstances surrounding the signing and execution of the instrument was asked: “From what you saw and heard at the time the will was executed state whether or not in your opinion Mrs. Roff was of sound mind at the time she signed it.” Plaintiffs’ objection being overruled the witness answered: “In my opinion she was of sound mind.” The other subscribing witness, Norvell, having related substantially the same facts and circumstances surrounding the making of the questioned instrument was not, upon plaintiffs’ objection, permitted to give an opinion as to the mental state of testatrix based upon what he observed and heard at the time. Appellant assigns this ruling of the court as error; we will hereafter, in proper course, discuss the assignment.
On the part of the contestants six lodge sisters of Mrs. Roff who had known, and associated with her in lodge activities testified to various conversations with her in which she expressed resentment toward the “Luck children” (the defendants) and made declarations of her intention relative to the disposition of property owned by her at the time of her death. Some of these declarations were said to have been made fifteen years before her death, others at various times thereafter and as late as Thursday before she became ill on Friday night. There was much similarity in these conversations and declarations as related by the witnesses. From the testimony of these witnesses we glean these declarations which Mrs. Roff is reported to have made at various times; that the “Luck children hadn‘t treated her right;” that “the Luck children beat her out of everything Luck had and that a $1000 was all she got out of his estate;” that she “didn‘t want the Luck children to have any of her property when she died because of the way they treated her;” that she “had one brother” (plaintiff Reynolds) and “intended to leave all her property to him;” that she “wanted everything she had to go to her brother;” and that she wanted certain pieces of her jewelry to go to her niece Pearl Reynolds (daughter of plaintiff Samuel Reynolds). These statements were repeated, reiterated and elaborated upon with, at times, the opinions and declarations of the witness herself freely interspersed. Two or three of the lodge sisters testified that they had not been at once and promptly notified of Mrs. Roff‘s illness (the imputation evidently being that Mrs. Pearson was in some way delinquent and designing in not notifying
Here and in connection with proponents’ (appellants) demurrer to the evidence we note that, except the testimony of Dr. Hunt to which we shall presently refer, the foregoing is, we think, a fair summary of contestants’ evidence as to testamentary incapacity and if it stood alone and were the sum of the evidence on the part of contestants bearing on that issue we would be inclined to hold that it does not constitute substantial evidence of mental incapacity to execute the will in question. Proponents made prima facie proof of testamentary capacity and thereupon “the weight of the evidence was against contestant,” and it became necessary “in order to obtain a submission of the issue of testamentary incapacity” for contestants to adduce some substantial evidence “tending to support that affirmation.” [Sanford v. Holland, 276 Mo. 457, 207 S. W. 818; Williams v. Lack, 328 Mo. 32, 40 S. W. (2d) 670.] This brings us to the testimony of the attending physician Dr. Hunt who appeared as a witness for contestants. The doctor testified, that Mrs. Roff‘s illness was “pleural pneumonia;” that when she was taken to the hospital “her pulse was weak” and she had “no resistance;” that there was a “progressive decline from the (first) time he saw her until she died;” that during the entire time “she was moribund (in a dying state) . . . in a low state of physical condition, in extreme pain, in her side, when she took a breath . . . was apathetic and disinterested;” that her condition was marked by “apathy, indifference and inattentiveness;” that she was “somewhat delirious at times” but, when asked, at another time, about delirium, that “she wasn‘t in delirium in the sense that she was flighty;” that he called on her two or three times daily and “recalls her condition very well” though has “no distinct recollection of her condition at any particular hour.” The “Progress Record” which is kept by the attending physician was introduced in evidence. Dr. Hunt testified that all the entries on this record were in his handwriting and made by him. This record
“3/6. Pt. entered. pneumonia.
“Pain. s. breath. cough. slight delirium.
“Weakness. Prognosis bad from start. poor phys. cond. Pt. quite exhausted.
“Progressive decline to date death, mental confusion.
“Pulse became weak. Pt. had no resistance.
“3/11/26.”
Appellant‘s had evidence tending to show that the words “slight delirium” and “mental confusion” were added to this record some months after Mrs. Roff‘s death. This was a question of fact however for the jury to resolve upon the testimony of the witnesses who so testified and the testimony of the doctor concerning the record. It will again be recalled that the will was executed at about nine o‘clock Wednesday morning. Dr. Hunt visited the patient at nine-thirty that morning. He testified that at that time “she was worse than she was the day before” and “symptoms of apathy and debility” were manifest. These questions were propounded to Dr. Hunt and answered as follows:
“Q. From your judgment and knowledge of the disease with which Mrs. Roff was suffering and her physical condition, lack of resistance, have you an opinion as to what her mental condition was, as to soundness, on Wednesday morning, the 10th day of March at 9 o‘clock that morning? A. I have.
“Q. Just tell the jury what your opinion is. (Defendant‘s objection overruled.) A. She was unsound.
“Q. Unsound mind? A. Yes, sir.”
The doctor then said: “My opinion is based upon the observation of the patient through her entire sickness concerning her mental deterioration and debility as well as physical.” At another point in his testimony the doctor stated that he had a “vivid recollection of this patient and is positive as to her mental and physical condition . . . she was frail and weak; the pneumonia caused so much pain in the side that most of the time she was in misery . . . she was disinterested in anything that went on about her.” This testimony of the attending physician concerning the physical condition and accompanying or resulting mental debility and deterioration which he says existed during the entire illness together with the opinion he gave based upon his personal observation of the patient must be accepted and treated as substantial evidence tending to support the affirmation of testamentary incapacity and the trial court therefore properly refused proponents’ demurrer to the evidence.
The subscribing witness James F. Norvell resided at Lee‘s Summit, Missouri. He was related by marriage to Miss Dean and her family. He had come to Kansas City on Tuesday, spent Tues
“Q. State whether or not you saw anything in her actions or what she said that would indicate she wasn‘t in possession of her faculties?
MR. MUSSER (attorney for contestants): We object to that for the reason that there has been no foundation laid; he never knew the lady before and never saw her afterwards and never heard her talk except just as he has related it, and we object to that as being incompetent and that it invades the province of the jury and he should not be permitted to answer the question.
“THE COURT: Objection sustained.
“MR. LAUGHLIN (attorney for proponents): To which we except.
“Q. From what you saw and heard at the time the will was executed; state whether or not in your opinion Mrs. Roff was of sound mind at the time she signed it.
MR. MUSSER: The plaintiffs object to the question on the same grounds heretofore stated, that it calls for a conclusion and he hasn‘t laid any foundation for this witness, and it invades the province of the jury, and it is incompetent.
“THE COURT: Objection sustained.
“MR. LAUGHLIN: To which we except.
“Q. Mr. Norvell, at the time you were there in that room in the presence of Mrs. Roff, did you see anything unusual either in her actions or in what she said—
“MR. MUSSER (interrupting): Object to the question, trying to get by indirection what they can‘t do by direction. ‘Anything unusual.’
“THE COURT: Objection overruled.
“MR. MUSSER: To which we except.
“A. I did not.”
Appellants assign and urge as reversible error the action of the trial court in sustaining contestants’ objections to the above questions and refusing to permit this attesting witness to give an opinion, based upon what he at the time observed and heard, as to the mental soundness of testatrix at the time she executed the will. Our statute (
“On the issue of testamentary capacity the testimony of subscribing witnesses is of great importance. Having been present at the time of the execution of the will, having to a greater or less extent had their attention directed to the nature of the act the testator was performing, having been called on to subscribe their names to a particular document as witnesses, and having had the opportunity of observing the actions of the testator and all surrounding circumstances at the particular moment as to which the mental capacity is to be determined, subscribing witnesses, although not experts, are allowed to give their opinions as to the sanity or insanity of the testator at that time, and as a general rule a nonexpert subscribing witness may state his belief, without giving the facts upon which it is founded. The opinion of a subscribing witness, however, must be based on what he saw and heard at the time the will was made. He cannot give his belief in answer to hypothetical questions; in that respect he is the same as any nonexpert witness. . . . The law presumes that a subscribing witness had his attention directed to and noted the mental capacity of the testator, therefore his opinion should be entitled to more weight than that of one who was merely passive. Having the duty of observation, it will be presumed that a subscribing witness was more observant than others might have been. . . . Neither the opinion or the testimony of a subscribing witness is conclusive and he may be contradicted by other evidence.”
Page on Wills, section 696, says:
“It is settled by the almost unanimous weight of authority that the subscribing witnesses to a will may give their opinion as to the sanity or insanity of the testator without any reference to their means of determining his mental capacity, or their ability to judge of his capacity with the means at their disposal. They need not make a special examination of the testator; or even be acquainted with him, if the circumstances attending the execution of the will call
their attention to his mental condition. The subscribing witnesses may give their opinions as to the sanity of testator without first stating the facts upon which they base their opinions, although they may also give their opinions in connection with the facts of execution.”
And the rule is stated in Corpus Juris (22 C. J., p. 609) as follows:
“The English rule permitting the attesting witnesses to a will or deed to testify as to the sanity of a testator or grantor at the time of executing the instrument is very generally accepted in the United States, even in jurisdictions where the inferences of other unskilled observers would be rejected. A statement of the facts on which the inference is based is usually considered unnecessary in the case of an attesting witness to a will, nor is any qualification as to opportunity for observation beyond that afforded when he attested the will required of the witness.”
We think it clear that it was competent for Norvell as a subscribing witness, and that he was qualified to do so, to state the opinion excluded by the trial court and that proponents were entitled to the benefit of such testimony. That seems, at least tacitly, to now be conceded by contestants, as the writer understands respondents’ argument here, but respondents contend that the exclusion of this testimony could not have been prejudicial to proponents because after the court in effect ruled that the witness was not competent or qualified to state an opinion and that no foundation had been laid upon which the witness could properly base an opinion the court permitted proponents to ask the witness whether he saw anything unusual about Mrs. Roff‘s conduct while he was in the room and the witness answered “I did not.” On cross-examination contestants pressed the witness as to what he meant by the term “unusual” and the several questions along that line finally culminated by the witness saying, “There was nothing unusual is the only way that I can answer.” It must be assumed that as a consequence of the court‘s prior ruling the jury understood this witness was not qualified to express an opinion as to the soundness of mind of testatrix at the time the will was made because he had not known her before that time, had never heard her talk except on that occasion and never again saw her and in view of that situation the general statement that he did not see anything unusual about her conduct could not likely have been of sufficient weight and force to cure the error theretofore committed by the ruling of the court. Such conclusion or opinion cannot be reckoned to have atoned for the loss to proponents of the benefit of the statement of a clear, untrammeled opinion by the attesting witness that the testatrix was of sound mind. In view of the fact that mental soundness was the ultimate, controlling and decisive factor involved and that contestants offered several nonexpert witnesses who were permitted to give an opinion;
The giving of the following instruction, at the request of contestants, is assigned as error:
“The jury is instructed that under the statute of wills in this state, the sanity of a testator is not presumed, but the burden of proof is upon those asserting the will, to affirmatively show that the deceased was of sound mind when she executed the will, and unless the defendants have so proven to your satisfaction your verdict should be for the plaintiffs and against the will.”
The rule is well settled in this State that the burden of proof is upon him who propounds the will to show that the testator was of sound mind at the time he made the will and in an action contesting the will on the ground of mental incapacity such burden remains with proponent throughout the case. [Rock v. Keller, 312 Mo. 458, 278 S. W. 759; Goodfellow v. Shannon, 197 Mo. 271, 94 S. W. 979; Major v. Kidd, 261 Mo. 607, 170 S. W. 879; Mayes v. Mayes (Mo.), 235 S. W. 100, l. c. 105; Berkemeier v. Reller, 317 Mo. 614, 296 S. W. 739; Schoenhoff v. Haering, 327 Mo. 837, 38 S. W. (2d) 1011; Erickson v. Lundgren (Mo.), 37 S. W. (2d) 629.] But appellants argue that though the burden of proof was upon them to show mental capacity it was error to tell the jury: “the sanity of a testator is not presumed;” that they were entitled to the benefit of the presumption that all men are sane and the instruction is erroneous and prejudicial in depriving them of the benefit of that presumption. It is urged by respondents that the effect of our statute of wills is to abolish and eliminate the presumption of sanity. We have repeatedly in will cases referred to this presumption and seemingly recognized that under some situations it obtains. This court said in Jackson v. Hardin, 83 Mo. 175, “The law presumes that the testator was possessed of a sound and disposing mind.” It is stated in Lindsey v. Stephens, 229 Mo. 600, 129 S. W. 641: “The law presumes that a testator is of a sound and disposing mind until there is evidence tending to overcome this presumption.” In Norton v. Paxton, 110 Mo. 456, 19 S. W. 807, this court said: “It is sufficient for those who claim under the will to make out a prima facie case in the first instance. There is a presumption that every adult person is compos mentis, but the presumption is one of fact only. It may be that the production of a will, reasonable on its face, with proof of due execution and attestation, and that the testator was of full age, will make out a prima facie case on the part of the proponents,
“The weight of authority, however, and the better reasoning are that the proponent of a will must, in the first instance, establish his prima facie case by proof of the testamentary capacity of the testator. Although, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, all persons are presumed to be of sound mind, and although this presumption may be accepted as a wise and profound rule of testamentary common law, yet it is not sufficient in itself to absolve the proponent from the necessity of proving the testamentary capacity of the testator. It must be remembered that the right to dispose of an estate by will is statutory, and when one relies upon a will in order to gain property in opposition to the heir, it is but just that he should establish the fact that the decedent had testamentary capacity. However wise may be the presumption of soundness of mind, yet the conscience of the court must be satisfied of the mental capacity of the testator, and this the presumption alone is not able to do. It is not strictly a legal presumption; it is more a presumption of fact, an inference to be drawn in the absence of evidence. The law requires that no will be admitted to probate except that of a testator of sound mind, and unless the court is fully satisfied on this point, the instrument should be rejected. It has been claimed that there is an inconsistency in requiring proof of what the law presumes, but it appears better to say that the inference of fact that may be drawn without proof is not sufficient to satisfy the absolute requirement of the statute that no instrument can be the last will of a decedent unless executed when he was of sound mind.”
Page on Wills, at section 689, says: “It has been said that the presumption is one upon which proponent may rely if there is no evidence to the contrary and that it has no probative force if evidence to the contrary is introduced.” In the instant case the proponents having made, in the first instance, a prima facie case of sanity the contestants came forward with evidence tending to show testamentary incapacity and thereupon proponents introduced further evidence tending to sustain testatrix‘s sanity. If the instruction means there is no conclusive presumption of sanity, as a matter of law, it is correct in that respect. If it means that under the statute of wills the presumption is not available or of any aid to proponents though there be no evidence to the contrary we are inclined to think it is not a correct statement as an abstract proposition of law but
Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Ida Reynolds and Pearl Reynolds, as witnesses for contestants, after having detailed the facts upon which they based their opinions were permitted, respectively, over proponents’ objections, to give an opinion that testatrix was of unsound mind on Monday afternoon and Tuesday morning before, and Wednesday afternoon following, the making of the will on Wednesday morning. One ground of proponents’ objections was that the witnesses had not detailed any facts as a basis for such opinion which were inconsistent with soundness of mind. Appellants complain of the action of the trial court in overruling their objections and permitting these witnesses to give opinions that testatrix was at such times of unsound mind. We have set out above, in a condensed form, but nevertheless the substance of, the facts detailed by these witnesses upon which they purported to base their opinions. By reference thereto it will be found that neither Mrs. Reynolds nor her daughter Pearl recited any facts, actions, language or conversation on the part of Mrs. Roff during the “five to eight minutes” they were in the hospital room on Wednesday afternoon which tended to show that Mrs. Roff was irrational, delirious or mentally deranged. Their testimony showed no more than that Mrs. Roff was very sick and physically weak as was unquestionably her condition; both testified, in effect, that her conversation with them while brief was rational. Nor were the facts related by Mrs. Smith as a basis for her conclusion or inference that Mrs. Roff was of unsound mind during the time she was in the same hospital room with her inconsistent with sanity or a sound mind on the part of Mrs. Roff. It is true that Mrs. Smith testified that Mrs. Roff several times repeated the question, “Are they going to bob my hair,” and implied that in so doing Mrs. Roff was not aware of what she was saying but that is the only circumstance related by Mrs. Smith which could, even by implication, be considered as indicative of delirium or mental confusion and it is of such doubtful significance as to hardly afford a reasonable basis for an opinion that she was of unsound mind during the entire time Mrs. Smith
Appellants refer us to numerous other rulings of the court admitting evidence on the part of contestants of which they complain. Some of these complaints have to do primarily with the order of proof and may be corrected, if important, on a retrial. The evidence introduced by contestants concerning the payment of a building and loan certificate to the executor and the controversy about same neither tends to prove or disprove testamentary capacity nor does it appear to have any bearing on undue influence, set up in the petition, but introduces a controversy foreign to, and apart from, the issues
For the reasons stated the judgment is reversed and cause remanded.
Sturgis and Hyde, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by FERGUSON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
