113 Mo. 56 | Mo. | 1892

Gaittt, P. J.

This is a proceeding to contest the will of Hugo Grimm, who died in St. Louis on July 13, 1887, unmarried and without issue.

Defendant Tittman is administrator of the estate of the deceased. The other parties to the action are the brothers and sisters of deceased. The will bears date June 7, 1887, and is in the handwriting of the testator. The deceased was a German, and the will was in the German language.

On the seventeenth of June, 1887, the testator went to the store of Frederick Toussaint, a friend of his. He reached the store, number 708 Pine street, about one o’clock in the afternoon. After some conversation with Mr. Toussaint and partaking of a glass of wine, the testator produced the will, already signed by himself, and requested Toussaint to sign it. Toussaint identified the will in evidence and testified he was well acquainted with Hugo Grimm’s handwriting, and that the signature and all except the signatures of the two attesting witnesses was in the testator’s handwriting.

At the foot of the instrument and opposite the. name of the testator was the word iiZeugen,'>'’ the German word for “witness.” Under this word Toussaint signed his name, in the presence of Hugo, the testator. Before signing his name he read the last *61three lines of the writing and testified he knew it was Hugo Grimm’s will he was attesting.

The testator requested Toussaint to send his servant to the postoffice for his brother, G-ustave Adolph, who was an employe in the postal service. G-ustave came and signed the will in the presence of Hugo, the testator, and Toussaint, the other witness. .

Gustave was offered as a witness and plaintiffs objected to his testimony on the ground that he was incompetent by reason of his interest in the event of the suit.

Thereupon counsel offered and read in eveidence the following: " '

“RENUNCIATION OB G. A', GRIMM.”

In the Matter of the Will of ^ In tlie probate Oourt Hugo Grimm, Deceased, V of tte 0ity of gt-. Louis. offered for Probate. J

“I, Gustavus Adolphus Grimm, hereby release and renounce all legacies or bequests given to me by the will of Hugo Grimm, deceased, now offered for probate, reserving to myself only so much of the estate of the deceased as would descend or be distributed to me as-oné of his heirs in case of his intestacy, and I furthermore renounce and decline to accept the executorship to which I am named by said will.

“Witness my hand and seal, this sixteenth day of September, 1887.

“[Seal.] G. A. Grimm,

“Filed September 16, 1887.

“W. A. Wagner,

“Clerk, Etc.”

The objection was then overruled, and Gustave testified in substance, that, when he received the word from his brother, he obtained the consent of the superintend*62ent and went to Toussaint’s store and found his brother Hugo there. “He had an envelope in his hand and had a sheet of paper lying on Mr. Toussaint’s tailoring table. * * * He asked me to sign the paper under Tous-saint’s name and I did sign it. * * * "While I was signing I saw he had an envelope in his hands on which was written ‘Hugo Grimm’s last will and testament, June 7, 1887,’ in the English language and in his handwriting.” After Grustave signed under Mr. Toussaint’s name as a witness, Hugo gave him the envelope and said: “Put this document in the envelope and deposit it in the Missouri Safe Deposit Company on Sixth and Locust, and the day after I am hurled take it and go to Mr. Toussaint, and take him to the prolate court and deposit it there.” ■ •

The appellants objected to the probate of the will in the probate court, but it was admitted to probate.

They then commenced this action. The petition charges, first, that the will was not executed and attested as required by iaw and is of no effect; secondly, that it was obtained by the undue influence of Grustave, his brother.

I. The first contention is that Gustavus Adolphus Grimm was not a competent witness because by the terms of the will he was given a legacy. By section 3995, Revised Statutes, 1879 (section 8903, Revised Statutes, 1889), the legacy bequeathed to Gustave was rendered void and his competency as a witness restored.

It is deemed unnecessary to trace the history of this provision. It is too clear to admit of doubt. As he could take nothing under the will, he was without interest in sustaining the will. But appellant endeavors to show, that, by virtue of section 3996, Revised Statutes, 1879 (section 8904, Revised Statutes,1889), he still has a pecuniary interest in sustaining the will, and so construes that section in connection with the resid-*63nary clause as to show he will gain by the establishment of the will.

We do not concur in this view. The language of the section admits of but one construction. If the will should not be established he would be entitled as an heir to one ninth of the estate. If the will is established he can get one ninth of the portion devised from the devisees and no more, and in no case more than the value of the legacy or devise. Murphy v. Murphy, 24 Mo. 526; Sullivan v. Sullivan, 106 Mass. 474.

The purpose of the statute it would seem was to remove the incompetency of the legatee or devisee, who had ignorantly or improvidently become an attesting witness by vacating the legacy or devise. If section 8903 stood alone and the subscribing witness was an heir or distributee and as such would receive a portion of the estate, in the absence of a will, he would have every motive to testify against the will, because .if established he would lose not only his legacy under the will but his portion as heir, hence section 8904 was enacted to counteract that adverse interest resulting from section 8903 and to render him indifferent by saving him so much of his share as heir if the will be sustained as would not exceed his legacy or devise. But that his competency is established, whatever the motive of the lawmaker, cannot be questioned.

II. But his competency is equally well established by section 3999, Revised Statutes, 1879 (Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 8907), which provides that, if “before giving testimony concerning the execution of such will,” he shall have released any legacy thereby given him, he shall be admitted as a witness. The release of the legacy-.and renunciation of the executorship read in evidence in this case without objection, without doubt restored his competency. Matter of Will of Wilson, 103 N. Y. 374. These provisions of the statute were *64evidently designed to prevent wills becoming nullities,, by reason of the interests of attesting witnesses.

III. The competency of the attesting witnesses being established, was there a sufficient publication of the paper writing as a will of the testator?

The court gave the following instructions for defendants against plaintiff’s objections:

“The court instructs the jury that, in the attestation of the instrument in controversy, it was not necessary for the witnesses, Toussaint and Gustavus A. Grimm, to sign it- as witnesses in the -presence of each other, but only in the presence of the deceased, and at the request of deceased. Nor was it necessary that the deceased, Hugo Grimm, should have in fact signed his name to said instrument in the actual presence of either of the witnesses, provided the jury find from the evidence that, at the time of the witnesses so signing and attesting said instrument, the said deceased acknowledged or made known to them by word, act or sign that he had signed or executed the same as his last will and testament.
“The court instructs the jury that it was not necessary for deceased, Hugo Grimm, to inform the witnesses, Toussaint and G. A. Grimm, either at the time they signed their names to the instrument in controversy, or before or afterwards, as to the contents of said instrument. It was only necessary for him to inform them by word, act or sign that they were attesting as witnesses his last will and testament.
“The court instructs the jury that in passing on the question of fact as to whether or not the witnesses, Toussaint and Gustavus A. Grimm, on the occasion and at the time of their signing their names to the instrument in controversy, were, informed by deceased, Hugo Grimm, that it was his last will and testament, and the jury may and should take into • consideration all *65that was said and done by Mm in their presence at the time, and all the facts and circumstances immediately connected therewith, whether immediately before or immediately after the act of signing their names as witnesses,” and refused those offered by plaintiffs requiring the defendants to show special calling upon the witnesses to attest the will by some declaration that it was his will or by some statement or word declaring it his will.

We think the instructions given state the law correctly. It was not necessary for the testator to sign in the presence of the attesting witnesses. His acknowledgment of his signature would have been fully as efficacious, and where as in this case both the witnesses were well acquainted with his signature, it was equally significant as a direct acknowledgment when he laid his signature' before them, attached to a paper they knew to be a will from its language and the distinct assertion on the envelope that it was, with a reguest to sign it as witnesses. That the testator was eccentric all the witnesses agree, but that he was fully comprehended on this occasion seems hardly to admit of a doubt. It was ,a question of fact, submitted under-proper instructions, and ought not to be disturbed.

IV. The court correctly held that there was no> evidence of undue influence, and declined to submit that issue to the jury. The evidence tended strongly to show the testator was a man of clear' head and strong will, and wholly failed to disclose any such a confidential relation between him and his brother as would throw the slightest suspicion of undue influence either possessed or exercised by his brother over him. Jackson v. Hardin, 83 Mo. 175.

There are several other assignments — the refusal to compel the production of letters between the sisters *66and Gustave, the evidence of the financial condition of the brothers, Joseph and Phillip, and the exclusion of Mrs. Flint’s letter.

The court unquestionably ruled correctly in holding these depositions concerning the financial condition of the brothers were incompetent and irrelevant; and as Gustave produced all the letters from his sisters and swore positively he had no others, and no showing was made to the contrary, it affords no ground for a reversal of the judgment.

The judgment is affirmed.

Maoparlane and Thomas JJ., concur.
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