158 Mo. 379 | Mo. | 1900
This is a suit to contest the will of James Reilly, dated October 20, 1897. Tbe testator was a man of about sixty years of age. He was a widower, with no children and no direct descendants. His heirs at law are the plaintiffs, who are daughters of his deceased brother, and the defendant Catherine Rowdern, and the defendant William Reilly, a nephew of the half blood. The deceased was sick with consumption or some like affliction and was confined to his bed from August 8, 1897, until his death on the twenty-third of August, 1897. The will was made on the
At the trial the proponents showed the execution of the will and the sanity of the testator. The testimony shown by the abstract of the record (the case is here on a certificate of the judgment) is substantially as follows:
Albert Gerst as a witness for the defendants, and who drafted the will, testified:
“Q. Did he ask you at that time, or did he ask Mr. Andreas in your presence, anything about the character of his estate, the extent of it or the amount? A. Not to my recollection.
“Q. What did he say at that time, if anything, respecting his relatives? A. Nothing more than when he came to the children of Robert Reilly he told me to write each of the children of Robert Reilly one dollar.
“Q. Did he mention them by name ? A. No, sir.
*383 “Q. Did lie say how many they were? A. I asked him and he said he didn’t know.
“Q. Didn’t know ? A. Not accurately he said.
“Q. Well, after the will was drawn, what then took place? A. Nothing,'somebody got the witnesses, because I was not acquainted up there, and brought in Mr. Cast, Mr. Earrington, and in the presence of those two witnesses and myself, the will was signed.
“Q. Is Mr. Earrington now living? A. Mr. Earrington is dead.
“Q. Mr. Cast, however, is living? A. Yes, sir; he is living.
“Q. You saw Mr. Reilly sign it, did you ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And you saw these two other gentlemen, who were witnesses with you, sign it? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You signed it in their presence and in the presence of Mr. Reilly? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did Mr. Reilly ask you to sign as witness? A. . No, sir; I always sign just as a matter of precaution. . ...
“Q. When you went there state all that was said, what he said to you about this will ? A. When I went there and took paper, he told me to sit down and he dictated as I sat there. Eirst, he said: ‘Put down the first party’ and then he said something about when it came to Eather McCabe, to Eather McCabe for the benefit of the church, he wanted it to go to the church, that particular matter. Then he spoke about a monument. When he came to that monument clause he had rather extravagant ideas on a monument and I told him that was not in keeping with a man- — he spoke about the Slevin monument in Calvary.
“Q. Go ahead? A. I think he spoke before about making the monument about $5,000 to me, that is the reason*384 why I made that remark. Then he spoke about the Slevin monument and I told him it was not in keeping with his lot and things of that kind, and he said: ‘Well, make it $1,000, anyhow, no less than $1,000.’ After making a good many bequests to the Archbishop, I told him, ‘You are giving the Archbishop a good deal, ain’t you?’ He said: ‘Well, what would you suggest?’ I said: ‘Do you want to give the Monks anything?’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘put in a thousand dollars for the Monks.’ ”
Henry Andreas■ a witness for defendants, testified as follows:
“Q. When was this conversation that you had between Mr. Reilly and you as regards the value of the estate? A. It was on the 20th of August, 1891.
“Q. Who was present at that time ? A. Mr. Albert Gerst, my partner.
“Q. Did it occur in that room at that time ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. While he was making his will ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What else occurred? Will you please state now all that was said from the time you and Mr. Gerst went into that room until you left; were you there during the time he drew it up ? A. While it was drawn and read I was there, and I stepped out then.
“Q. Please state what was said about any particular clause in that will? A. He said, first: ‘I want my just debts paid, although I have not any,’ and then he said: ‘I give to my niece, Miss Mary Bowdern, the sum of $1,000,’ and then he said: ‘I give $1,000 to my nephew, Mr. Reilly Bowdern.’ He mentioned particularly Reilly Bowdern and then $1,000 to his sister, Catherine Bowdern, and then I think went on with giving all the sum of one dollar to his nieces of his deceased brother, Robert Reilly, and Mr. Gerst, at that time, asked him if he remembered the name, and he*385 did remember tbe name but Mr. Gerst said it was not necessary as long as he had mentioned five of them, or all of them, that would be sufficient, and then he went on and said that he had a step-brother that had a son by the name of William Eeilly, he would give him $1, and then he gave $4,000 to Archbishop Kain for the masses for the repose of his soul, and $500 to the Keverend Father James McCabe for the repose or benefit of the church, and then $1,000 to Archbishop Kain again for the repose of his father’s soul, and $1,000 to Archbishop Kain for the repose of his mother’s soul, and then $1— Mr. Gerst said — he was going to give $1,000 again to Archbishop Kain for his wife, and Gerst said: ‘How about the Monks ?’ He said: ‘Where are they at ?’ ‘Down on Mermac street,’ Mr. Gerst said; and he said: ‘$1,000 to the Monies for the repose of my wife’s soul,’ and then $50 to the Little Sisters of the Poor, and then: ‘The balance of my property, re'al and personal, to go to Archbishop Kain for the repose of my soul.’ Mr. Gerst said: ‘The balance of your estate going to Archbishop Kain?’ He said: ‘Yes.’ Then I said: ‘There, is your sister, Mrs. Catherine Bowdern, what about her ?’ He said: ‘It will all go to Archbishop Kain, the balance of my estate.’ Mr. Gerst said: ‘Who do you want named as executor of your estate?’ He said: ‘Mr. Andreas,’ pointing to me, and I suggested also Mrs. Catherine Bowdern, his sister, that we might jointly act as executors, and he said: ‘Yes, I want Mrs. Bowdern to look after my affairs as well as anybody else,’ and then Mr. Gerst read these bequests over several times, and after it was all written up he read the will to him, and read it again to him, and then I was requested to call the witnesses, which I did. That was all that was said in Mr. Eeillv’s presence.
“Q. Have you stated all that passed between you and Mr. Gerst at that time ? A. Yes, sir; and he was very par*386 tieular before making up the will, that he wanted everybody out of the room, except myself and Mr. Gerst, wanted the doors closed.” On cross-examination the witness testified that the testator was confined to his bed from the eighth of August until his death; that he was attended by Dr. Carson, who prescribed for him and that the witness and Mrs. Bowdern, testator’s sister, gave the medicine to him; that the medicine consisted principally of whiskey, which was given to him every two or three hours, in doses of a teaspoonful at a time, mixed with selzer water; that the first direct conversation he had with testator about making the will was on the day the will was made, when the testator told him to come up that evening.
G. A Gast, one of the attesting witnesses, testified, as a witness for the defendants, that he signed the will as a witness at the request of Mr. Gerst, the draughtsman of the will; that it was signed by the witnesses in the testator’s presence after the testator had signed it; that he, witness, knew it was Reilly’s will but did not know its provisions. Absolutely the only testimony in the case as to the mental capacity or incapacity of the testator to make a will is found in the testimony of the witness as follows: “Q. At the time you signed your name there what, in your judgment, was the mental condition of Mr. Reilly? A. I believe his mental condition was first rate.” This witness further testified as follows:
“Q. You say it was at the request of Mr. Gerst that you signed that paper ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did Mr. Gerst tell you what it was ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. He told you what it was ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you have any conversation with Mr. Reilly at all about the will? A. No, sir.
“Q. He didn’t say to you anything about the will at all? A. No, sir.
*387 “Q. Not a word? No, sir.
“Q. And when yon went in there, Mr. Gerst told yon that this was Mr. Reilly’s will and asked yon to sign it as a witness? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Who was present at that time? A. Mr. Gerst and Mr. Farrington and Mr. Reilly and I.
“Q. Did yon hear any conversation before that day about making the will by Mr. Reilly or anybody else ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. When did yon hear that talk ? A.' On Thursday evening.
“Q. Before the will was made? A. Yes, sir; the evening before the will was made.
“Q. Whom did you hear converse about it then ? A. Well, I was sitting outside in the yard with Mr. Keegan, we were talking together and I heard Mrs. Keegan and Mrs. Bowdern talking to Mr. Reilly about'making a will.
“Q. You heard Mrs. Keegan and Catherine Bowdern talking to Mr. Reilly about making a will? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. That was on Thursday evening? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Ydiat did he say then, what was the conversation ? A. ILe said he didn’t want to make a will.
“Q. And that was on Thursday evening before he made .it? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. He made it on Friday? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What did he say? A. I couldn’t tell it all, I know they had a kind of argument about the will and Miss Mary Bowdern, she came up and told her mother, ‘you had better stop this, if he don’t want to make a will, drop it and don’t have no argument about it.’ That is about all I know that was said about the will.
“Q. And James Reilly and Catherine Bowdern were arguing about the matter ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And James Reilly seemed to be irritated about*388 it? A. Yes, sir; they said they thought it would be better for him to settle his affairs iu case anything would happen to him.”
To maintain the issues on their behalf the plaintiffs called as a witness, Rev. Patrick Bradley, who testified that he had known the testator by sight for nearly twenty years and had occasionally seen him at the Church of the Sacred Pleart, of which the witness was assistant pastor, although he was a member of Saint Leo’s church, but that he had never spoken to him in his life until he was called to see the testator during his last sickness; that testator was physically rather weak, and was in bed; that on the second visit he heard the confession, and the testator wanted him to take four thousand dollars and use it for masses to be said for the repose of the souls of his father, his mother, his wife and himself, but that he refused to take the money; that thereupon the testator asked him who he would suggest he should give the money to for this purpose and he suggested Archbishop Kain; that he administered to him the sacrament of extreme unction on the third or fourth visit, and visited him in all about eight times; that once after he had refused to take the four thous- and dollars, the testator spoke to him about his business and told him he had made a will and began to tell him what disposition he had made of his property, but was interrupted and never finished telling him at that time; that the testator was “sick with consumption, something analogous to that;” that Mrs. Bowdern once said to him that the testator ought to make a will, but he, witness, never spoke to the deceased about it.
Ered PL Eieke, the druggist who filled the prescriptions, testified, as a witness for the plaintiff, that the first two prescriptions were filled on August 8, 1897; the first consisted of aromatic spirits of ammonia, four drams, fifteen drops to be taken in water every hour, and the second consisted of sup
Annie Keegan, the testator’s sister-in-law, testified as a witness for the plaintiffs, that the testator never suffered very much, he seemed weak, but did not complain; that on the nineteenth of August she spoke to him about making his will, but that “he didn’t think he was going to die, didn’t seem likely to die;” that his business was scattered and it would be a hard matter for him to make a will, but “he expected to get well and could go out and do it;” that his father and mother had been dead more than twenty-five years, and his wife thirteen years.
Upon this testimony the court gave the jury a peremptory instruction to find for the defendants, establishing the will, which the jury did, and the plaintiffs perfected this appeal.
L
There is no merit in the contention that the evidence does not show that the witnesses signed the will at the request of the testator. He asked Andreas on the twentieth of August to come to see him that night. Andreas and Gerst went. The testator dictated the will and the special bequests were read to him several times and when Gerst finished writing the will it was read to him again, then the witnesses were called, the testator signed the will in their
n.
The testimony amply shows that the testator was of legal age, sane and fully competent to make a will. He knew what act he was performing, what property he possessed, the disposition he was making of it and the persons and objects of his bounty, for he dictated the terms of the will himself, and the face of the will shows these facts. This is all the law requires. [Sehr v. Lindemann, 153 Mo. loc. cit. 288, and cases cited.] The testimony of Gast is uncontradicted, and shows that at'the time the testator made the will his mental condition was “first rate.” No witness on either side even suggests a doubt as to his mental capacity. It is true the plaintiff’s evidence shows that he had been sick in bed for about twelve days at the time the will was executed, and was afflicted with consumption or some such disease. Rut this testimony also shows that Mrs. Keegan his sister-in-law spoke to him the day before this will was made about male
The petition charges that the testator’s mental condition bad been weakened and changed by the medicines he had taken to alleviate his sufferings so that he was entirely incapacitated to make a will.
The testimony wholly fails to support the charge. It appears that on the eighth of August, he was given aromatic spirits of ammonia, to be taken in doses of fifteen drops, in water, every hour, and suppositories of quinine sulphate, to be used every four hours; that on the tenth of August a prescription of carbonate of ammonia, syrup of ipecac, distilled water and syrup of tolu, was given him to be taken'in doses of a dessert spoonful every two hours, and that on August 14th he was given a prescription of carbonate of creosote, spiritus f ermenti and syrup of tolu, to be taken in doses of a teaspoonful every three hours. These medicines were prescribed by Dr. Carson, his attending physician, and, prima facie must be held to be insufficient to impair his capacity to make a will. There is no testimony in the case controverting this prima facie showing and therefore it must be taken as conclusive that the medicines did not impair his mind. Great stress is laid upon the fact that the prescription of August 14th contained whiskey — an ounce and a half — and that this was given to him in teaspoonful doses every three hours, but no evidence is adduced that even whiskey administered in such doses at such intervals will impair in six days a man’s mental capacity to make a will, and we decline to so decide as a matter of law.
The proponents therefore showed all the law requires of them in the first instance, and the burden of proof then
III.
Undue influence means such influence “as amounts to overpersuasion, coercion, or force, destroying the free agency and will power of the testator.” [Tibbe v. Kamp, 154 Mo. l. c. 579, and cases cited; Sehr v. Lindemann, 153 Mo. l. c. 289, and cases cited; Schierbaum v. Schemme, 157 Mo. l. c. 11.]
The undue influence charged in the petition is that of Rev. Patrick H. Bradley, assistant rector of the Sacred Heart church. The only testimony offered by the plaintiffs to support this charge was that of Rev. Bradley himself. So far from giving any countenance to the charge, the testimony of this witness emphatically denies the charge, and affirmatively shows that such was not the case. He never spoke to the testator until called to see him during his last sickness. The testator was not a member of the parish of which the witness was assistant pastor. On the second visit of the witness the testator wanted to give him four thousand dollars, to be used by him for masses to be said for the repose of the souls' of his father, mother, wife and himself, but the witness refused to take the money. The testator then asked the witness who he would suggest the money for this purpose should be give\i to, and the witness replied Archbishop Kain was the richest man in the church in St. Louis and if the money was given to him he would see that it was used as the testator desired. Afterwards the testator told Rev. Bradley he had made a will, and told him its provisions, and in speaking of the provisions for his relatives said: “They have already gotten more than is coming to them from me.” Archbishop Kain was in Europe when the will was made, and is not shown to have known either of the will or of the testator.
Law suits are determined by the facts proved and not by mere suspicions drawn from matters which are not proved, and proof of which would be inadmissible. What passed between Eev. Bradley and the testator in confession, are privileged communications, and neither a court nor a jury have any right to predicate a decision of a case upon such undisclosed and incompetent matters. The plaintiffs wholly failed to introduce any semblance of testimony even tending to support the allegations of the petition that the will was the result of the undue influence of Eev. Bradley, and therefore there was no controverted question of fact in the case which it would have been proper to submit to the determination of the jury, and the court did right in directing a verdict, unless the fact that the major portion of the estate was left to be used for masses to be said for the repose of the souls of testator’s father, mother, wife and himself, is in and of itself sufficient evidence to justify or warrant a jury in finding that the testator was incompetent to make a will or was unduly influenced.
IV.
The testator was a widower. He had no living children or direct descendants. His nearest relatives were his sister, Mrs. Bowdern, and her children, who were given one thousand dollars each, and who do not contest the will, and his nieces the plaintiffs, who are the children of his deceased
The bulk of the estate was devised for use in having masses said for the souls of his father, mother, wife and himself. The father and mother had been dead about twenty-five years, and the wife about thirteen years, and counsel for plaintiffs argue that if their souls had already gone to Heaven they needed no masses, and if not, masses now would be unavailing, and, moreover, that if this is a trust fund, who and before what tribunal is a charge that the use has been sub-served or the trust been violated to be made, heard and determined ? The answer is complete. The property was the testator’s. The law gives him the power to direct its disposal by will. He has done so, while, so far as the evidence in this case shows, in the full possession of his faculties and without the undue influence of any one, and without legal injury to any one who can be heard to complain. It is enough, in this case, that the disposition made of his property was satisfactory to the testator. Whether any or how much good such a disposition would do, is not a question for a court or jury. It does not lie in the province of these plaintiffs to question the propriety at any time, for the further use of the trust fund or of its misappropriation, if such be the case, and there is no suspicion even of such a thing in this record.
The plaintiff wholly failed to make out a case, and the trial court properly directed a verdict. The judgment is affirmed.