FANNIE MEYERS ET AL., Appellants, v. WILLIAM JOSEPH DRAKE ET AL.
Division One
February 3, 1930
24 S. W. (2d) 116
For the reasons assigned the opinion and judgment of the Kansas City Court of Appeals are quashed. Lindsay and Seddon, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by ELLISON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
FANNIE MEYERS ET AL., Appellants, v. WILLIAM JOSEPH DRAKE ET AL.
—24 S. W. (2d) 116.
Division One, February 3, 1930.
The contestants of the will (who are the parties plaintiff in the action) are Fannie Meyers, Martha Schrage, Mary Dettle and Catherine Rood, nieces of the testator, being the daughters of George W. Drake, a predeceased brother of testator. The parties defendant in the action are the respective beneficiaries named in the will of testator. William Madison Hawkins is named as a party defendant in the capacity of executor of testator‘s estate, as well as in his individual capacity. The minor beneficiary, Darwin Brooks, having died after the commencement of the action, his surviving parents, J. L. Brooks and Annie Brooks, were substituted as parties defendant in the stead of Darwin Brooks, deceased.
The petition is conventional in form, alleging that the paper writing of September 9, 1922, purporting to be the last will and testament of Madison C. Drake, is not the will of said testator, for the reason that the said testator, at the time of the alleged signing and execution of such purported will, was not of sound mind and had not mental capacity sufficient to make a will, and for the further reason that the purported making and signing of said written instrument was procured by the undue influence of the defendant and chief beneficiary, William Madison Hawkins, upon and over the mind of said testator. The petition prayed that the issue whether said instrument of writing is, in fact, the last will of testator be submitted to a jury, and that said purported will be declared void and of no effect. The joint answer of defendants joined the issues raised and presented by the petition.
At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court instructed the jury that there is no evidence in the cause as to undue influence, upon the part of William Madison Hawkins, over the mind of the testator, and, as to such issue or claim, their verdict must be to sustain the will of testator. The issue or claim of testator‘s mental incapacity to make the will was submitted to the jury, resulting in a finding and verdict by nine of the jurors that the instrument of writing dated September 9, 1922, is the last will and testament of Madison C. Drake, deceased, and judgment was entered in accordance with such verdict. After an unsuccessful motion for a new
The proponents of the will (defendants) educed the testimony of Berryman Henwood and Robert H. Clayton, the attesting witnesses to the signing and publication of the will, both of whom testified that the will was signed and published by the testator, Madison C. Drake, in their presence; that the testator was of sound mind at the time of the signing and publication of the will; and that they had subscribed their names to the will, as attesting witnesses, at the request and in the presence of the testator, and in the presence of each other.
The witness Berryman Henwood further testified that he was a practicing attorney in Hannibal, Missouri, on and long prior to the month of September, 1922; that Madison C. Drake came alone, and unaccompanied, to the law office of Mr. Henwood in Hannibal early in the month of September, 1922, and requested that Mr. Henwood write his will; that no one else was present in the office at the time; that Madison C. Drake discussed with Mr. Henwood the terms of the contemplated will at considerable length; that he discussed the matter of his property, in a general way, and his relationships, and how he wanted to divide and distribute his property by will; and, furthermore, Madison C. Drake discussed the matter of his relatives, his attachment for certain relatives, and his lack of attachment for other relatives; that, in the course of the conversation, Mr. Drake mentioned the plaintiffs (contestants), and said that he had not been close to them, or had they been close to him, since they had grown up, and he did not feel that they were interested in him; that was why, Mr. Drake explained to Mr. Henwood, he was leaving them (plaintiffs) out of the provisions of his will; that Mr. Henwood, during the course of the conversation, made a memorandum of the desires of Mr. Drake respecting the disposition of his property, from which memorandum Mr. Henwood thereafter dictated the will in controversy to his stenographer; that, several days after the typewritten will had been prepared by Mr. Henwood, Madison C. Drake returned to Mr. Henwood‘s office and himself, unaided by Mr. Henwood, read the typewritten will, and, after reading the will twice, Mr. Drake signed the will in the presence of both Mr. Henwood and Mr. Clayton, both of whom thereupon attested the signing of the will in the presence of Madison C. Drake; whereupon, Mr. Henwood delivered the will to Mr. Drake, who took the will from Mr. Henwood‘s office, after it had been enclosed in a large envelope labeled, “Last Will and Testament of Madison C. Drake.” Mr. Henwood testified further that he had been reared in the town of Oakwood, and in
Robert M. Clayton testified that he was engaged in the insurance business in Hannibal, and had known testator six or seven years, perhaps longer, before his death; that he had tried, on one or two occasions, to buy from testator a tract of land in Hannibal, owned by the testator and situate at the corner of Fourth and Center streets, opposite the public city park, but that testator had stated that he did not want to sell the land, and he had never been able to get testator‘s consent to sell the land, which a client of Mr. Clayton desired for a gasoline-filling-station site; that such negotiations for the purchase of the tract of land were had shortly prior to the execution of testator‘s will; that Mr. Henwood telephoned Mr. Clayton that Mr. Drake wanted him to be a witness to his (Drake‘s) will, and that he went immediately to Mr. Henwood‘s office and found both Mr. Henwood and Madison C. Drake there; that Mr. Drake said that he had just made a will, and that he wanted Mr. Clayton “to come up to be a witness to his will;” that witness talked to Mr. Drake about the witnessing of the instrument; and that witness “don‘t think there was any doubt about his being of sound mind at that time.”
The contestants (appellants) educed the testimony of some twenty lay witnesses (including several of the contestants and their respective husbands) tending to show that the real property owned by Madison C. Drake at the time of his death was inherited from a wealthy uncle, one Dr. Hampton; that he created no estate or property by his own thrift and industry; that he did not improve the lands he inherited from his uncle, but permitted them to fall into a state of dilapidation; that he rented, or leased, his real property for a long term of years at a nominal and grossly inadequate rental; that Madison C. Drake could not write, except to write his own
In rebuttal of contestants’ evidence, the proponents of the will (respondents) educed the testimony of some thirty-five witnesses, all acquaintances and neighbors of testator, tending to show that testator was industrious, and always capable of attending to, and well understood, his business transactions; that he personally collected the rents from his several properties, and paid the taxes thereon; that he was a regular contributor to the support of the local Methodist church, of which he was an occasional attendant; that, while he dressed plainly, his clothing was clean, and never filthy; that he chewed tobacco, which occasionally would drop on his clothing; that he was never profane or unclean in his speech, or in his habits and conduct; that he promptly paid his debts and looked after the insurance upon his properties, and personally paid the insurance premiums; that he frequently and intelligently discussed current topics and matters of business with his neighbors and acquaintances; that
I. Appellants, in their brief, concede that “a sharp question of fact was made by the evidence” respecting the issue, or claim, of the mental incapacity of the testator to make the will in contest, thereby admitting that such issue was properly submissible to the jury. It is urged by appellants, however, that the trial court erred in not submitting to the jury for determination the issue of undue influence on the part of defendant, William Madison Hawkins, and in instructing the jury, at the request of the proponents and defendants, that “there is no evidence in the cause as to undue influence upon the part of William M. Hawkins, defendant, upon the mind of the testator; and, therefore, as to that issue your verdict must be to sustain the will.” Appellants argue that, even if it be true that “there is no direct or positive evidence of that fact (i. e., of undue influence),” yet “there are facts and circumstances in the record which are difficult to explain upon any other theory; the exercise of undue influence upon a testator in the execution of his will may be proved by circumstantial evidence.” Appellants rely strongly upon the opinion of this court, en banc, in Fowler v. Fowler, 318 Mo. 1078, 1086, 2 S. W. (2d) 707, 710, and cases cited therein, in support of the foregoing (quoted) statement and argument, and assert that the evidence herein is closely similar, if not almost identical, to that found in the Fowler case, as respecting the issue of undue influence, upon the part of the chief beneficiary of the will, over the mind of the testator.
Appellants quote the following portions of the evidence, as related by certain of contestants’ witnesses and found in the record, which they claim is ample and sufficient evidence to have entitled them to a submission of the issue of undue influence, under the ruling of this court, en banc, in the Fowler case, supra: “Uncle Mat (testator) said Will Hawkins collected some of his rents; said Willie Mat Hawkins collected rents over there in South Hannibal from
In the Fowler case, supra, there was strong and substantial evidence that testator‘s disposition of mind, as previously expressed by him, was hostile to the chief beneficiaries named in the will; that they had previously displayed anxiety that testator should make his will; and that he was taken to their home, hopelessly sick and mentally weak, where testator was exclusively under their care and control for seven or eight days, when testator made a will in their favor, directly contrary to his intention theretofore often expressed; and that testator died, shortly after making his will, from the fatal ailment with which he was stricken when taken to the home of the chief beneficiaries named in the will. While the chief beneficiaries of the will were absent on the day the attorney who prepared the will made a memorandum of testator‘s desires, and were likewise absent on the next day, when the will was read to testator and signed by him, yet it was held in the Fowler case that it was a matter for a jury to say, under the foregoing circumstances in evidence, whether the will was the result of undue influence over the mind of the testator, exercised by the chief beneficiaries of the will.
We have given close study to the evidence herein, and we find no substantial evidence of undue influence, upon the part of William Madison Hawkins, or any one else, exerted over the mind of testator. The burden of proving undue influence rests upon the contestants, and an unequal testamentary disposition of testator‘s property, or
II. Appellants complain of error in the procedure adopted by the court upon the trial of the cause. It is said that the proponents were not content with making a prima-facie case by merely offering the testimony of the attesting witnesses to the will, tending to show only the formal execution of the will and the mental capacity of the testator at the time he signed and published the will; but that the trial court erroneously permitted the proponents to further examine the attesting witnesses, Henwood and Clayton, respecting the conduct, habits and business transactions of the testator, covering a period of many years prior, and subsequently, to the execution and publication of the will.
It appears from the record that, upon the conclusion of the testimony of the attesting witnesses, Henwood and Clayton, the proponents, having made a prima-facie case, rested. Thereupon the contestants insisted and moved that proponents be required by the court to put in all of their evidence, before the contestants should be required to offer any evidence to overcome the prima-facie case made by proponents. The trial court overruled the contestants’ motion, and required them to introduce their evidence for the purpose of overcoming the proponents’ prima-facie case made by the two attesting witnesses to the execution and publication of the will. Upon the conclusion of contestants’ evidence, the proponents were then allowed to offer evidence in rebuttal of contestants’ evidence. It is urged by appellants that the procedure so adopted by the trial court resulted in a tactical advantage to proponents, which advantage was highly prejudicial to contestants.
As a general rule, the order of introducing evidence upon the trial of a cause is a matter which lies in the sound discretion of the trial court, and unless the trial court has palpably abused such discretion, to the prejudice of the complaining party, an appellate court will not interfere with the trial court‘s action, or hold such action of the trial court to constitute reversible error. [Dozier v. Jerman, 30 Mo. 216, 220; Seibert v. Allen, 61 Mo. 482, 487; Scullin Steel Co. v. Iron Co., 308 Mo. 453, 479.] While our uniform practice requires (in every case contesting the validity of a will) the making of a prima-facie case by the proponents of the will, and then requires the contestants to put in their case, nevertheless, it does not shift the burden of proof as to the mental capacity of the testator, and such burden remains with, and rests upon, the proponents of the will throughout the entire trial, and consequently the proponents have the right to open and close. [Major v. Kidd, 261 Mo. 607, 625; Berkemeier v. Reller, 317 Mo. 614, 622; Smarr v. Smarr, 319 Mo. 1153, 1165.] We see nothing prejudicial to appellants-contestants in the trial court‘s order of procedure, and find no reversible error therein.
III. The contestants proffered the testimony of Joseph F. Barry, an attorney, who was appointed by the Probate Court of Ralls County to appraise the value of testator‘s estate for the purpose of assessing the statutory inheritance or transfer tax. The witness identified the inventory and appraisement of the value of testator‘s estate, amounting to $33,990, as filed by the executor, William M. Hawkins, in the Probate Court of Ralls County, and the trial court allowed such instrument to be put in evidence by contestants. Thereupon counsel for contestants inquired of the witness, Barry, if he “had a talk with William Hawkins, the defendant in this case, and chief beneficiary under the alleged will of Madison C. Drake, about the $6,000, par value, of Government bonds.” The proponents objected to the inquiry upon the ground that it did not bear upon any issue in the case, and the objection was sustained by the trial court. Contestants then offered to prove by the witness, Barry, that he had asked William M. Hawkins if there were some U. S. Government bonds which were a part of the assets of testator‘s estate, and that Mr. Hawkins claimed the same as his own property, stating to witness that the bonds had been given to him (Hawkins) by his uncle, Madison C. Drake, a short time prior to his death, and that he, Hawkins, claimed them as his own property and that they constituted no part of the assets of the estate of Madison C. Drake; and, furthermore, that the witness, Barry, had asked Mr. Hawkins if there was some cash or evidences of debt, amounting to $600 or $700, belonging to the Drake estate, which had not been listed and inventoried by Mr. Hawkins, as executor of the estate, and that Mr. Hawkins, with reluctance, admitted there was, and claimed that, through inadvertance, he had failed to list the same as part of the assets of the estate. The aforestated offer of proof was objected to by defendants upon the ground that the proffered proof was immaterial and had no bearing upon the issues in the case, and the objection was sustained.
The appellants cite no authority in support of their claim and assignment of error. We perceive no reversible or prejudicial error in the rulings and action of the trial court respecting the matters complained of by appellants. Strictly speaking, the assessment of the inheritance or transfer tax does not directly involve the administration of a decedent‘s estate; the proceeding is one, not against the property or estate of decedent, as such, but is against the interest or property right which an heir, legatee, devisee, grantee, or donee has in the property formerly held and owned by the decedent, whether transferred by will, by the laws of intestacy, or by deed or gift made within two years prior to decedent‘s death, and without adequate valuable consideration—this is to say, made in contemplation of decedent‘s death. Consequently, it has been held by this court that the assessment of the inheritance or transfer tax should be postponed until the final determination of a will contest proceeding, for the reason that the parties whose interests or property rights may be ultimately subject to the tax cannot be ascertained or known until the final determination of the will contest proceeding. [In re Bernero‘s Estate (Div. 2), 197 S. W. 121.] Furthermore, it would seem to our minds to be wholly immaterial, so far as involves the issues in the present action, whether William M. Hawkins claims to be the owner of the Government bonds, if any there be, formerly possessed by his uncle, Madison C. Drake, as the donee of a gift of the bonds from his uncle, or as the residuary legatee named in the uncle‘s will. But, even if the proffered and rejected evidence be deemed properly admissible, which we do not concede, it is of so little importance, and has so little bearing upon the issues involved in the instant cause, that it could not possibly have prejudiced the rights of appellants, and hence does not justify a reversal of the judgment. [Coats v. Lynch, 152 Mo. 161, 168.] Besides, the statute (
Such statute does not purport to change the order of the introduction of evidence in a civil action or proceeding, or allow to a party the right and privilege of calling an adverse party to testify as a witness in his behalf at a time that is inconsistent with the orderly procedure of the trial of such an action. Under the statute just quoted, the defendant, William M. Hawkins, was amenable to a subpoena to appear as a witness in the cause in behalf of the contestants, in the same manner as other witnesses (not parties) in the cause. For reasons best known to contestants, however, they did not request, or seek to compel, the defendant, Hawkins, to appear and testify as a witness in their behalf at the time the contestants made their case in chief, although counsel for contestants stated to the court that the defendant, William M. Hawkins, was present in the courtroom throughout the trial, which lasted some four or five days, and until the morning of the last day of the trial, when it would appear from the record that said defendant was momentarily absent from the courtroom. It may have been that contestants believed that the proponents would call the defendant, Hawkins, as a witness, and thereby contestants would have been afforded the opportunity and privilege of cross-examining the defendant, Hawkins; but, be that as it may, the proponents did not call the defendant, Hawkins, as a witness in the cause, and contestants had no good reason to rely upon proponents calling the defendant as a witness.
In 38 Cyc. 1352-1354, it is said: “In order to prevent injurious surprises, and annoying delays in the administration of justice, rules of practice, looking to the orderly introduction of evidence by the respective parties, are essential. The trial has its regular stage of process, and the evidence should be introduced with reference thereto. ‘Otherwise, the trial will be in perpetual confusion.’ . . . Ordinarily, the rebutting evidence offered by him upon whom the burden of proof rests concludes the introduction of evidence, but not always. Within the discretion of the court, for good reasons, in furtherance of justice, the other party may be permitted to introduce evidence in response to that called forth by the rebuttal testimony, but nothing
The action of the trial court complained against by the appellants was discretionary, and we cannot say that the court abused the discretion in making the ruling complained of.
V. Appellants assign error in the giving of Instruction 4, at the request of defendants, which instruction reads: “The court instructs the jury that to render testator competent to make a will, the law does not require the same degree of understanding or mental capacity necessary to make a contract or manage his estate, nor any particular degree of understanding, but he must have sufficient understanding or intelligence, at the time of making or executing his will, to comprehend the nature and extent of the transaction he is, at the time, engaged in, to know his relatives and natural objects of his bounty, the nature and extent of his property, and to whom he desired to and was giving it; and, if you find from the evidence, that Madison C. Drake possessed these requisites, at the time he signed the instrument of writing mentioned in the pleadings and the evidence as his will, you must find for the will.”
At the request of the plaintiffs-contestants, the court gave to the jury Instruction A, which reads: “In determining the issues of whether or not Madison C. Drake was of sufficient soundness of mind to make a will on the 9th day of September, 1922, before you can find in favor of the proposed will, you must believe from the greater weight of the evidence that at the time of the signing and execution thereof, if you find he did in fact sign same in the presence of two witnesses who signed same in said Madison C. Drake‘s presence, that said Madison C. Drake had sufficient understanding to comprehend the nature of the transaction he was engaged in, and was capable of understanding the nature and extent of all his property, and the reasonable claim, if any, of all persons who may have been naturally and reasonably within the range of his bounty, and to whom he desired to give his property, and realized to whom he was giving it,
It is urged by appellants that Instruction 4, given at the request of defendants, sets up a wholly different test, or standard, of mental capacity required of a testator from that defined and stated in Instruction A, given at the request of plaintiffs-contestants; wherefore, it is claimed that the said instructions are clearly conflicting, and consequently were confusing and misleading to the jury. Instructions precisely identical in form, words and language with the above-quoted instructions were given on behalf of the opposite and respective parties in Heinbach v. Heinbach, 274 Mo. 301, which was an action under the statute (
Criticism is made of defendants’ Instruction 4 because it tells the jury that, to render testator competent to make a will, the law does not require “any particular degree of understanding” on the part of the testator. The law, as stated to the jury in the criticised instruction, comports with the rule or principle of law announced by this court in Harvey v. Sullens, 56 Mo. 372, 380, as follows: “If a person is of sound mind, and capable of managing his affairs, then he may make a will. The law does not require any particular degree of understanding, but the person must have sufficient capacity to intelligently know what disposition he is making of his property.”
Lastly, it is claimed by appellants that proponents’ Instruction 4 is argumentative in form and language and is a comment upon the evidence. We cannot agree with appellants in such contention. The instruction makes no reference, direct or indirect, to any of the facts or circumstances in evidence, and the trial court, in such instruction, obviously does not discuss the tendency of the evidence, or any portion of the evidence, or lay any emphasis thereon. Appellants, in support of their contention, place reliance upon the rulings of this court in Post v. Bailey, 254 S. W. 71, 74, and Hartman v. Hartman, 314 Mo. 305, 314, 284 S. W. 488, 490. In the cases just cited, the instructions condemned by this court told the jury, in substance, that “old age, physical weakness, or imperfect and failing memory caused by sickness or old age” are not sufficient to establish the incompetency of the testator, or to invalidate a will, or to justify a finding of the jury that the testator was of unsound mind at the time the will was made. While conceding the correctness of such quoted statement as an abstract rule of law, it was held in the cited cases that the effect of such statement in an instruction was to minimize, if not wholly destroy, the effect of contestants’ evidence, which tended strongly to show that testator‘s mind had been weakened by old age and physical infirmities to such an extent that his memory
Matters other than those discussed and ruled herein are assigned as error by appellants, but inasmuch as appellants have not briefed such claims of error, or cited authorities in support thereof, we will treat them as abandoned by appellants.
We are of the opinion that the cause was well tried by the court below, and was properly submitted to the jury upon the issue, or claim, of the mental incapacity of testator raised by the contestants, which was the sole issue upon which the action was submissible under the evidence educed. Finding no reversible error in the record before us, the judgment nisi must be affirmed; and it is so ordered. Lindsay and Ellison, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by SEDDON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur, except Ragland, J., who concurs in the result.
GEORGE S. HOVEY, Trustee under Last Will of JOHN JOSEPH GRIER, v. MARY ANN GRIER ET AL.; E. W. ENGLE, Interpleader, Appellant; CELIA POINSETT, Interpleader, Respondent.
unknown
Division One
February 3, 1930
23 S. W. (2d) 1058
