MAUD B. PICKETT, Executrix, et al., v. JAMES F. COOPER, et al., Defendants, JAMES F. COOPER, Appellant.
No. 39456
Supreme Court of Missouri, Division One
January 7, 1946
Rehearing Denied, February 11, 1946
192 S. W. (2d) 412
In the light of these facts, said report recommends that respondent having “acted in good faith on advice of counsel and under an opinion of the Attorney General of Missouri, and to prevent injury to the present consumers of electricity generated or distributed by respondent that the judgment of the court be so conditioned as to afford respondent a reasonable opportunity to effectuate the reorganization for which respondent has already made provisions.” Accordingly, the writ of ouster will issue, but respondent is granted the period of one year in which to effectuate its reorganization, if it is so advised, the court reserving jurisdiction of the case for such other and further action as may be deemed proper and appropriate in the premises. All concur except Gantt, J., absent.
Don C. Carter and J. W. Buffington for appellants.
Walter S. McColly died December 18, 1943, at the age of eighty years. The contested instrument had been made on November 3, 1943, while testator was confined in General Hospital at Mexico, Missouri. Testator was not survived by children or other descendants, and his wife had died April 5, 1938; but he was survived by two brothers, two sisters, two nephews and four nieces. The original contestants were the then living brothers and sisters of testator, and his nephews and nieces who are the children of a deceased sister. A brother, contestant, has died since the trial of the cause and his executrix has been substituted as a party plaintiff.
By the contested will testator devised his eighty-acre farm to his brothers and sisters; town lots to a friend; bequeathed sums of money to churches, friends, and a niece; and gave the residue and major portion of his property to James F. Cooper, appellant, cashier of the First National Bank of Mexico. James F. Cooper was also designated executor with bond.
As stated, the issue submitted to the jury was the mental capacity of Walter S. McColly to make a will; and it is contended by
Testator for many years had resided on his eighty-acre farm, mentioned supra, situate in Audrain County near Rowena, until the death of his wife; and thereafter testator lived variously at the homes of others in Audrain and Boone counties. For about seventeen years preceding his death, he had been in ill health at times and had been treated at several hospitals. After the death of his wife, he had become dissatisfied and restless; “he could not get reconciled.” Dr. F. L. McCormick, in whose hospital at Moberly testator was treated from January 13 to January 21, 1942, testified that testator was then in poor health. He suffered with “hydro-achloridia,” or lack of acid in the stomach. He was mentally deranged. His mind was absolutely unsound. He was suspicious of the food. He would get out into the hall when he was supposed to be in bed. “We took his clothes out of the room and he would get out in the hall without any clothes on except his underclothes. He would pile chairs up against the door to keep people from coming into the room and he would talk to himself.” Testator had been brought to the McCormick hospital by Dr. M. C. McMurray of Paris. Dr. McCormick stated, “. . . I had to call Dr. McMurray to take him home because we could not care for that type of patient.” It was Dr. McCormick‘s opinion that testator could not transact any business when he “was at my place . . .” because he could not carry on a conversation . . . he didn‘t know anything.” In the doctor‘s opinion, testator‘s condition would get worse.
Dr. McMurray, to whose hospital at Paris testator was taken January 21st, testified that testator was afflicted with senile dementia due to hardening of the arteries of the brain. When Dr. McMurray went to Dr. McCormick‘s hospital to get testator, “Mr. McColly was in the room and had the door barred with chairs and had a chair up in his
Dr. George M. Ragsdale, a physician of Paris, had examined testator at the McMurray hospital on January 22, 1942. Testator was incoherent and in a delirious state—“liable to tell you anything.” He had pronounced arteriosclerosis and senile dementia. Witness again saw testator in February 1943, “He would get on a subject and before you could answer he would jump over to another . . . I could not at any time engage him in an intelligent conversation.” Dr. Ragsdale saw testator “off and on all that summer” and could not see any improvement. “I say he was a person of unsound mind.” In a pronounced case of arteriosclerosis, the “brain blood vessels can become so hard the brain doesn‘t get the proper nourishment and therefore the man is suffering, we say, with softening of the brain.”
Plaintiffs’ lay witnesses, including testator‘s two brothers, a sister, and a niece (and others) testified of the conduct of the testator in the latter years of his life.
Testator, who had moneys deposited in banks and invested in postal savings certificates, forgot where his postal savings certificates were; he got the First National Bank of Mexico confused with the First National Bank of Centralia. He threatened to take his life. He offered to will his property to a witness to whom he was in no way obligated or related. “He said that Potter (husband of a niece) was trying to rob him.” He was fearful that somebody would take the money out of the estate of William E. McColly, an estate of testator‘s deceased brother which was then in process of administration. He hid his best suit in a newspaper and would complain of people stealing his clothes. He thought someone had stolen the door off a building on his farm. He said, “That little Doctor and Cooper is trying to beat me out of what I have got.” He expressed that ill feeling existed between him and his brothers and sisters; said they were not treating
(Some of the conduct related by the lay witnesses was not such as would justify a reasonable inference of unsoundness of mind; nevertheless the witnesses were permitted, over objection, to express such an opinion of testator‘s mental condition. Of this appellant complains, and this contention of error will be considered infra.)
When the contested will of November 3d was executed, testator was acting as executor of the will of his brother, William E. McColly, who had died in February 1943. The brothers had executed reciprocal wills. In the spring after his brother‘s death, testator made a will devising his eighty-acre farm to Anna Pearl Potter (the niece to whom he bequeathed a legacy, $500, in the will of November 3d), who, he had said, was his favorite niece; residue to his brothers and sisters and the children of his deceased sister. He executed another will October 11, 1943, in which he bequeathed legacies of $200 each to two friends and devised and bequeathed the residue of his property to I. W. Potter and Anna Pearl Potter (his favorite niece), husband and wife. The day preceding the execution of the will contested in the instant case, testator (then, as stated, confined in General Hospital at Mexico) told I. W. Potter, “You haven‘t treated me right, you haven‘t been to see me but twice in seventeen days and I think you are neglecting me, . . . I am going to make another will and leave you out.” The residuary legatee (appellant) of the will of November 3d was not related to testator and had done nothing for him except “as a customer of the bank.”
We have seen that three physicians testified of the testator‘s mental deterioration. These physicians did not treat or examine the testator within several months preceding the execution of the will. Two of the physicians, however, had seen and talked with testator in the summer of 1943. He was “not right,” and no improvement could be seen.
The mental disorder, senile dementia, with which testator was afflicted, “is marked by progressive decay of the mental faculties, of which memory is one of the first to fail; and the loss of memory is at first more marked for recent than for remote events. The instincts and affections change, the tastes alter, and the sense of delicacy often suffers. In the purely intellectual sphere, we observe an impaired judgment and a weakened power of attention. . . . In advanced cases, especially, in which all the mental and moral faculties are more or less clouded, delusions are observed. These delusions are usually of a depressive or persecutory kind; a common one is the idea of loss of property, or of being robbed; . . .” Vol. I, Wharton & Stille‘s Medical Jurisprudence, secs. 975-6, pp. 794-5; Hamner v. Edmonds, 327 Mo. 281, 36 S. W. 2d 929; Byrne v. Fulkerson, 254 Mo. 97, 162 S. W. 171.
It is neither true that every weakness incident to age and disease incapacitates a man from making a will, nor is it true that a lack of testamentary capacity is any less fatal to the legal power to make a will because it is the result of these things. Byrne v. Fulkerson, supra. Testimony of plaintiffs’ lay witnesses, which we have quoted supra, relating to testator‘s eccentric conduct might not alone be considered sufficient evidence to overthrow a will on the ground of mental incapacity; nevertheless, such evidence may be taken into consideration with other facts in determining whether testator is of such mental incapacity. Proffer v. Proffer, 342 Mo. 184, 114 S. W. 2d 1035. But the testimony and opinions of plaintiffs’ medical witnesses, who had treated and examined testator, that testator had senile dementia, a progressive mental disorder, especially when considered in conjunction with the testimony of the lay witnesses of and concerning the continuing eccentric conduct characteristic of such dementia, was sufficient in our opinion from which it could be reasonably inferred that the testator did not have the legal mental capacity to dispose of his property by will at the time the purported will was executed. We hold the issue of mental capacity was submissible to the jury. Proffer v. Proffer, supra; Fields v. Luck, 335 Mo. 765, 74 S. W. 2d 35; Hamner v. Edmonds, supra; Moll v. Pollack, 319 Mo. 744, 8 S. W. 2d 38; Byrne v. Fulkerson, supra.
By Instruction A, given at plaintiffs’ instance, the court advised the jury that it devolved upon defendants to show that testator was of sound and disposing mind and memory, that is, “that he had mind and memory capable of comprehending the nature of the transaction in which he was engaged, and the disposition he was making of his property, and generally the nature and extent of his property, so as to enable him to fully contemplate and know . . . those who were the natural objects of his bounty, that he had sufficient mind and memory to do these things without the aid of any other person . . .” (Our italics.) Instruction No. 9, given at the defendants’ instance,
Appellant contends the trial court erred in refusing to give defendants’ Instruction No. 7, which, if given, would have advised the jury that under the law and evidence the verdict should be for defendants on the issue of undue influence. And the appellant contends that the court erred in refusing defendants’ Instructions Nos. 3 and 4 withdrawing the issue of the due execution of the will. The issue of undue influence and the issue that the will had not been signed and attested as the law required had been pleaded by plaintiffs in their petition, but no substantial evidence was introduced to sustain these issues, and, as stated, the trial court submitted only the issue of mental capacity. The issues of undue influence and that the will had not been duly executed were abandoned. There was no error in the refusal of Instructions Nos. 3, 4 and 7. It is not presumed that the jury found for plaintiffs upon an issue which was not supported by substantial evidence and which was not submitted, where, as here, the jury was guided by given instructions as to the issue, mental capacity, to be determined. Dietzman v. St. Louis Screw Co., 300 Mo. 196, 254 S. W. 59; Scott v. Kansas City Public Service Co., Mo. App., 115 S. W. 2d 518; Vol. 1, Raymond, Missouri Instructions to Juries, sec. 12, p. 20.
Of appellant‘s contention the trial court erred in permitting nonprofessional witnesses to give their opinion that testator was of unsound mind. The contention is ruled adversely to appellant. The trial court, before permitting a lay witness to state an opinion that
The judgment should be affirmed.
It is so ordered. Bradley and Dalton, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by VAN OSDOL, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
