170 Mo. App. 372 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
Plaintiffs are sons of Levi S. Wolfe, who died on the 5th of December, 1911, leaving a will. The female defendants are the daughters of Wolfe. Plaintiffs’ action is to set aside the will for alleged lack of testamentary capacity. The judgment in the trial court was for defendants.
The ground of the appeal by plaintiffs is that the trial court erred in giving instructions 4, 5 and 7 for defendants. The chief criticism is that they are a comment and argument on the evidence and that they assume controverted points of evidence. We need not examine in detail the objections made, since, in our view, the trial court was liberal in instructions for plaintiffs and that it would have been justified in directing a verdict for defendants.
The error we find in plaintiffs’ theory is that it assumes, in effect, that the testator must have had a capacity for the transaction of business. That is not the test. Testamentary capacity may exist where business capacity might fail. We said in Thomas v. English, decided this term, that “competency to make a will may exist where ability to conduct business may be lacking.” It was said in Crum v. Crum, 231 Mo. 626, 638, that there is no instrument for the measurement of mental capacity. We must judge of each case as it is presented under the tests recognized by the law. By competency to make a will is meant intelligence sufficient to understand the act being performed, the property to dispose of, the disposition to be made and the persons to whom the property is being given. [Sehr v. Lindemann, 153 Mo. 276, 288.] In the Thomas case aforesaid, quite recently decided by us, we examined at length the question here involved, and we refer to that case for the reasons justifying our judgment in this.
The evidence for plaintiffs separated in its different parts amounts practically ■ to nothing by way of showing testamentary incapacity. But, as said in
Testator was a widower, and we have a love affair shown in the record as evidence of lack of testamentary capacity. It seems he got into correspondence with some woman living in Texas, on the subject of marriage, and that he wrote to her that he was sixty-five years old when, in truth, he was seventy-seven; and that he had four children, when he had six. We have read these letters and find nothing in them to suggest he was incapable' of making a will. They convey rather the contrary impression. To formulate a falsehood, especially when it is uttered to advance one’s effort to enter into a marriage contract, is no more evidence of incapacity than misrepresentation in other civil contracts. A disposition to deceive is bad, but ability to do so is rather to be considered as evidence of mental strength.
We have examined the entire record and have evidence which would have justified a finding against the will, and hence affirm the judgment.