67 Mo. 574 | Mo. | 1878
— This was a suit under the statute brought
The Sunday following, Mr. Young died. Mr. Vories and the other attesting witnesses testified that Mr. Young was in his right mind when the will was signed by him, and that he seemed to understand perfectly the business he was transacting. On the other hand, the attending physician, Dr. Bertram, testified that he was called to see Mr. Young on Tuesday, (the day after the will was exe
Mrs. Ridenbaugh testified that Mr. Yories dictated the will, saying, “ Major, this had better be so and so, had it not ? ” My father acquiesced. Mr. Yories suggested that I, being a widow, should have more than my brother; that I should have the home place in town and the money. My father simply acquiesced. On Monday, while Mr Young was giving Mr. Yories instructions in regard to his will, Mrs. Ridenbaugh testified that <£ Mr. Oolhoun rose from his chair and said, £ I do not wish to give security.’ Mr. Yories aroused my father, told him what Mr. Oolhoun said, and _asked if he should be required to give security ; my father shook his head.” Mr. Yories testified that Mr. Young stated as a reason for changing the will made on Monday that he thought Mrs. Ridenbaugh and her son George had been provided for by insurance on Mr. Ridenbaugh’s life, but that as no such provision had been made, he wished to change the will so as to provide for them, justice not having been done to his daughter and her son in the will. To the same effect is the testimony of Mr. Oolhoun, who stated also that Mr. Young said he wished further to provide for her, as she would have to pay taxes on much unproductive property. Dr. Ellingood testified that Mr. Young told him .he intended to fix his property so as to make his children comfortable while they lived; that they didn’t know the value of money. He seemed anxious that they should be provided for.
It is necessary to give this synopsis of the evidence in order that the points relied upon for a reversal of the judgment may be understood. The estate of George Young
The court submitted to the jury an issue directing them to “ say in their verdict whether the writing produced and alleged by the infant defendants to be the last will and testament of George Young, deceased, is the last will of the said George Young or not.” Eor the plaintiff the coui’t gave the following instructions: 1. “ That unless hey believe, from the evidence, that at the time the testator, George Young, signed the paper alleged to be his last will and testament, he was of sound mind and disposing'
For defendants the court gave the following instructions : 1. That if they believe, from the evidence, that the deceased, George Young, freely signed and executed the paper writing read in evidence as and for his last will and testament, and that A. II. Vories, John Colhoun, John Williams and George T. Iloagland, or any two of them, attested the same by subscribing their names as witnesses thereto in the presence of said George Young, and if they further believe, from the evidence, that at the time of said signing, execution and attestation said George Young had sufficient capacity, as defined by the other instructions of .the court, to make a will, they will find said paper writing to be his last will, and answer the issue submitted to them in the affirmative. 3. If the jury believe, from the evi
That there was evidence of the exercise of undue influence to procure the making of the will, there can be no doubt. Upon its quality or quantity we will not comment, nor will we indicate what, in our judgment, should have been the verdict of the jury. It may be observed, how
The highest rate of interest on money authorized by law is ten per cent. This would yield $6,000 per annum on the amounts in the hands of the trustees, from which were to be deducted $1,000 for the education of the children, $2,910 taxes on the principal, $1,000 to be paid to the trustees for managing the fund, and if to these amounts be added $800 taxes paid on the property devised to Mrs. Ridenbaugh for the year 1874, the year her father died, there would be a balance of $250 for the support of Mrs. Ridenbaugh and her family, and for repairs on the property.
The court excluded evidence to show that in the year 1874 Mrs. Ridenbaugh paid that amqunt of taxes on the
But if for nothing else, we should reverse this judgment for the glaring error in the sixth instruction. It dc-4.-. dares (( that the unsoundness of mind sufficient to invalidate a will must be such as to render the testator, for the time being, incapable of understanding that he was engaged in making a disposition of his property.” One might know that he was making a disposition of his property and be utterly incapable of comprehending its extent or his relation to his kindred, or of making a disposition of his property with understanding and reason. The instruction is to the effect that, to invalidate the will, the jury should find that the testator had the lowest degree of intellect, or, rather, none at all. A child five years of age knows when it parts with its toys that it is disposing of its property, and, by the test given in the sixth instruction, would be capable of making a will disposing of an estate worth $100,000, because it might know that it
In McClintock v. Curd, 32 Mo. 422, an instruction identical with the one under consideration was given, in connection with others, and the court said that, “ taken as a whole, they presented the law of the case fairly to the jury. The jury were in effect called upon to say whether, at the time of the execution of the will, said Freeland had a sufficient mind and understanding to dispose of his estate with judgment and discretion.” The court evidently did not regard that instruction as properly declaring the law. There are cases in which a judgment should not be reversed, although the trial court may have given an erroneous instruction, if by others it properly and clearly declared the law of the case. They are cases, however, in which it is apparent from the simplicity of the issues, and the overwhelming weight of evidence to sustain the finding of the jury, on the correct theory of the case, that the erroneous instruction could not have prejudiced the complaining party; but where no such preponderance of evidence appears in a case in which the validity of a will is contested on the ground of incapacity and undue influence, in which some of the finest- distinctions are to be drawn that are presented in jury trials, it cannot with any certainty be said that an erroneous instruction has not prejudiced the losing party against whom it is given. Many jurymen are apt to seize upon those instructions which are
Reversed.