Boyer ex rel. McGee v. Dively

58 Mo. 510
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 58 Mo. 510 (Boyer ex rel. McGee v. Dively) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyer ex rel. McGee v. Dively, 58 Mo. 510 (Mo. 1875).

Opinion

Napton, Judge,

'delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought under the 9th and 47th sections of the act concerning wills (Wagn. Stat., 1365). The plaintiffs in their petition state that the decedent William Gilliss and ICahketoqua, an Indian wowan, child and daughter of La-harsh, a chief of the Piankeshaw nation or tribe of Indians, in the life-time of said Gilliss, and in the Indian country, about the year eighteen hundred and thirty, were married as hue-[515]*515band and wife, and for a long time thereafter cohabited and lived together as such husband and wife, that there was issue of said marriage, to-wit: Nancy Grilliss ; that said Nancy was the only issue or child of said marriage ; that said Nancy was twice married, first, to Joseph Boyer, who, having died, she was secondly married to James Charley. That plaintiff, Francis Boyer, is the sole child and issue of said first marriage, and plaintiff, James Charley, Junior, is the sole child and issue of said second marriage. That said Nancy afterwards, in the year 1862, died leaving plaintiffs her only children, issue and heirs. That said Kahketoqua, wife of "said Grilliss and mother of said Nancy, died about the year 1863, having had an only child and issue, the said Nancy. That William Grilliss, said decedent, about the 19th day of July, 1869, died, having first made his will. That said Grilliss died, leaving, then living, no child or children or descendant of any child or children except plaintiffs, children, as before stated, of said Nancy and grand-children of said Grilliss, and so died leaving no widow, and that plaintiffs are the only heirs of said testator, Gilliss. Plaintiffs file the will of said Gilliss and make it part of their petition, and state that by said will defendant, Mary A. Troost, was appointed executrix thereof; that said Mary A. Troost caused said will to be admitted to probate in the Probate Court of the county of Jackson, and took out from said court letters testamentary as the executrix of said will, and was proceeding to administer the estate and execute said will according to the terms and provisions thereof: that by said will said testator devised and bequeathed to defendant, Mary A. Troost, the whole of his estate, real and personal, worth four hundred thousand dollars, except two nominal bequests of ten dollars each, which plaintiffs consent shall be paid.

Plaintiffs in their petition, further state that they are descendants and children of said Nancy, who was a child of said testator, William Gilliss ; and although such descendants and children, they, the said plaintiffs, are not and were not, in or by said will or any of its provisions, named or provided for, [516]*516nor was nor is said Nancy, mother of plaintiffs, so named or provided for; On the contrary, said will makes no provision for them or either of them, nor are they or either of them mentioned or named in said will.

The petition further alleges, that by the law said testator, as to plaintiffs, his said grand-children, and their mother, said Nancy, not named or provided for in or by said will, is deemed to have died intestate, and that they, said plaintiffs, are entitled to such proportion of the estate of the testator, real and personal, as if he had died intestate, and that they are entitled to have the same assigned to them. And plaintiffs pray the court to declare and adjudge the intestacy of said William Gilliss as to plaintiffs, and for contribution accordingly from said defendant as executrix and legatee, and for such other and further relief as the court shall deem right and proper.

• The suit, as originally brought, was against Mary A. Troost as executrix and also as legatee under the will. -Defendant, Mary A. Troost, died, leaving a will by which she disposed of her whole estate, including that derived by her under the will of the said William Gilliss, and the suit was revived against her executors, the defendants, Donnelly .and Black.

Defendant, Mary A. Troost, as executrix and also as legatee, made answer.to the petition; and in the answer protested that plaintiffs’ petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against defendant, as executrix, to be •answered unto, nevertheless for answer, defendant in substance states that she had no sufficient knowledge or information to form a belief whether Kahketoqua was the child and daughter ofLaharsh and says it is not true ; and she denies that said testator, William Gilliss, and said Kahketoqua, in the lifetime of said William Gilliss and in the Indian country, about the year 1831, or at any other time,, were married as husband ■and wife; denies that they for a long time thereafter or for. any length of time, cohabited and lived together as husband and wife; denies that there was any issue of any marriage between Gilliss and Kahketoqua, and says if Kahketoqua did leave a child it was not lawfully begotten by the testator. [517]*517Whether said Nancy was twice married and had children as stated in the petition, she had no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief; admits that Gilliss died testate as stated in petition; denies that plaintiffs (or either of them) are the heirs of testator Gilliss; says it is not true and denies that Gilliss left no legal heirs and representatives other than plaintiffs, and states the fact to be that Gilliss left surviving two legal heirs and representatives, and only two, to-wit: Sophia Gilliss and Mary Gilliss, both named in said will and provided for, and alleges that they are both living; admits her appointment by the will as executrix, that the will was admitted to probate, that letters testamentary were granted her, and that she assumed the burden of administering under the will; says she has no sufficient knowledge or information to form a belief whether plaintiffs are the children of said Nancy, and denies that said Nancy was or that plaintiffs are legal heirs of Gilliss; admits that plaintiffs are not named in said will and that the will makes no provision for plaintiffs or either of them; denies that by the law said testator, as to plaintiffs or either of them, died intestate, and denies that they are entitled to any portion or part of the property, real or personal or mixed, of which said Gilliss died seized or possessed, and asks to be discharged with costs.

To defendant’s answer there was a replication by plaintiffs.

In the progress of the cause in the court below and on the application of Sophia Gilliss and Mary Gilliss, they were admitted as parties defendants. They filed answer in substance denying plaintiffs’ right as asserted and claiming to be children and heirs of the testator Gilliss, and entitled to share in the estate, and charging that the defendant, Mary A. Troost, had, by fraud and other means, procured the making and execution of the will, by which they were each cut off with a bequest of the nominal sum. of ten dollars.

Portions of the answer were ruled out and the remaining portions replied to by plaintiffs.

In the fnrther progress of the cause, defendant Mary A. Troost having died, defendants Donnelly and Black as ex-[518]*518ecntors of her will were made defendants, and the suit revived against them. Defendants Donnelly and Black having entered their appearance, with the permission of the court, adopted as their answer the answer of their testatrix, Mary A. Troost.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Mo. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyer-ex-rel-mcgee-v-dively-mo-1875.