Buckner v. Tuggle

203 S.W.2d 449, 356 Mo. 718, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 616
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 9, 1947
DocketNo. 40057.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 203 S.W.2d 449 (Buckner v. Tuggle) 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
Buckner v. Tuggle, 203 S.W.2d 449, 356 Mo. 718, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 616 (Mo. 1947).

Opinions

Mary Agnes Mitchell died on April 21st, 1945 when she was almost eighty-five. She owned a two-family apartment house at 4235 Kossuth, assessed for tax purposes at $4100, and about $1500 worth of personal property, consisting chiefly of two $500 building and loan certificates. By her will, executed on the 20th of January 1945, she bequeathed $100 to each of her brothers, James and Elisha Buckner. She bequeathed $5.00 to her niece, Catherine Ming, $5.00 to her nephew, Raymond Buckner, and $5.00 to each of her other nephews and nieces. She appointed Leonard J. Tuggle executor of her will, made him the residuary beneficiary of her estate and specifically devised the apartment house on Kossuth to him, the devise reciting: "This devise is made in view of the facts that for a number of years Mr. Tuggle has cared for me and my business without compensation in a very satisfactory manner; when I could not get my brothers and relatives to care for me and my business, I could always depend on Mr. Tuggle to take care of both, and I now desire to compensate him in a small measure for his services." *Page 721

Her brothers, James and Rev. Elisha, instituted this action to contest her will on the pleaded grounds of mental incapacity and undue influence exerted by Tuggle. The trial court submitted the case on both grounds, unsoundness of mind and undue influence, and the jury returned a verdict sustaining the will. Upon this appeal by one of the brothers, James, it is insisted that the court erred in refusing to give three of their instructions, one of which directed a verdict for them as contestants, and in giving three instructions for the proponents. However, all these assignments and the essence of this appeal have to do with but a single point and that is whether there was in addition to proof of a fiduciary relationship between Tuggle and Mary and benefaction to him also proof that he was active in some way which caused or induced or assisted in causing the execution of the will. Clark v. Powell, 351 Mo. 1121, 1130, 175 S.W.2d 842, 846; Pulitzer v. Chapman, 337 Mo. 298, 316, 85 S.W.2d 400, 409; Loehr v. Starke, 332 Mo. 131, 144, 56 S.W.2d 772, 777. It is not claimed that the three instructions given at the behest of the proponents on the subjects of unsound mind and undue influence were in and of themselves erroneous (but see Meyers v. Drake, 324 Mo. 612, 631, 24 S.W.2d 116, 124 and Carl v. Ellis, (Mo. App.), 110 S.W.2d 805) except in so far as they excluded or more accurately failed, in connection with undue influence, to charge upon the subject of confidential relationship, benefaction and activity on the part of Tuggle. The contestants' refused instructions likewise dealt with this subject and so, in fact, there is but the single question.

The apartment on Kossuth came to Mary upon the death of her second husband some time prior to 1927. She lived there for forty years, working all the while, even when she was approaching eighty, as a cleaning woman in office buildings. She had executed two previous wills. Her 1926 will gave her sister Katie, who was then married to John Green, one half of her [451] property and the other one half was divided equally between her brothers, James and Elisha, and her sister Bessie. In 1939 her second will gave her property in equal shares to the two brothers and Katie. Bessie was then dead. Leonard Tuggle was a witness to that will which was drafted by Mr. Thomas who had been Mary's lawyer since 1927. In 1940 a codicil appointed Tuggle executor of her will in the place of her brother Elisha. The codicil was witnessed by Mr. Thomas, Mr. Gershenson and Miss Joby.

In 1927 Mary voluntarily caused the title to her Kossuth Street property to be transferred so that it stood in her name and that of her sister Katie as joint tenants with right of survivorship. But in 1943 Katie was about to marry Walter Chappel and Mary began demanding that title be restored to her or, as she put it, that Katie's name be gotten off the deed. Katie refused to reconvey the title and in June 1943 Mary instituted a suit to cancel the deed and compel a reconveyance and restoration of her title. In that controversy with Katie *Page 722 the brothers, James and Elisha, advised Mary against the suit, giving as a reason for their positions her declining health. That suit was terminated by Katie's death but her experience with it and her brothers' position in it may have had some bearing on her future conduct even though they may have thought they were acting in her best interests.

Tuggle, a retired postal employee, came to live in the first floor quarters of Mary's apartment as a tenant, at twenty-five dollars a month rental, in 1932. He had not been there long, he says by 1934, until he began to do the necessary chores about the apartment such as mowing the lawn, trimming the hedge and firing the two furnaces. Everyone, including the contestants and their witnesses, said that Mary always spoke with high praise of Tuggle and said that he was nice to her. Until 1943 Mary was physically able to handle her own business and financial affairs. But during that year she began turning all of her business and financial affairs over to Tuggle. He did the shopping for her, paid her bills, collected money for her and finally had a joint savings account with her, though he never used it, and had access to her safety deposit box. He kept an accurate account of her receipts and of any expenditures on her behalf.

The contestants claim that Mary had been in bad health for years and that even by 1943 she was physically unable to care for herself. They claimed that, by the time she executed her last will on the 20th of January 1945, she was blind and so ill both physically and mentally that she lacked the capacity to execute a will. But the proponents' evidence tended to show that she was not blind, that during 1943 and 1944 she was in good health considering her advanced years and that she was mentally alert and fully capable of executing a will. Prior to 1945 she had been ill and under a doctor's care for short periods of time. Once, in 1940 and a part of 1941, her niece, Catherine Ming, came and lived with her while she was not so well. In the latter part of 1944 she became quite feeble and by January 1945 was quite ill and remained under doctors' care until she died on the 21st of April. During her illness Tuggle prepared and took meals to her. Some of the time he was her only nurse. Before she became so ill the brothers and their wives asked her to come live with them but the proponents' evidence tended to show that they always imposed as a condition to her coming to them that she turn her business and financial affairs over to them. One brother, James, testified that he did so talk to her because he wanted to see her treated right until she died.

On the 6th day of April 1945 James filed an information in the probate court charging that Mary was of unsound mind and incapable of managing her affairs. According to the proponents' evidence she was incensed at the proceeding and sent Tuggle to her lawyer, Mr. Thomas, with instructions for him to resist the suit. Mr. Thomas and his associate called on her and subsequently caused her to be examined by *Page 723

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Bluebook (online)
203 S.W.2d 449, 356 Mo. 718, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckner-v-tuggle-mo-1947.