Byrne v. Byrne

186 Iowa 345
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 21, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 186 Iowa 345 (Byrne v. Byrne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byrne v. Byrne, 186 Iowa 345 (iowa 1919).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

The will in question was executed March 1, 1913, and the testator died January 29, 1917, at the age of 70 years. The contestants allege, and the jury found, that, at the date of said instrument, Matthew Byrne was of unsound mind, to an extent rendering him incapable of making an intelligent disposition of his estate. The evidence offered in support of this claim involves, to a large extent, the story of this man’s life in its entirety. Many alleged incidents relating to his acts, words, and conduct during the period of 40 years or more preceding his death are testified to with particularity by witnesses, and pressed upon our attention by counsel, as justifying the verdict and judgment below. The volume of such evidence is quite large, and we cannot attempt its restatement in this opinion with any degree of fullness; but, having reached a conclusion at variance with the views of the trial court, we récite enough of the showing to make plain the grounds upon which we think a reversal is made necessary.

I. Byrne was a native of Ireland, who came to America while still a boy, and, except a period of four years hereinafter referred to, lived practically all the remainder of his life at or near the town of Fonda, in Pocahontas County in this state. While still a young man, he married. The wife of that union died about the year 1887, having, borne him ten children, who survived her. In 1894, he married the proponent of this will, by whom he had two - children, [348]*348and with whom he lived until his/' death. At his decease, nine of the children of the first marriage and the two of his second marriage survived him. He was a farmer and an active cattle dealer, and had bought and sold several different tracts of land. At his death, he was- owner of a farm of 240 acres, and (as we understand the record) a house and lot in town. He left very little personal estate, and his indebtedness aggregated about $5,000. He never at any time until his death relinquished the personal management of his property and business. The children of the first marriage,' except Matthias, left home at o-r before arriving at their majority, and thereafter made very few visits to their father. Since his death, the son Parnell has died. The remainder of the children of that marriage, except Matthias and Margaret, appear among the contestants, and testify as witnesses in their own behalf.

The testimony of these children, upon which much stress is laid in argument by their counsel, relates almost exclusively to the alleged tyrannical and cruel treatment which they suffered at the hands of their father, while still members of the family home. For example, the oldest daughter, Katherine, testified to seeing her father strike her brothers and sisters with buggy whips or cattle whips, for what she describes as slight or trivial faults; that she saw him put the children to bed with a whip; that he would sometimes strip them naked and whip them. She says the “main thing was that the boys would not do their work to suit him,” and that, in at least two instances after such shippings, she “saw their bodies would be bleeding.” During the lifetime of her mother, she remembers occasions when her father would be whipping some of them, and her mother stepped in “between him and the children, to protect them,” and that, on such occasions, he struck her also. She says she never saw him offer any violence to her mother except when she interfered to protect her children.

[349]*349The witness says her father also sometimes would kick his horses, or “strike them with the neckyoke, or things of that kind.” He was not intemperate, she says, but he was profane and abusive in language.

After reciting these and other similar occurrences, the witness was interrogated as follows:

“Q. I want you to tell the jury what your judgment and opinion is, and I want you to base your judgment and opinion solely and exclusively upon what you saw your father do, what you heard him say, his appearance and conduct, all of which you have related here in your testimony to the jury this morning, whether or not, in the year 1897, your father was a person of sound or unsound mind? (Mr. Price: We object to that as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial. Overruled. Proponents except.) A. Unsound.”

On cross-examination, this witness admits that she herself might have whipped some of the children, — her brothers and sisters, — but expresses her opinion that some of them deserved the punishments given them by her father, and again concedes that “sometimes there was some justification and excuse; there were times when he whipped me, he might have been justified. I cannot say as to whether or not his punishments of the other girls was justified. * * * Father frequently sold cattle in Chicago. He oc7 casionally bought me and other members of the family gifts. He bought me a gold watch in my childhood.”

The son Thomas testified to much the same story of the frequency and severity of the whippings administered by his father to the older children, and to his hitting the witnesses’ mother once or twice, when she came between him and the children. He also developed the fact that the deceased possessed a revolver, which he sometimes carried, and that, on one occasion, he became involved in an affray with one Griffin, in which he shot and wounded the latter, [350]*350and that, upon trial for the alleged felonious assault so committed, he was acquitted. Thomas and another one or two of the witnesses also say that their father complained, on one or more occasions, of having been followed by some unknown person in the nighttime, and that once, someone tried to stop his team; but neither witness had any knowledge whether these things were or were not true.

After stating these incidents, this witness was .asked the same question we have above quoted from the examination of his sister Katherine, concerning his opinion whether Matthew Byrne was of sound mind during the last 20 years of his life, and answered, “Unsound mind.” On cross-examination, he emphasized this expression by declaring, “I knew my father was a raving maniac.”

Another son, James, corroborates the story of Thomas "and Katherine to some extent, but says he never saw his father whip either Parnell or Matthias or Lizzie.

“Saw father cruelly beat his horses. Saw him strike mother once or twice. After mother died, father used to cry almost all night long. That continued eight or ten months. It continued even after he began to wait on other women.”

Basing his opinion on the facts related by him, he also declares that his father was of unsound mind as far back as he can remember him. This witness had not visited or seen his father after some date in the year 1911.

The daughters Mary and Lizzie testify to the story of whippings by their father, but with materially less particularity than is indulged in by the witnesses already mentioned. Mary unites in the opinion that the testator was of unsound mind, but Lizzie expresses no opinion on that subject. Margaret does not testify, and does not join in the contest.

The contestants also called the proponent as a witness in their behalf, with the apparent purpose of drawing from [351]*351her testimony of some kind which would tend to support their charge of undue influence.

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Bluebook (online)
186 Iowa 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrne-v-byrne-iowa-1919.