Catholic University of America v. O'Brien

79 S.W. 901, 181 Mo. 68, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 23, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 79 S.W. 901 (Catholic University of America v. O'Brien) 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
Catholic University of America v. O'Brien, 79 S.W. 901, 181 Mo. 68, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 102 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This is an action by plaintiff, one of the legatees named in the will of Maurice O’Brien, deceased, to have said will, which had been rejected by the probate court of Lawrence county, where O’Brien lived at the time of his death, proved, as provided by section 4622, Revised Statutes 1899. Upon issue joined in the court below the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for defendants, from which plaintiff, after [71]*71filing motion for a new trial and the same being' overruled, appeals.

Maurice O’Brien was seventy-tbree years of age at the time of the execution of the will. He had lived in Pierce City, Lawrence county, for many years, and died there in 1895, the owner of real and personal property located there, and of real property in Chicago. In November, 1894, he executed the will in question. At that time F. C. Johnson was a lawyer residing in Pierce City. He had assisted in drafting a previous will for Maurice O’Brien. O’Brien went to his office and instructed him how he wished to dispose of his property, and employed him to put the will in question in form; he returned later, and took away the draft Johnson had made, wrote it out in his own hand, and later brought back this holograph will and signed it at Johnson’s office and had Johnston and Otis C. Maxey, who was reading in the office, to sign as witnesses. He left surviving him, one son, Thomas Joseph, and two daughters, Mary and Alice. He was a Catholic. . By this will he (1) provides for payment of his debts and gives $20 to Father Healy and $10 to Father Thomas, to say masses for the repose of his soul and of his deceased son; (2) gives his son, Thomas Joseph, $2,000, and his daughter, Mary, $1,000, and his dwelling in Pierce City, furniture, piano, etc., and to his daughter Alice nothing; (3) gives his nephew John H. O’Brien, and his sister $300 each, and to his brother Richard’s widow $300, and to his cousin, Mrs. Patrick Power, $200; (4) gives the Mission of the Immaculate Virgin for the protection of homeless and destitute children, a corporation of New York, $500'; (5) gives to Charles A. Vissani, or his successor as commissary of the Order of St. Francis, etc., $500; (6) directs $25 to be deposited in Lawrence County Bank to be used to keep his cemetery lot in order; and (7) gives the residue of his property to the Catholic University of America.

February 14, 1895, this will was presented to. the [72]*72probate court of Lawrence county, for probate, and tbe probate court rejected it “for tbe reason that bis mental condition was such that be was incompetent to make a will.”

Tbe present action to prove and establish such will was brought by the Catholic University of America in the circuit court of Lawrence county against all the heirs and all the beneficiaries under such will of said deceased. The petition was filed June 22, 1898, and all the defendants were brought into court to answer to the August term, 1898, several of them by summons, and the others by order of publication. An amended petition was filed. February 13, 1900. The amended petition differs from the original only by the allegation that ‘ ‘ said Maurice 0 ’Brien at the time of his death left real estate and personal property located in said county of Lawrence in the State of Missouri, and this action affects the establishment of the lawful right thereto.” The petition alleges in substance that plaintiff is a corporation; that Maurice O’Brien died January^ 1895, a resident of Lawrence county, Missouri, testate; that on November 17, 1894, he was upward of twenty-one years of age, of sound mind and competent under the laws of Missouri to make his will, and did make his will in writing, signed by him and attested by two competent witnesses, viz., F. C. Johnson and Otis C. Maxey, subscribing their names to such written will in the presence and at the request of the testator; that on February 14, 1895, such will was presented to the probate court of said county for proof and was on such date by such court rejected; that the said written, subscribed and attested paper is the last will of Maurice O’Brien; that he left him surviving, his sole children (and descendants of deceased children) Thomas Joseph O’Brien, Mary Kiely and Alice Daily; alleges the disposition he made of his property, the same as above recited; that the defendant Eliza A. 0 ’Brien claims to be the widow of deceased and is made party for that [73]*73reason, but is not his widow, bnt was legally divorced in his lifetime, and in the decree all her rights to and in his estate, living and dead, were finally determined;, that deceased left property located in said Lawrence county; that said Thomas Joseph O’Brien, Mary Kiely, John H. O’Brien, Alice O’Brien, Mrs. Richard O’Brien,' Ellen Meany Power, otherwise known as Mrs. Patrick Power, The Mission of the Immaculate Virgin, etc.,, Godfrey Schilling, Commissary, etc., are non-residents of Missouri; and asks that said will may be proved, and an issue be made up whether the said writing be the will of Maurice O’Brien or not.

Defendants, Lewis L. Allen, Thomas Lustenberger, The Lawrence County Bank, Eliza O’Brien, Daniel Healy, and Alice Daily were served with summons; all the other defendants by publication. '

August 23, 1900, Alice Daily and Eliza O’Brien filed their separate answer, alleging that they deny all allegations, not specifically admitted; admit the death of Maurice O ’Brien and that Thomas, Mary and Alice are his sole surviving children; aver that if Maurice O’Brien did sign the instrument propounded as his will, then at the time of signing the writing mentioned in the amended petition, said Maurice 0 ’Brien was of unsound mind and was not capable of making a will and was unduly influenced in signing the same; that at the time of the order of publication more than five years had elapsed since the rejection of the will by the probate court; and assert no information whether plaintiff is a corporation or not, and deny it.

L. L. Allen filed his separate answer denying all the allegations of the petition.

All the other defendants failed to plead.

August 23, 1900, plaintiff filed replication, denying all allegations of new matter in the answer of Alice Daily and Eliza O’Brien.

F. C. Johnson, one of the attesting witnesses, testified that Maurice O’Brien was over twenty-one years [74]*74of age. He owned Ms dwelling house in Pierce City, and notes and money, and had property in Chicago. The last years of his life he was in quite feeble health; he stayed about home most of the time; of course he came down town occasionally, frequently came to my office; I had some little business with him from time to time; he seemed to be a man of considerable information; appeared to be a man that at one time had been quite well educated; in later years he was not so strong and didn’t appear to take so much interest in matters generally; think he took some newspapers; he was a man who was inclined to pay attention to what was going on; he was a very pleasant man to have about, a good conversationalist, and pretty well informed; that was some years back that I have reference to; he didn’t go about very much and was not in my office very much the last year or so of his life. (Examining the will): This is the will. This is the will he wrote. I think, I prepared the contents of it. I outlined it for Mr. 0 ’Brien only a short time before it was signed. It was signed in my office the 17th day of November, 1894. The entire paper is in the handwriting of Mr. 0 ’Brien. He wrote his name to it in my presence and the presence of Otis C. Maxey.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 S.W. 901, 181 Mo. 68, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catholic-university-of-america-v-obrien-mo-1904.