Coe v. Estate of Coe

15 N.W.2d 278, 234 Iowa 1113, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 448
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 28, 1944
DocketNo. 46394.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 N.W.2d 278 (Coe v. Estate of Coe) 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
Coe v. Estate of Coe, 15 N.W.2d 278, 234 Iowa 1113, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 448 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

Both the challenge to the probate of the will and codicil and the supporting and opposing testimony are of a type very familiar to the courts. The propositions of law involved for the most part have been before this court many times. Whether the maker of a testamentary disposition of property had sufficient mental capacity, and whether the disposition was the desired and voluntary act of the maker or that of someone else unduly influencing or effecting the act are usually determined by the facts. This case is no exception. The facts are the determining factors.

Viola Coe was seventy-nine years old when she executed the will on August 12, 1939, and the codicil on the 27th day of the next month. She had never married and had spent her life as the housekeeper of her bachelor brother, S. N. Coe, who died January 21, 1939, at the age of approximately eighty-one years. By his will, made in 1924, he gave all of his property — an estate of about $25,000— absolutely to'his sister, Viola. They were born at a crossroads settlement in Illinois, known as French Grove Corners, where their parents operated the grocery store and post office. There were four other children. The eldest, Anna, who married a Ilardenburgh and moved away into Iowa, or pther state to the west, had three children, and they are the proponents, Alora H. Dunn, Bertha Lewis, and Edna Bell. Another child, James E. Coe, married a neighbor girl, Harriet E. Wyckoff, and they lived on a forty-acre farm near by, which the wife inherited, until their deaths. This branch of the famity is represented by their only child, Royce W. Coe, the most active contestant. Another child, Jennie, married Reed, and the other proponents are their children or grandchildren. The youngest child of the old folks at the Corners, was Laura, *1115 who married a MeRili. They moved to Kansas and never kept in very close touch with the other brothers and sisters and their families. The other contestants are the sons and daughter of Laura MeRili.

Viola and S. N. Coe stayed with the parents. Viola helped about- the home and store and worked in the neighborhood and her brother, B. N., operated a farm near by. In 1892 they both came to Henry County, Iowa, where S. N. bought a farm near Mount Pleasant, which he and his sister operated until about 1914 or 1915, when he bought a home in Mount Pleasant, which they moved into and occupied until their deaths. Some'years after they came to Iowa their parents came and lived with them until the mother died in 1903- and the father in 1911. Their bodies were taken to French Corners for burial. S. N. and his sister went back to French Corners occasionally for visits and to attend funerals and for other purposes. They sometimes stayed at the James E. Coe home, and the latter and his wife and their son, Royce, and his children occasionally visited the Mount Pleasant home of S. N. and Viola. There appears to have been no particular friction between any members of the various branches of the family. Members of the Reed family visited at the Mount Pleasant home, and there were visits back and forth between the Alora Dunn family at Fairfield, Iowa, and Viola and S. N. The latter was a capable and thrifty business man. Both were active in church work. Viola taught a class in Sunday school for some years. After retiring from the farm they spent several winters in California. Viola was a bright, pleasant, companionable woman, neat in dress and clean in person. During her brother’s life she had no occasion to attend to business matters.

The contestants introduced testimony that in 1936 she was struck by an automobile in Mount Pleasant, and that this was the inception of a mental decline which became quite precipitate after her brother’s death in January 1939. This testimony, if it is true, tends to prove that she became more forgetful of persons and events, halting in her speech, careless of her appearance, untidy and unclean in her dress and person, and indifferent to matters going on about her. Much of this testimony covers a period a year and two years after the execution *1116 of the will and codicil. There is undisputed testimony that in the spring or early summer of. 1941, Miss Coe, before daylight one morning', slipped ont of her home, without the knowledge of the maid, in her night clothes, and was found 'wandering confusedly about the streets and in the city park of Mount Pleasant, and it was with some difficulty that she was returned to her home. Some months later she fell in her home and injured her arm. She died January 21, 1942, at the age of eighty years and five months. Two local doctors, in response to long hypothetical questions, not always in keeping with the testimony and including some matters of little importance, gave opinions against her mental capacity. Dr. Soucek, superintendent of the state hospital at Mount Pleasant, in answer to a hypothetical question, testified that it indicated the subject “was showing some signs of mental derangement — insanity,” but did not confine his answer to any particular time or date. On cross-examination he frankly and freely stated that several of the hypotheses in the question were not evidential of insanity.

For the proponents, lay witnesses gave testimony directly contradictory to that of the lay witnesses of the contestants. Dr. Sternberg, who was the doctor whom Miss Coe and her brother called when in need of a doctor’s attention, and who gave her a physical examination the day she executed the will, testified that he considered her of sound mind on that day. While we have briefly referred to this testimony as to the mentality of the testatrix for its bearing on the issue of undue influence, it is our judgment that the trial court rightly submitted the issue of testamentary incapacity to the jury.

I. Contestants urge that the most important error committed by the trial court was the withdrawal of the issue of undue influence from the consideration of the jury. We will set out, in substance, testimony bearing upon this issue.

The objections of contestants allege that the will and codicil were not the acts of Miss Coe, but were the expression and will of Alora H. Dunn, and the result of duress and undue influence exercised by her over the testatrix. Alora H. Dunn, a niece of the testatrix, is the wife of Irving H. Dunn, of Fair-field, Iowa. She is a lady of some business experience and the owner of property. On the morning of the day when he was *1117 taken to the hospital just preceding his death, S. N. Coe told his sister to be sure to get Mrs. Dunn to come down from Fair-field. She came that afternoon and took Mr. Coe to the hospital. After his funeral, and within two or three weeks, she returned to the Coe home and gave personal attention to much of the business affairs of Miss Coe. She spent some time each week with her. A. M. Van Allen, lawyer at Mount Pleasant, had drawn the will of S. N. Coe and it was in his custody. It named Viola A. Coe as executrix. Mr. Van Allen notified her of the will and she came to his office and told him that because of her feeble health she thought best to decline the appointment of executrix, and asked that an old friend, James T. Gillis, be appointed. She signed and swore to such a declination and request on January 31, 1939, ten days after her brother’s death. On February 15, 1939, Miss Coe and Mrs. Dunn came to the Van Allen office and Mrs. Dunn said that Miss Coe had determined to serve as executrix.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.W.2d 278, 234 Iowa 1113, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coe-v-estate-of-coe-iowa-1944.