DeCrow v. Harkness

163 P. 630, 100 Kan. 144, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 283
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 10, 1917
DocketNo. 20,737
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 163 P. 630 (DeCrow v. Harkness) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeCrow v. Harkness, 163 P. 630, 100 Kan. 144, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 283 (kan 1917).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

West, J.:

James W. Harkness died January 28, 1914, at Colorado City, Colo., having made his will on the 17th. He was sixty-seven years of age and left as his heirs his widow, Jane Harkness; two sons, Charles E. and Claude ;■ two daughters, Mary E. Peterson and Elizabeth L. DeCrow, children by a former wife; and Brannon H., a son by his widow, Jane Harkness ; Myrtle Crozier, widow of a son, William R. Harkness by the former wife, and three grandchildren, the offspring of William R. For some time the testator had been in poor health. In 1913 he gave up his farm in Scott county, Kansas, and went to California, .thence back to Colorado City where he bought property and settled down to .pass his remaining years. He had some trouble with his kidneys for several months before his death. On January 2, he had a spell of nosebleed and called Dr. Gilmore. The doctor saw him again on the 4th, and on the 6th Mr. Harkness called at the office and settled the bill. On the 8th of January Dr. Fanning gave Mr. Harkness a prescription for nosebleed but made no examination. The former of these physicians gave it as his opinion that the testator was not able to transact ordinary business from the second day of'January until his death. The latter, that he was thus disqualified from January 17. Certain other physicians testified theoretically to the usual effect of Bright’s disease upon the mental condition of the patient. The daughter, Mrs. DeCrow, a school teacher, testified, among other things, that her father was in very poor health when he went to California in 1913; that he was “bloated like a stuffed toad, walking down the street.” She next saw her father in August, 1913, [146]*146at Colorado City, found him looking fine but troubled in mind. She knew this by things .he would say and by the way he would do them. He met her at the train and had something to say about some controversy with his wife a short time before. She next saw him on the 18th of January, 1914.

“Of course he was n’t expecting me, but he had been looking for me the day before; so when I went in he threw up his hands, and said, ‘Oh, my God,’ and he went into a fit or something. . . . Well, as I said, he threw up his hands and his face contracted, and then he went to throwing up; and he was n’t in a condition to talk for at least half an hour. . . . Then he turned over and went to talking; and said he had given me up coming; that he thought I wasn’t coming; and then he went and told me how sick he was.”

She remained with him until the 28th, when he died.

“Q. Tell the jury how he talked. A. Well, his principal talk lay upon the fact that he was sick and was going to die. He would n’t have been in bed, he said, but Dr. Gilmore came down there and treated him like a brute and done all sorts of things to him. He said he had given him some kind of medicine. And then he went on and told about this Dr. Fanning. He said he had given him poison and that was what put him where he was; if it had n’t been for him he would n’t have been in bed, he said. He said that was what was the matter with him.
“Q. Now, how long were you with him after you arrived on the 18th? A. Until his death. I was with him all the time except at night.
“Q. How much of the time were you with him? A. Well, we kept turn about. My stepmother kept watch part of the time and I part of the time.”

The witness further testified that from what she saw and the conversation with him, and from her own knowledge of her father, he was certainly not rational the day she arrived.

This suit was brought by Mrs. DeCrow and other heirs to set aside the will on the grounds of mental incapacity, and undue influence on the part of the wife. The latter testified that she not only did not influence him to make the will but tried to keep him from making one for fear it would make trouble with the children as she knew she would keep half of the property under the law. The jury found mental incapacity only. The defendants assign error in giving instructions eight and ten, in refusing defendants’ first instruction, and in overruling their motion for a new trial.

J. D. Custer, a stone mason, testified that he was acquainted with Mr. Harkness about six months, saw him on the 11th, [147]*14714th, 21st and 23d of January, 1914, and at that time his actions were not in all respects that of a man of ordinary intelligence; that Mr. Harkness was not right when he was suffering from his disease; “was rational sometimes and not right at other times.” He did not see him on the 17th.

N. B. Wallace, seventy-three years old, deposed that Mr. Harkness lived in the house next door to him for about three months, told him what property he had, that he wanted to buy a home for himself and wife, and expected to live there and educate his little boy, and expected the balance to go to his children. He seemed out of his mind at times and at other times not. Conversations indicated a very sensible condition of mind and the witness did not know that he was not at all times competent to transact ordinary business such as he had to transact.

Charles Harkness, a son, testified that he saw his father after he went to. California the latter part of September of that year, and he looked in better health than when he went, but could not stand to walk much, seemed to be bloated. “His mind seemed to be fairly well, although he asked the witness to advise him in some business matters.”

L. S. Boyer testified that he was'well acquainted with Mr. Harkness, had looked after his business for a number of years. Mr. Harkness was poor when he came to the county, but accumulated about four quarters of land and a considerable number of cattle, and some horses, and seemed to be in comfortable circumstances. He had a talk with him in September, 1913, about the disposition of his property, talked a good deal about his property in 1902 and 1903. In September, 1913, he said he didn’t intend to make a will.

The testimony on behalf of defendants requires somewhat extended notice. Mr. Hilligoss, fifty-nine years of age, real estate agent of Colorado City, was acquainted with testator about a year, ’had some business relations with him, called on him every day up to his death. “Harkness was capable of transacting ordinary business up to his last illness.”

Mr. Adams knew Harkness about six months prior to his death, met him every few days, walked with him from church, met him at the “checker game,” called on him at his last sickness. Said his capacity to transact business was as good [148]*148as anybody’s as far as witness could judge by his conversation ; this condition continued up to within a week of his death: he had his last talk with Harkness about a week before he died; his mental condition was good then. On the 17th of January, the day he made his will, he was confined to his room, and his mind was as good as it ever had been.

Mrs. Hilligoss, a nurse, was acquainted with the testator from late in the spring of 1913 until his death, lived close, visited at the house many times during his last illness; was at the house the day Mr. Harkness made his will, both before and after he made it; had a conversation with him relative to the' will both before he made it, in the morning, and after he made it in the evening of the same day. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
163 P. 630, 100 Kan. 144, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decrow-v-harkness-kan-1917.