Dimmick v. St. Patricks Catholic Church

251 N.W. 610, 217 Iowa 268
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 12, 1933
DocketNo. 41904.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 251 N.W. 610 (Dimmick v. St. Patricks Catholic Church) 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
Dimmick v. St. Patricks Catholic Church, 251 N.W. 610, 217 Iowa 268 (iowa 1933).

Opinion

Claussen, J.

Anna McElderry died in her home in Missouri Valley, Iowa, on September 13, 1932. On July 26, 1932, an instrument was executed which was offered for probate as her last will and testament. Objections were filed to the probate of this instrument, and in due time the issues presented by the offer and the objections were tried to a jury in the Harrison district court. At the close of proponent’s testimony a motion for a directed verdict was made by the objectors which was overruled. At the close of all the testimony, motions for a directed verdict were made by both sides. The objectors’ motion was overruled. The proponent’s motion was sustained. From such action this appeal is prosecuted.

On the day the purported will was executed, W. J. Burke, a banker in Missouri Valley, and Dr. Fogarty, the family physician of the deceased, went to the home of the decedent. At that time a sister of the deceased’s husband was staying with the deceased. Upon arriving at the decedent’s home an unsuccessful effort was made to induce her to go to a hospital. After the failure of these efforts, Mr. Burke, who had taken care of the decedent’s business for a number of years, requested the sister-in-law and the doctor to leave the room. They complied with this request and went to the front porch, which was at some distance from the room. After some little time Burke recalled them to the room, and at his request each of them signed the instrument, offered as a will, in two places indicated by Burke. The decedent was an elderly woman and at the time of the transaction was in poor health and was evidently very feeble. At the time the instrument was signed by the sister-in-law Ella B. Deal and Dr. Fogarty, the decedent was lying on a daybed in the room. The decedent did not sign the instrument in the presence of either Mrs. Deal or Dr. Fogarty, her signature evidently having been affixed to the instrument before the witnesses were summoned to return to the room. Dr. Fogarty states *270 that upon his return to the room he signed his name to the instrument in the places indicated by Burke and that nothing was said concerning the character of the instrument or the signature of the decedent on the instrument. The record of the testimony of Mrs. Deal in relation to what took place at the time the instrument was signed by her and Dr. Fogarty is as follows:

“He (Burke) just showed me where to sign. He came on to the porch where Dr. Fogarty and I were and told us to come in; witness does not remember just what was said. He said he wanted us to sign papers.

“Q. When he (Burke) called you to the room, what did he say to you in the presence of Mrs. McElderry? A. Well, he came on to the porch where Dr. Fogarty and I were and told us to come in.

“Q. What did he say to you? A. I don’t remember just what he said.

“Q. Didn’t he say anything to you about what you were doing? A. He said he wanted us to sign some papers.

“Q. State whether or not you knew at the time that you placed your signature twice upon this instrument, whether you knew you were witnessing the signature of Mrs. McElderry? A. Mr. Burke told us that was her signature.”

And again this witness said:

“The porch where we went is I think thirty or forty feet from where Anna McElderry was on the bed. I did not hear her talk in the room where Mrs. McElderry and Mr. Burke were when Dr. Fogarty and I were out on the porch, not a word. After some time Mr. Burke came to the door leading out on to the porch and told us to coime in. The porch is on the east side of the house, and the dining room where- Mrs. McElderry was is in the southwest part of the house. Mr. Burke told us to come in and sign, witness to her signature; to come in and witness her signature; that is all he said. Dr. Fogarty or I did not say anything at that time. Then Dr. Fogarty and I went into the room where my sister-in-law was. When we got in the room where my sister-in-law was Mr. Burke had this paper that I signed, Dr. Fogarty signed this paper first. He signed twice and then they showed me where to sign. Mr. Burke showed me where to sign, and he told me where to sign on this paper (referring to the will in question). He said ‘sign on this line.’ I don’t know *271 whether he said anything to Dr. Fogarty. When I signed Exhibit 1 it was folded up. * * * Dr. Fogarty did not say anything there when I signed this paper, Exhibit 1, not a word; and I did not say anything, not a word, at the time I signed the paper. Mr. W. J. Burke just pointed out the line on this paper, Exhibit 1, where I was to sign at the time; don’t think he said a word; that is my best recollection. After Dr. Fogarty and I had signed Exhibit 1 Mr. Burke took it; if he said anything I don’t remember it; after he took Exhibit 1 he put it in his pocket. I don’t know for sure what he did with it. He stood and watched us sign it and then he picked it up, and I don’t know what he did with it after that.

“Q. Did W. J. Burke say a word to Anna McElderry your sister-in-law, when you and Dr. Fogarty went back into the room? A. No, I don’t think so. ** * I don’t remeriiber that Burke said anything at that time, don’t remember what he called the paper. * * *

“Q. Did your sister-in-law Mrs. McElderry say a word after you and Dr. Fogarty and W. J. Burke went back in the room where she was until Mr. Burke left there? A. No.

“Q. You are positive of that? A. Yes sir. She did not make a sign or gesture or anything of that kind after Dr. Fogarty and Mr. Burke went back into the room where she was until after Mr. Burke left, as I remember.

“Q. You never saw Mrs. Anna McElderry, your sister-in-law, sign Exhibit 1 at all did you? A. No.

“Q. And she didn’t tell you that she did sign it? A. No sir.

“Q. And nobody told you there that she signed it, did they? I mean in the room, nobody said she had signed it? A. No>, not that I remember of. I don’t think Mr. Burke said anything after Dr. Fogarty and I went back into the room, that is my best recollection. I don’t remember what Mr. Burke called this paper or what he said before I signed it. So far as I remember no one said anything to me as to what this paper was before I signed it, that is right.”

The record is conclusive that the instrument was not signed by Mrs. McElderry in the presence of either Mrs. Deal or Dr. Fogarty. The instrument was signed by the witnesses in the presence of Mrs. McElderry and in the presence of each other. Nothing was said by Mrs. McElderry to the witnesses as to the character of the instrument or that the name written on it was her signature; in fact, the *272 record discloses that she said nothing. Mr. Burke said nothing to the witnesses in the presence of Mrs. McElderry concerning the character of the instrument or the signature which was written upon it. The statements made by Burke in relation to decedent’s signature were made to the witnesses while they were on the porch. It is true that Mrs. Deal knew that' the signature she witnessed was that of the decedent, but she knew this because Burke had told her so while she was on the porch, and not on account of anything done or said in the presence of decedent.

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Bluebook (online)
251 N.W. 610, 217 Iowa 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dimmick-v-st-patricks-catholic-church-iowa-1933.