Estate of Townsend v. Townsend
This text of 105 N.W. 110 (Estate of Townsend v. Townsend) 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.
Opinion
The will in question was properly •executed on the 9th day of June, 1896, and the contestant admits that J. W.' Townsend was then of sound mind. She contends, however, that the will was procured by the undue influence and fraud of the proponents, or some of them. The jury determined the 'issue in the contestants favor, and whether or not the verdict should be permitted to stand is th'e most serious question for our consideration. Before pro[623]*623eeeding to the consideration of the evidence which the contestant claims justifies the verdict and judgment, we may-call attention briefly to the well-settled rules of law governing contests of this kind.
[624]*624
[625]*625Declarations made at any distance of time after the will was executed are all the less pertinent to show fraud and undue influence, where the will itself has remained in the testator’s possession and control uncanceled; and mere declarations, whether previous or subsequent to the will, amount of themselves to very little in the face of a prima facie showing that the testator was a thoroughly competent person, enjoying normal health, and under no apparent coercion or stress of error when he executed the instrument, especially if he looked personally after the details of' drawing and executing his own will. In short, a testator’s declarations, whether made before or after the execution of the will, aside from the time of the execution itself, are admissible chiefly to show his mental condition or the real state of his affections; and they are received, rather as his own external manifestations than as evidence of the truth or untruth of facts relative to the exertion of undue influence upon him. They may corroborate, but the issue calls for its own proof from the living. . . . There, on the whole, should be independent testimony indicating undue influence before the decedent’s declarations are considered, and then they are chiefly pertinent to show, the condition of mind susceptible to the sinister influence, and a testamentary act correspondingly.
The rule thus announced by the eminent writer is so just and so applicable to this case that we feel no hesitation in adopting it to its -fullest extent. See, also, Manatt v. Scott, 106 Iowa, 203.
When the case was before us on the former appeal, we seriously doubted the sufficiency of the evidence, and such doubt was expressed in the opinion, and we are now thoroughly satisfied that the verdict should not stand; for putting aside the declarations of the testator, there i£ no evidence in the record tending in any way to show that the will was not his free act. The case having been twice tried to a jury with the same result, we have given the evidence very careful consideration. The claims made for it in the oral and printed arguments have also been fully considered, and we are abidingly satisfied that there is no substantial evi[626]*626denee supporting the verdict and judgment. Many errors are assigned and argued, but, as we believe that our conclusion on the facts will be a final disposition of the case, we need not extend this opinion for a discussion thereof.— Reversed.
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105 N.W. 110, 128 Iowa 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-townsend-v-townsend-iowa-1905.