Eyman v. Howard

309 P.2d 664, 181 Kan. 90, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 320
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 6, 1957
DocketNo. 40,414
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 309 P.2d 664 (Eyman v. Howard) 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
Eyman v. Howard, 309 P.2d 664, 181 Kan. 90, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 320 (kan 1957).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroeder, J.:

This is an appeal from an order in the lower court admitting a will to probate wherein appellants seek to have the will denied probate on the ground that undue influence was exerted upon the testatrix by the petitioner.

The appellee, Mamie E. Howard, after the death of her mother, Margaret Olive Eyman, petitioned the probate court for the admission of her mother s will to probate. The petition named all of the heirs as follows: Mamie E. Howard, a daughter, Hazel Craner, a daughter, Joseph Harvey Eyman, a son, Margaret Meier, a granddaughter, and Maynard Morris, a grandson (the latter two being the surviving children of a prior deceased daughter). All except the petitioner objected to the admission of the will to probate on the ground that the will was executed by reason of undue influence exerted upon the testatrix by Mamie E. Howard. The probate court denied probate and upon appeal to the district court the will was admitted to probate after full hearing.

After the usual provisions the will disposed of the decedent’s property in the following manner: To Margaret Meier, $100.00; To Maynard Morris, $1.00; To Joseph Harvey Eyman, “my” King Solomon Temple rug and an unimproved eighty acres; To Mamie E. Howard, an improved eighty acres together with all household furniture and effects except the King Solomon Temple rug; To Lura Cole, $300.00, to be deducted from the bequest of Joseph Harvey Eyman; and the residue to Joseph Harvey Eyman, Mamie E. Howard and Hazel Craner, in equal shares. That portion given to Hazel Craner was then set up in trust naming Mamie E. Howard trustee to serve without bond. Mamie was also named executrix, to serve without bond.

Hazel Craner, an incompetent person, is confined to an institution in the state of Colorado. She is represented by Katheryn S. Tarwater as guardian ad litem.

The appellants contend (1) That the alleged will was not executed according to law; (2) That the testatrix was not mentally competent to make a will on June 12, 1954, the date of the execution of the alleged will; and (3) That the terms of the will did not reflect the true desires and wishes of the testatrix, but were the results of undue influence exercised by her daughter, Mamie E.

[92]*92Howard. While appellants admit in argument that the decedent was not an incompetent person on the date of the execution of the will, they contend she was so physically weakened and seriously ill that when coupled with the use of sedatives for medication her mental capacity was such that she was easily influenced. Their primary contention is that the alleged will was drawn under undue influence.

The evidence disclosed that Margaret Olive Eyman died on the 22nd day of June, 1954, at Independence, Kansas, a resident of Elk county, only ten days after making the alleged will, never having left the hospital at Independence, Kansas, after her admission on the 20th day of May, 1954. Dr. Porter M. Clark, an M. D., first saw the decedent in December, 1951, and treated her at the hospital in Independence early in the year 1952. Dr. Clark talked to her at that time, stating to her in effect that she was a sick woman and ought “to get her house in order.” The decedent inquired as to whether she was about to die, and upon being informed to the contrary, stated “if I’m not going to die, I’m not going to make a will.” Dr. Clark indicated that it came to his attention that the decedent had a hard time getting along with her family.

Dr. Clark again saw the decedent about a year later and again not long before her death on the 20th day of May, 1954, when she was admitted to the hospital. He then administered dilaudid, a narcotic which represses fear and anxiety, allows the patient to breathe easier and relieves hunger. On the evening of the same day which the testarix entered the hospital, morphine was administered to her but not more dilaudid. Thereafter, an eighth of a grain of morphine was administered daily as required by the patient until her death, which was caused by congestive heart failure.

On the 21st day of May, 1954, the decedent seemed worried and discussed her illness with Dr. Clark, who advised her that she should take care of her business, and that in all probability she was confined with her terminal illness. The decedent then asked Dr. Clark who could make a will for her. The doctor declined to recommend any particular attorney, but after the decedent suggested one, she related to the doctor that she did not want to use him because she was dissatisfied with the way he had handled a certain matter. The' decedent then suggested another attorney, O. L. O’Brien, of Independence, Kansas.

[93]*93Mamie E. Howard, the only close relative who lived near the decedent and helped her with her private affairs, then consulted with Mr. O’Brien at his home. She informed him that her mother wanted to make a will but that she did not know what provisions her mother desired to put in the will.

Prior to the second visit of Mamie with Mr. O’Brien, the attorney himself visited Dr. Clark and asked him whether or not the decedent was mentally competent to make a will. The doctor informed Mr. O’Brien that in his opinion she was competent, but that she was a very sick woman. When Mamie called at the office of Mr. O’Brien on her second visit, she related that she had talked to Dr. Clark and her mother, and that her mother wanted Mr. O’Brien to come out and prepare a will for her. Mr. O’Brien asked Mamie if she had any idea what her mother wanted to do and she said she really didn’t know, except that she had a general idea of it. The attorney then asked for Mamie’s idea about it and then prepared a rough draft of the will incorporating some of his own ideas into the will, particularly concerning a trust for Hazel Craner, the decedent’s incompetent daughter.

On the 11th day of June, 1954, Mr. O’Brien met at the hospital with Dr. Clark where they together went to the room of the decedent. Mamie Howard was also present in the room. The decedent then related to Mr. O’Brien that she had been thinking about making a will and that Dr. Clark had told her that she was very sick. Decedent further related that she thought she ought to make a will and that it was important that she make a will because of the family situation. She commented that her daughter in Colorado, adjudicated incompetent, was her main problem. She did not want the state of Colorado to gobble up what she left to her for her care and hospital expense. She wanted to know if she could make a will to do something about that. Mr. O’Brien then read the provisions of the rough draft prepared to the decedent, and the following is his testimony on this point:

“This is the one I had drafted, . . . and when I read that clause to her about giving the hundred dollars to the one Margaret and one dollar to Maynard, why she wanted to know if that would hold. She said she didn’t want them to have any more than that because she said they hadn’t done anything for her, . . . and then the next thing that she stopped me at as I read it on down is this paragraph (c), ‘To my grandson Allan Howard, I given my Buick automobile.’ She said, . . . 7 don’t want to give him the car. I think he has got a car’, ... I said ‘Give me an idea how [94]*94you want it . . And so she thought about that quite a little while and discussed it and finally she, I think she spoke to Mrs. Howard about it, too, and Mrs. Howard told her it was up to her, whatever she wanted to do with it, so ...

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Related

In Re the Estate of Bennett
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Bluebook (online)
309 P.2d 664, 181 Kan. 90, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eyman-v-howard-kan-1957.