Farmer v. Farmer

31 S.W. 926, 129 Mo. 530, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 2, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 926 (Farmer v. Farmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmer v. Farmer, 31 S.W. 926, 129 Mo. 530, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 161 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the circuit court of Ralls county establishing the last will and testament of Americus W. Farmer, deceased, late of said county. The contestants were his widow and all of his children save one, a daughter, Harriet E. Farmer, to whom he devised the principal portion of his estate, subject to a life estate of one third to his wife. A. W. Farmer executed the will in contest on the twenty-first day of January, 1892, and died the next day.

Over five years prior to the execution of the will in question he executed another will in which he made the same disposition of his property except he named a different executor and made a somewhat more liberal provision in this last will for his wife. The sole ground upon which the will is attacked is found in the following averment in the petition:

“That said paper writing is not the last will and testament of said Americus W. Farmer, but that said Americus W. Farmer at the date of said paper writing was not of sound mind and memory; that by reason of physical injuries received during his lifetime, and of his age, and his protracted and extreme sickness at said date of said paper writing, the said Americus W. Farmer was at said time of unsound mind and memory, and was mentally incapacitated from making a will, or any distribution of his property.”

The will in dispute was drawn by Hon. J. P. Wood, a member of the bar of that county, and was attested by himself and Charles Carter, Jr.

For the contestee these two subscribing witnesses testified that the testator was capable of understanding the business he was transacting and capable of executing a will that disposed of his property. Mr. Wood had drawn the first will in 1886, and testified that Mr. Farmer was at his office about six weeks before his [536]*536death and told him what changes he desired to make in his will. He had been his attorney for ten years.

Carter, the other subscribing witness, was a neighbor who had known the testator for twenty years and testified he was of sound mind. Dr. Downing, a physician who attended him in his last illness, testified that “he was perfectly competent to do so.” “There was nothing about his sickness like insanity.”

On the part of contestants there was much evidence of a most deplorable nature; testimony by all the contestants of maltreatment by deceased of his wife and children, and of the fact that- in 1886 he shot and killed one of his sons, William Parmer, and was shot by said son four or five times.

These witnesses testified to facts tending to show a most unnatural antipathy by the husband and father after a blow he had received on his head some twenty-four years before the trial, and a restless, troublous state of mind after the killing of his son and there were other witnesses to the morbid condition of his mind after the killing of his son.

In rebuttal of this, however, there was evidence by the business men and county officials of the county who were intimately acquainted with Mr. Parmer in his lifetime, and down to a time immediately preceding his death, that they saw no evidence whatever of insanity and regarded him as entirely competent to transact business.

Por the contestants the court gave the following instructions:

1. “The burden rests on the defendants to prove that Americus W. Parmer, at the time of making the will, possessed a disposing mind, that is, that he had sufficient understanding to transact his ordinary business affairs and understood what disposition he was making of his property, and to whom he was giving it. [537]*537If the jury find the will produced to be not the will of Americus W. Parmer, the verdict may be in the following form:

‘We the jury find the will produced to be not the will of the testator. ’

2. “The court instructs the jury that a disposing mind and memory is a mind and memory which have a capacity for regarding and discriminating and feeling the relations, connections, and obligations of family and blood; and that a person may have upon some subjects and even generally, mind and memory and sense .to know and comprehend ordinary transactions, and yet upon the subject of those who would naturally be the objects of his care and bounty, and of a reasonable and proper distribution as to them of his estate, he may be of unsound mind; and if the jury find from the evidence that in making the will in controversy the mind of Americus W. Parmer was controlled and directed .by hatred and morbid and insane delusion as to the natural objects of his bounty to such an extent as that he did not comprehend the disposition he was making of his property, then said Parmer was not of sound and disposing mind and memory at the time he made said will.”

Por the proponent the court instructed as follows:

1. “The jury will determine the question whether or not the will produced be the last will of the deceased, Americus W. Parmer. If the jury find from, the evidence in the cause that the deceased, at the time of the execution of the will, had sufficient understanding and intelligence to transact his ordinary business affairs, and understood what disposition he was making of his property and to whom he was giving it, then they will find in favor of the validity of the will, and in such case the verdict may be in the following form: ‘We, [538]*538the jury, find the will produced to be the will of the testator.

2. “The jury are instructed that if they believe from the evidence the instrument proposed as the will of Americus W. Farmer was by him signed in the presence of these witnesses, James P. Wood and Charles Carter, who, in his presence and at his request, subscribed their names as witnesses thereto; that at the time of his subscription to said instrument, and at the time of such subscription and declaration, he was of sound mind, then the jury will find it to be the will of the said Americus W. Farmer.

3. “The court instructs the jury that a man has the right to dispose of his property by will as he may choose, even to the entire exclusion of those who but for the will would be the heirs of his estate; and the jury are not to consider whether or not the disposition made by the testator is appropriate, or, in the opinion of the jury, just, but simply whether the paper propounded as his will be or be not his last will and testament.”

To which action of the court in giving said instructions, and each of them, the contestants at the'time objected and excepted, and still except.

The court refused to give the following other declarations prayed by the contestants:

3. “The court instructs the jury that a person who is of rational understanding in all other things, may in one or more particulars be insane; that there is a partial insanity and a total insanity, and that such partial insanity may exist as it respects particular persons, things, or subjects, while as to others the person may not be destitute of reason; that it is not sufficient of itself that a man should be able to describe his feelings tor give • suitable answers to ordinary questions; this he may do and yet the mind be too much diseased [539]

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 926, 129 Mo. 530, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmer-v-farmer-mo-1895.