Fields v. Luck.

74 S.W.2d 35, 335 Mo. 765, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 455
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 17, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 74 S.W.2d 35 (Fields v. Luck.) 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
Fields v. Luck., 74 S.W.2d 35, 335 Mo. 765, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 455 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

This is a statutory will contest and is here on a second appeal. At the first trial the verdict and judgment was against the instrument and our opinion reversing that judgment and remanding the cause will be found at (Mo.), 44 S.W.2d 18. On a second trial the jury found against the will but, upon defendants' motion, the trial court set the verdict aside, as being against the weight of the evidence, and granted a new trial. At the third trial plaintiffs or contestants again prevailed and from the judgment entered in conformity with the verdict finding the instrument propounded was not the will of Margaret Luck Roff, deceased, defendants (proponents) have appealed. The property of which the testatrix died possessed was composed entirely of personalty of an appraised value of $9500, hence our jurisdiction.

The testatrix, Margaret Luck Roff, was a resident of Kansas City. She died at Research Hospital, in that city, March 11, 1926. The day preceding her death she executed the will in contest whereby she bequeathed all her property to the defendants, E. Chester Luck and Julia O. Pearson, who are brother and sister and children of Mrs. Roff's former husband, Robert L. Luck, "to be divided between them share and share alike." Mrs. Roff never had any children and the plaintiffs in this action are all of her collateral heirs. Plaintiff Samuel L. Reynolds is her half brother and the other plaintiffs are the children of John Fields, deceased, who was her brother. The contested will was admitted to probate by the Probate Court of Jackson County on March 20, 1926; the plaintiffs filed this action February 24, 1927. The grounds of contest specified in the petition are undue influence and testamentary incapacity. The trial court *Page 769 refused to submit undue influence as an issue and submitted the case to the jury on the issue of testamentary capacity alone. As noted the verdict and judgment was against the will. The record is voluminous and the real, substantial and what should be the controlling facts are submerged and well nigh lost in a mass of incidental matter, purported conversations many times repeated and slight circumstances of little, if any, probative value. We shall, however, attempt to piece together a brief statement of the history of testatrix from the time she first became a member of the Luck family and also endeavor to segregate the real and more pertinent facts appearing in the record bearing upon the issue of testamentary capacity.

Margaret Luck Roff was sixty years of age at the time of her death. She was somewhat frail in appearance but very active and energetic. In 1894 Margaret Rogers (the testatrix) was a widow. She owned no property except personal effects of small value. She had no income other than the wages she was earning as a waitress in a boarding house in Kansas City. At that time Robert L. Luck was a widower. He had two children, the defendants herein; the son Chester being then eighteen years of age and the daughter Julia fourteen years of age. Luck advertised for a housekeeper. Margaret Rogers applied for the position and was employed. When she had worked several months as housekeeper in the Luck home in Kansas City she and Luck were married. After the father's marriage to Mrs. Rogers, Julia remained at home for three years and until her marriage when she went to her own home and Chester continued to live at his father's home for eight years and until he married and established his own home. The evidence is uncontradicted that during this period and in fact until after the death of the father and husband an affectionate and parental relationship at all times existed between the stepmother and the children. They addressed her, and spoke of her, as their mother and she referred to them as her children. Mr. and Mrs. Luck continued to live in Kansas City for some time and then moved to a farm in the State of Kansas which Luck purchased and where he died in 1913. By his will Luck devised his real estate to his children on condition they pay their stepmother $3600, and bequeathed all his personal property to his wife. She was also the beneficiary in an insurance policy for $1000. The terms of the will were complied with; the defendants paying their stepmother the amount specified, $3600, whereupon she executed a quitclaim deed conveying to them all her interest in the real estate. The personal property was sold for $1000 so that the total amount received by the widow, including the insurance, was $5600. After the death of Luck the widow returned to Kansas City and resided for several months at the home of defendant E. Chester Luck. Later she lived alone and leased a number of rooms or apartments which *Page 770 she rented to roomers. In 1915 she married W.A. Roff and they lived together in a rented apartment in Kansas City until his death in September, 1925. Other than that Mr. Roff left $3000 in insurance to his widow it does not appear what, if any, property came to her at his death. There are numerous side lights in the evidence tending to show that testatrix was an energetic, thrifty woman; that she was a good manager, a capable business woman and competently and successfully handled her own business affairs. No claim or suggestion of any mental unsoundness or debility prior to the last illness is made. During the night of Friday, March 5, Mrs. Roff became ill. She requested that her stepdaughter, the defendant Mrs. Pearson, be called and at about four o'clock Saturday morning, March 6, Mrs. Pearson was notified by telephone that Mrs. Roff was ill and she went to Mrs. Roff's apartment. Mrs. Pearson wanted to call a doctor but Mrs. Roff would not consent. Mrs. Pearson administered to and cared for her stepmother during the morning and about noon Mrs. Roff yielded to Mrs. Pearson's importunities and consented that she might call a doctor whereupon a Dr. Hunt was called. The doctor diagnosed Mrs. Roff's illness as pneumonia, prescribed for her and stated he would return later in the day. About four o'clock that afternoon Dr. Hunt returned and upon further examination advised that Mrs. Roff be immediately taken to a hospital. Mrs. Pearson called an ambulance and Mrs. Roff, accompanied by Mrs. Pearson, was taken to Research Hospital and Mrs. Pearson stayed at the hospital with her until nine o'clock that night. (Mrs. Roff died at two-forty o'clock A.M. the following Thursday.) The testimony on the part of the appellants is that on the next day, Sunday, March 7, Mrs. Pearson and her husband, her son and his wife and Mr. and Mrs. E. Chester Luck visited during the afternoon with Mrs. Roff at the hospital. That afternoon Mrs. Roff requested that Mrs. Pearson notify certain friends residing in Kansas City, whom she named, recalling and noting the telephone numbers in some instances, of her illness. Mrs. Pearson at that time asked if she should call the plaintiff, Samuel L. Reynolds, Mrs. Roff's half brother who lived in Leavenworth, Kansas, by telephone but Mrs. Roff said it was not necessary to do that and suggested that Mrs. Pearson write to Mr. Reynolds. Later in the day Mrs. Pearson called the friends named by Mrs. Roff who resided in Kansas City and wrote a letter to Mr. Reynolds which was mailed the next morning, Monday. Chester Luck was the president and manager of the Adams Seed Company, and each morning before going to his office he would visit Mrs. Roff Mrs. Pearson spent much time daily with Mrs. Roff. Mrs. Roff was a member of several fraternal societies or organizations. On Monday, Mrs. Cox and Mrs. Phenie, members of one of these societies and friends of Mrs. Roff, spent several hours with her and on Tuesday a Mrs. Duncan, a friend and lodge *Page 771 sister visited her. These witnesses testified that at all the times they were in the hospital room with Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.W.2d 35, 335 Mo. 765, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fields-v-luck-mo-1934.