First Presbyterian Church v. Hammel

324 P.2d 184, 182 Kan. 760, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 12, 1958
DocketNo. 40,872
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 324 P.2d 184 (First Presbyterian Church v. Hammel) 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
First Presbyterian Church v. Hammel, 324 P.2d 184, 182 Kan. 760, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 293 (kan 1958).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Price, J.:

This appeal is from a judgment admitting to probate the separate wills of Luther W. Guest and his wife, Bertha M. Guest, who died residents of Clay County, and denying probate of an alleged lost or destroyed joint and contractual will alleged to have been formerly executed by them.

The Guests formerly lived in Nowata, Oklahoma, and came to Clay Center in about 1915, where they owned and operated a dry goods store. They were people who stayed pretty much to themselves, but through the years were extremely faithful and devoted members of The First Presbyterian Church of Clay Center. They taught in the Sunday School and held various positions in the church and its organizations. The Guests had no children but were very fond of Helen Hammel Henry, a daughter of the Carl A. Hammel family who were friends and neighbors. Luther and Bertha were not the demonstrative type of people and their admiration for Helen was exhibited by no particular outward show of affection.

In 1948 Luther consulted with W. M. Beall, an attorney of Clay Center, and Mr. Beall prepared a will for him which devised and bequeathed all of his property to his wife Bertha, absolutely.

[762]*762Prior to his death on March 20, 1955, Luther had been a patient for several months at a hospital in Clay Center. During this period the responsibility and management of the business fell upon Bertha and, it proving quite burdensome, the store was sold on or about January 1, 1955.

Shortly after Luther’s death Bertha brought his will to Mr. Beall in order to commence proceedings for its probate. Following some discussion, and in view of the fact Bertha was the sole heir-at-law, it was decided not to offer the will for probate, and Luther’s securities and other assets were later transferred to Bertha’s name.

In June, 1955, Bertha came to Mr. Beall’s office and told him she wanted to draw her will. In this conversation she told him that she wanted to leave her property situated in Oklahoma to her cousin Helen Feist, and that she desired to leave all of her Kansas property to Helen Hammel Henry, of whom both she and Luther were very fond. Accordingly, Mr. Beall prepared a will disposing of her property as indicated, and Bertha executed it.

A few days later Mr. Beall, having realized that her will actually did not dispose of property located elsewhere than in Oklahoma or Kansas, advised Bertha of the fact and suggested that her will be rewritten to cover any such property. She approved, and told him she wanted any such property to go to Helen Hammel Henry. Accordingly, Mr. Beall drew a new will which left all property situated in Oklahoma to Bertha’s cousin, Helen Feist, and all other property to Helen Hammel Henry. Bertha executed this new will, and the old one, at her direction, was destroyed. Carl A. Hammel, father of Helen, was named executor thereof without bond.

Bertha died on November 14, 1955. She was survived by no relatives closer than first cousins, none of whom lived in or near Clay Center. A few days later Mr. Hammel, named as executor, filed a petition to probate her will. A cousin living in Council Grove filed written defenses attacking the will on a number of grounds, among them being that as of the date of its execution and for some time prior thereto Bertha was in very poor physical health and mentally incompetent, and that the devise and bequest of a considerable portion of her estate to Helen Hammel Henry was the result of the undue influence, pressure, contrivance and coercion on the part of Carl A. Hammel, her father.

Following a hearing thereon the probate court admitted Bertha’s will to probate.

[763]*763It appears that about this time rumors were prevalent that Luther’s will devised and bequeathed his property to The First Presbyterian Church of Clay Center. To set these reports at rest Helen Feist and Helen Hammel Henry, the beneficiaries under Rertha’s will, petitioned the probate court for an order admitting Luther’s will to probate. The invalidity of his will also was asserted by the opposition.

During the pendency of the appeal to the district court from the order admitting Eertha’s will to probate, and of the hearing of the petition to admit Luther’s will to probate, the opposition purportedly received information that a former practicing attorney of Clay Center had prepared a joint and contractual will for Luther and Eertha in 1942 or 1943, by the provisions of which they had devised and bequeathed, after the death of both, all of their property equally to The First Presbyterian Church of Nowata, Oklahoma, and The First Presbyterian Church of Clay Center. Pleadings were filed in Luther’s estate by the Nowata church setting up this alleged joint and contractual will, a copy of which was never found or produced. After a full hearing thereon Luther’s will of 1948 was admitted to probate and the petition to establish the alleged lost or destroyed joint and contractual will was denied.

From these orders the Nowata church appealed to the district court. The Clay Center church did not appeal and is in no way interested as a party litigant in this controversy.

Pursuant to the provisions of G. S. 1949, 59-2225, the appeals and all questions pertaining to the validity of the several wills were consolidated for trial in the district court. At the conclusion thereof the court made extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law, the gist of which was that Luther’s will of 1948 and Rertha’s will of 1955 were upheld and admitted to probate, and the petition to admit the alleged lost or destroyed joint and contractual will of 1942 or 1943 was denied.

From this judgment The First Presbyterian Church of Nowata has appealed.

Although appellant submitted 114 suggested findings of fact and 55 suggested conclusions of law to the trial court, and the abstracts and briefs in this case contain 285 pages, actually there is only one basic question involved — and that it whether the ultimate finding with respect to the three wills is supported by competent and substantial evidence. Other than what already has been related as to [764]*764the factual background of the matter, we see no necessity to detail the voluminous evidence and arguments touching the various aspects of the case.

With respect to Luthers will of 1948, the court found and held that it was duly executed in accordance with law; that the testator was of sound and disposing mind and memory and not under any restraint or undue influence, and that by its terms Bertha was devised and bequeathed all of testator s property, absolutely; that such will specifically revoked any and all previous wills, and that it should be allowed and admitted to probate.

These findings and order are fully supported by evidence.

With respect to Bertha’s will of 1955, the court found and held that it effectively revoked any and all wills previously made by her; that there was no evidence whatsoever that anyone unduly influenced her in the making of her will; that she possessed testamentary capacity and was under no undue influence or legal restraint whatsoever, and that such will should be allowed and admitted to probate.

These findings and orders are likewise fully supported by evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
324 P.2d 184, 182 Kan. 760, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-presbyterian-church-v-hammel-kan-1958.