Fulton v. Freeland

118 S.W. 12, 219 Mo. 494, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 235
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 13, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 12 (Fulton v. Freeland) 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
Fulton v. Freeland, 118 S.W. 12, 219 Mo. 494, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 235 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

GRAVES, J. —

Action by plaintiff, the son of William J. Fnlton, deceased, contesting the will of deceased made in March, 1889. By said will it was provided (1) expenses of funeral to he paid out of personal property, (2) that executor sell so much of testator’s property as may he required to pay debts and pay same, and (3) bequest of one dollar “and no more” to the plaintiff.

The remaining four paragraphs or items of this will read:

“Item 4th. I hereby devise and bequeath to my beloved wife, Elzie, all the residue of my estate, both real and personal.
“Item 5th. In case my said wife shall die before, or with me, I herein devise the residue of my estate to my stepdaughter, Lizzie McPike, in estate tail to her and the heir or heirs of her body forever.
“Item 6th. In case my stepdaughter dies without issue I devise the said .residue of my estate, one-half to Pauline Engleman, of Parkville, Missouri, and one-half to Mary Scott, of Pueblo, Col.
[501]*501“Item 7. I hereby appoint Joseph L. Freeland to execute this, my last will and testament.”

G-ronnds of contest, as alleged, were (1) that said will was executed “by and through the fraud, deception, persuasion and undue influence of the defendant Elzie Fulton and Joseph L. Freeland, Lizzie McPike, and J. P. Tucker, or one or all of them, and of other persons related to said Elzie Fulton or friendly to her, and conspiring and conniving with her to procure said instrument, whose names are to this plaintiff unknown, and for that reason cannot be here stated;” (2) testamentary incapacity, thus stated: “That long prior to the signing and publishing of said instrument the mind of said William J. Fulton had become diseased and subject to a morbid delusion and hallucination amounting to a permanent and fixed insanity incapable of being removed and eradicated from the mind of said testator, which said delusion was in substance that the plaintiff herein and said' testator’s divorced wife had entered into a conspiracy for the purpose of inflicting bodily • injuries upon said testator, and to wreck said testator financially; that said delusion was without reason and unfounded in any fact or substance whatever, but purely a delusion and insane conception of said testator induced, created and perpetuated fraudulently and wrongfully by the defendant Elzie Fulton and her friends until his death, February 9, 1902, for the purpose and with the intention of procuring from said testator the will sought in this proceeding to be vacated and annulled;” and (3) a general charge (in which is pleaded the alleged evidence) of a fraudulent scheme upon the part of Elzie Fulton, then Elzie McPike, a widow, beginning in 1876, when testa-tator was married to another woman, by which the said Elzie by illicit relations with deceased sought to gain undue influence over him, separate him and his wife, and then marry him, and procure the will in question securing to her and her relations the property and es[502]*502tate of deceased, which alleged fraudulent scheme it is charged was carried out by the said Elzie and others.

By answer the defendants admitted the execution 'and probate of the will, the death of testator February 9, 1902, the qualification of defendant Freeland as executor, and denied all other allegations. Further answering they averred that William J. Fulton was a citizen of Platte county when said will was made and published, over the age of twenty-one years and of sound mind, and that the said will, a copy of which was attached to the answer, was the last will and testament of William J. Fulton, and prayed that the same might be so declared.

Reply, general denial of the new matter in the answer.

As above stated, plaintiff is a son of deceased by a first wife. Defendant, Elzie Fulton, is the second wife and widow of deceased. Lizzie McPike is the daughter of Elzie Fulton by her first husband, William McPike, and Pauline Engleman and Mary Scott are sisters of Elzie Fulton.

The history of this cause as depicted by the versatile pen of plaintiff’s learned counsel lacks only stage settings for a modern play. More or less of it will be required for a proper understanding of the points in dispute, and especially on the point made that the trial court erred in excluding certain testimony offered. The' suit was brought in Platte county, but on change of venue was tried in Holt county.

In 1852, William J. Fulton was married at Adrain, New York, to Mary J. Hadley, then a girl of fourteen years and an orphan. The young wife had inherited seventeen acres of land and some money from her father. The young couple remained there, on this place, until 1863, when they removed to Wyandotte, Kansas. Prior to this removal the plaintiff in this case was born of this marriage. In 1876, the Fultons removed to Parkville. Upon reaching the West, Wil[503]*503liam J. Fulton began contracting with a railroad company to furnish ties, timber and wood, and though he and his wife, Mary, suffered the hardships of tie camps, there was amassed considerable property. Troubles began shortly after the removal to Parkville. Two miles south of Parkville and in the neighborhood wherein William J. Pulton had large interests and was working many men, lived the widow McPike, on what is known as the Roberts farm, the old homestead of Mr. Roberts, father of Mrs. McPike, and the home of Mrs. McPike before her marriage to William McPike. Pulton acquired an interest in this farm and he and Mrs. McPike farmed it together. Mr. Pulton at that time was a business man of large affairs, and it is claimed by the plaintiff that Mrs. McPike at this time conceived the idea of separating Pulton and his wife, Mary, and ultimately marrying Fulton, and then procuring a will of the character of the one finally made, and to this end she used all the wiles of a crafty widow even to the extent of maintaining illicit relations with Pulton. The evidence at the trial was largely by deposition, and a great mass of it pertained to alleged proof of the relations between Pulton and Mrs. McPike from 1876 up to their marriage in 1881. This proof came largely from former employees of Fulton, both colored and white, from employees of Mrs. McPike, and from parties who testified to neighborhood rumors. The testimony of this character was excluded by the court and of this action error is assigned here.

Another contention of plaintiff is that through the influence of Mrs. McPike, Fulton was led to believe that a conspiracy had been formed by and between his then wife, Mary, and her nephew, William Hadley, and others to kill Pulton and get his property. That Fulton believed there was such a conspiracy is amply shown by his acts and the testimony of his neighbors and friends, but as to Mrs. McPike’s connection therewith the tendered evidence is not convine-[504]*504ing. To the evidence bearing upon this alleged conspiracy we will advert later.

Following the thread of events it appears that on September 3, 1880, William J. Fulton sued his wife, Mary J. Fulton, for divorce. In his petition he charged that they had not lived together as man and wife since the year 1870, although they both lived in the same house and he supported her. That he first suspected his wife of infidelity to him in 1868, and from that time until the filing of the petition she had been guilty of adultery with divers persons upon divers occasions, some of which persons and dates were named.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hardy v. Barbour
304 S.W.2d 21 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1957)
Hammonds v. Hammonds
297 S.W.2d 391 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1957)
Goodale v. Wilson
186 A. 876 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1936)
Denny v. Hicks
2 S.W.2d 139 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1928)
In Re Ford's Estate
261 P. 15 (Utah Supreme Court, 1927)
Bushman v. Barlow
292 S.W. 1039 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)
In Re Allen's Estate.
203 N.W. 479 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1925)
Estate of Rickey
222 P.2d 628 (California Court of Appeal, 1923)
Everly v. Everly
249 S.W. 88 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1923)
Lindsay v. Shaner
236 S.W. 319 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1921)
Wigginton v. Rule
205 S.W. 168 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1918)
Diggins v. Diggins
149 P. 73 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1915)
Wade v. Northup
149 P. 451 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1914)
Stevens v. Myers
121 P. 434 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1912)
Turner v. Anderson
139 S.W. 180 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 12, 219 Mo. 494, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-v-freeland-mo-1909.