Hahn v. Brueseke

155 S.W.2d 98, 348 Mo. 708, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 468
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 11, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 155 S.W.2d 98 (Hahn v. Brueseke) 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
Hahn v. Brueseke, 155 S.W.2d 98, 348 Mo. 708, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 468 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

Action to contest the will of Johanna Lindhorst, deceased, on the ground of fraud and undue influence. At the close of all the evidence the court directed a verdict sustaining the will, and judgment was entered on the verdict. Contestants have appealed.

Testatrix died December 16, 1937, in the City of St. Louis seized and possessed of real estate and personal property. She was 83 years of age and left no children or other descendants, but was survived by nieces and nephews. She had been married three times. Her last husband died in 1931. Plaintiffs (contestants) are (1) the children of August H. Gaertner, a deceased brother of testatrix, (2) the children of Louisa Hahn, a deceased sister of testatrix, and (3) the husband and son of Laura (Hahn) Hack, who died subsequent to the institution of the suit, and the administrator of her estate. Proponents are the children of Fredericka Schoenbeck (a deceased sister of testatrix), the executors, and the other legatees named in the will.

By the will, executed March 8, 1935, minor legacies were provided for Laura (Hahn) Hack (now deceased), Edna (Schoenbeck) Brueseke and Oliver F.W. Brueseke, her husband, Rudolph W. Schoenbeck, and Carl M. Schoenbeck (nephews), Louisa Carstens and Hattie Carstens, relatives of testatrix's last husband, Emma Gaertner, widow of testatrix's brother, and Anna Huebsch, a friend. All of the residue of the estate was devised and bequeathed to Rudolph W. Schoenbeck, Carl M. Schoenbeck and Edna (Schoenbeck) Brueseke, with Oliver F.W. Brueseke and Carl M. Schoenbeck as executors without bond. Testatrix's other nephews, four Gaertners and three Hahns, were not mentioned.

The petition alleged that the will was procured by undue influence, conspiracy and fraud on the part of Carl M. Schoenbeck, Oliver *Page 713 F.W. Brueseke and Edna (Schoenbeck) Brueseke while they were occupying a confidential fiduciary relationship to testatrix. Fraud allegations in conventional form are fully set forth, and are based upon alleged implantation in the [100] mind of testatrix of false beliefs "discrediting" to contestants and "offensive to testatrix."

[1] This is an action at law. We are not concerned with the weight and value of the testimony or the credibility of the witnesses. We must determine whether, upon a most favorable view of the whole evidence and all favorable inferences therefrom, a submissible case was made for a jury on either ground stated in the petition. We shall attempt to state the evidence most favorable to contestants, considering their evidence as true, disregarding all countervailing evidence and inferences and all other evidence offered by proponents, except in so far as such evidence may be considered as aiding contestants' case. We agree with appellants that "the evidence tending to support the validity of the will has no function to perform on this appeal," but in view of the way the case was tried and appellants' statement, brief and argument, we find it rather difficult to determine exactly what evidence of proponents is considered as aiding contestants' case. In some instances the cross-examination of proponents' witnesses proceeds upon the theory that certain facts shown only by proponents' witnesses are conceded to be true and are favorable to contestants' case. In presenting the matter here, appellants' counsel view almost the entire evidence as supporting and aiding contestants' case; even denials by proponents of facts sought to be established by contestants are argued in aid of contestants' case.

Only proponents' evidence deals with the actual execution of the will. The will was executed in testatrix's home in the presence of Frederick William Schindler, Jr., a brother-in-law of Oliver F.W. Brueseke, and Richard W. Borrenphol, the husband of a cousin of Edna (Schoenbeck) Brueseke. Mr. Brueseke, according to Mr. Borrenphol's "best impression," had phoned him the day before about the matter. Mr. Schindler had received a note from testatrix requesting him to come and witness her will. He then phoned Mr. Brueseke's residence and told him to advise testatrix that he would accept. He came by later and took Mr. Brueseke to testatrix's residence. The will was in typewritten form and was on the table in testatrix's residence when the witnesses and Mr. Brueseke arrived. Testatrix greeted them, they were seated, and after a visit she told them that "on account of conditions she was making another will," "on account of changed conditions," and the will was executed. She did not say what the conditions were. Mr. Brueseke testified that he knew nothing about the will until Mr. Schindler called him. He further said: "I did not call him (Borrenphol), although he testified I did." No question is raised as to the formal execution of the will.

Appellants concede that "every witness who testified on the point *Page 714 said they had no idea who drafted the will and nobody was able to say who did the typewriting," but appellants say that some of these witnesses "lied about it," and that the evidence shows they did know. We think the evidence referred to, however, was wholly insufficient to show prior knowledge of the will by any of the proponents. There was no evidence from which an inference could be drawn as to who prepared or typed the will, or as to the terms of any prior will.

For the last ten years of her life testatrix had "spells." Her arm would start hurting her, and then "it would go to her head" and she would have headaches, quite often. When she had headaches she would "take anything to relieve her." "She was pretty ailing for the last ten years." "She had had pains all her life." She had had rheumatism for many years and had suffered very badly the last few years. She was always holding her wrist and her suffering would show on her face. She would take aspirin tablets, sometimes 25 to 35 per day. When the pains struck her, she would grab her arm and scream with pain. The pain would continue "two hours to all day," and she thought it was neuritis pains. After 1933, "she wasn't to the point where she was a cripple and couldn't walk, no, but at times she would always say how she is suffering and she would grab a chair and say that the only things that fixed her up, maybe, were sedatives. . . . She used to always go to picture shows four or five times a day to forget about her pain and to get away from the heat in the summer; she was always spending her time in the picture show because she was in just such aching all the time." She also went to Hartman's Church and the cemetery. From around 1934 down to the time of her death "she was in very severe pain, she had that arthritis and it was in her arm, and she had very severe pain in her arm, and she continued to take sedatives." She attended "Truth Center" to have herself [101] healed. She would try any medicine she was told about. From 1934 to 1936 "mentally she was all right, but physically she wasn't very good." "She was feeble and childish," "childish and old," old physically and mentally, "naturally, at her age." William Gaertner's wife, Laura, said testatrix was childish, "because she was always domineered and controlled by the Bruesekes and the Schoenbecks." The witness said she based the latter conclusion on a conversation, hereinafter set out, between Carl and testatrix in December, 1934, when witness was present. In the trial, contestants' attorney stated: "We are not even contending this lady was of unsound mind. . . . We are . . . saying she was feeble because of her age and physical condition." No issue was made as to testamentary incapacity, but it is contended that testatrix's mental and physical condition made her susceptible to fraud and undue influence.

The evidence as to fraud and undue influence turns about certain

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W.2d 98, 348 Mo. 708, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hahn-v-brueseke-mo-1941.