Hamner v. Edmonds

36 S.W.2d 929, 327 Mo. 281, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 723
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 25, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 36 S.W.2d 929 (Hamner v. Edmonds) 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
Hamner v. Edmonds, 36 S.W.2d 929, 327 Mo. 281, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 723 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

Suit to contest the will of Bettie C. Hamner, deceased. From a judgment of the Circuit Court of Saline County in favor of plaintiff, setting aside the will, defendants have appealed. Ethelyn Hamner is the widow and sole devisee and executrix of John C. Hamner, deceased, who was a son of Bettie C. Hamner. She brought this action as plaintiff in her individual capacity and also in her capacity of executrix. The defendants are the three surviving children of Bettie C. Hamner and the children of a daughter who died after the death of said Bettie, together with the administrator of said daughter's estate. A son who is executor of Bettie C. Hamner's will was also named as defendant in that capacity.

Testatrix was the widow of L.J. Hamner who died testate in 1899. She and her said husband had six children, all of whom survived said L.J. Hamner. One Mary Belle, thereafter and prior to her mother's death, died intestate leaving as her heirs her mother and her five brothers and sisters. John, plaintiff's husband, died testate September 3, 1924, leaving no descendants. By his will he made plaintiff his sole legatee and devisee. The will in controversy was executed by Bettie C. Hamner on December 8, 1924, and she died in April, 1925, being then nearly seventy-one years old.

By his will, executed in 1896. L.J. Hamner gave certain real and personal property absolutely to his wife. Bettie C. Hamner whom he named executrix without bond, and directed her as such executrix to collect all money due his estate including life insurance, and to sell his bank stock and other stocks and bonds and within three years after his death invest the funds thus obtained in real estate in Saline County, Missouri. The will then provides as follows:

3. "After my entire estate (except what I have given my wife absolutely) shall have been invested in Real Estate mentioned I bequeath devise Said Real Estate to my said wife Bettie C. Hamner to be held by her during her natural life or as long as she shall remain my widow if she shall remain my widow I give her the right hereby to dispose of said Real Estate by Will to whomsoever she may please, but it is my desire that she shall have no power to mortgage or encumber said Real Estate.

4. "If at my death she shall refuse within the time prescribed by law to accept the terms of this Will it is my desire that she receive what the law allows her the rest of my estate shall be invested in the kind of real estate mentioned above for the benefit of my children who shall receive the rents and Profits until my youngest child shall reach the age of twenty one years at which time said Real Estate shall be equally divided among my children. *Page 288

5. "If after my wife under the terms of this will shall have invested in Real Estate the money mentioned shall marry I desire that she have one-third of the Real Estate during her life the other two-thirds shall be held for my children as mentioned above.

6. "I give and bequeath to my children Sallie C. Hamner, Lizzie S. Hamner, Riva Sue Hamner, John C. Hamner, Charles W. Hamner Mary Belle Hamner the sum of One Dollar each believing that as their mother love . . them as well as I do she will make suitable provisions for them at her death, but should they not treat her with proper respect as children should treat a mother in old age she can do as she pleases with my property by will.

7. "If my said wife chooses to make no will before her death then I wish my property in Real Estate to be equally divided among my six children above mentioned if the youngest shall have reached the age of twenty-one years if said youngest shall not have reached that age the property to be held as above mentioned until that time."

Within three years after the death of L.J. Hamner his said executrix purchased several hundred acres of land in Saline County with funds obtained from her deceased husband's estate, taking title thereto in her own name, and on June 13, 1902, she executed a declaration of trust stating that she held title to said real estate under the terms of and on the conditions stated in her husband's said will, which declaration of trust was duly acknowledged and recorded in the Recorder's office of Saline County. Later she sold and conveyed a part of the lands so purchased, her children, including John, joining in the conveyance. The balance of the land so acquired she continued to hold till her death. It is in the land so held at Bettie C. Hamner's death that plaintiff claims an interest as devisee of her deceased husband, John.

The purported will of Bettie C. Hamner, here in controversy, disposes of her own property and that acquired with funds of her husband's estate as above shown, as follows:

"I will, devise and bequeath to my four children, Sallie Ingram, of Marshall, Mo., Elizabeth Edmonds, Riva Sullivan and Charles W. Hamner of Miami, Missouri, all of my property, real, personal and mixed, of every kind whatsoever and wherever situate, and whether held by me in fee simple or as trustee, and whether by purchase or inheritance or as legatee under the will and testament of my late husband, Luther Judson Hamner, in equal parts and in fee simple. I intend by this instrument to dispose of all property which I own in my own right, and also all right and property which I may hold in the estate of my late husband, and in pursuance of the provision of his will and testament."

Sallie Ingram died before the institution of this suit and her children and husband and administrator are parties defendant herein. *Page 289

The grounds alleged in plaintiff's petition for setting aside said will of Bettie C. Hamner were (1) that at the time of executing same testatrix was not of sound mind and disposing memory and did not have mental capacity to make a will, and (2) that the purported will was procured by the undue influence of Charles W. Hamner, son of testatrix. The case was submitted to the jury on the first above mentioned ground only, the trial court refusing to submit the issue of undue influence.

Defendants, by their answer, admit the relationship of the parties, plead the will of L.J. Hamner, deny the allegations of mental incapacity and undue influence, make profert of the will of testatrix and ask that it be established as her will, and plead further that under and by virtue of the authority and directions of the will of L.J. Hamner said Bettie C. Hamner purchased said real estate and received deeds therefor "and became the owner in fee of said real estate, and was seized in fee and possessed of said real estate at the time of her death."

In the trial court the contest was waged mainly upon the issue of testamentary capacity of executrix. Defendants made proof of the due execution of the will and a sufficient prima-facie showing of testamentary capacity, whereupon plaintiff offered evidence tending to show the following:

About the year 1900 or 1901, testatrix became afflicted with inflammation of the joints, or arthritis, and from that date until her death could not walk and had to go about in a wheeled chair. In June, 1922, her mind was deranged, and on July 8 she was taken to a hospital at Marshall. Missouri, operated by Dr. A.C. Putnam, a doctor with twenty years' active practice. She remained in the hospital about twenty-six days. She was then, in addition to the arthritis, afflicted with diabetes mellitus in an advanced stage, with arterio-sclerosis or hardening of the arteries, not local but general and rather pronounced, and had senile dementia in a somewhat advanced stage, which ailments are progressive, i.e., grow progressively worse and are incurable.

It is in effect conceded that testatrix was of unsound mind when taken to the hospital in July, 1922. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W.2d 929, 327 Mo. 281, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamner-v-edmonds-mo-1931.