Hansen v. Waugh

21 N.W.2d 762, 237 Iowa 304, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 283
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 1946
DocketNo. 46790.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 21 N.W.2d 762 (Hansen v. Waugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansen v. Waugh, 21 N.W.2d 762, 237 Iowa 304, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 283 (iowa 1946).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

This is a will contest, involving a purported will and codicil of Rikka Waugh.

Rikka Waugh was born in Norway in 1852 and died in Des Moines in 1943, aged ninety-one years and five months. She came to this country as a young woman. Her father bought her one hundred twenty aeres of land in Hamilton County, Iowa, near Roland, a town fifty miles north of Des Moines. She married Neis Waugh and they lived on said farm until 1903, when they moved to Roland. Their four adult children were Erick, Nellie (Josendal), Bertha (Hansen), and Frederic. Bertha Hansen lived in Des Moines. Nellie Josendal lived in Roland, and Erick and Frederic on farms near Roland.

*306 Although Rikka Waugh was educated there is evidence that' she said she never had been interested in business affairs, that she knew little -about business matters, and that her husband had handled her farm and all the family business, including even her personal shopping, with which the daughter Nellie assisted. The rents from her farm went into her husband’s accounts. Apparently Rikka never had a bank account.

From his farming operations Neis Waugh accumulated a substantial estate, consisting of four Iowa farms totaling five hundred eighty acres, one hundred sixty acres in South Dakota, the home and several vacant lots in Roland, and certain mortgages and other personal property.

For the last few years of his life Neis Waugh was in failing health and John Josendal, husband of Nellie, managed the farms and business affairs, without charge, and Nellie and John did Rikka’s shopping. Nellie, Mrs. Brick Waugh, and.Mrs. Frederic’Waugh also assisted Rikka with her household duties and some of- them were in Rikka’s home each day.

In 1936 Neis Waugh suffered a paralytic stroke. Rikka suggested a guardianship. Upon Neis’ application John Josendal was appointed guardian of his property. During part of his illness Erick and Frederic, and Frederic’s son, Robert, alternated in caring for him at night.

Neis Waugh died intestate in October 1937. Upon petition of Rikka Waugh and Nellie Josendal, Erick Waugh and John Josendal were appointed administrators of his estate. Bertha and her husband, Fritz Hansen, wanted Fritz appointed, but Rikka thought that inadvisable because of his lack of familiarity with the matters and his inconvenient location.

Shortly thereafter Rikka said she was not capable of handling her own affairs, that her husband had always done that, and that she wanted John to do it because he had helped her all the years her husband had been sick. John told her he did not like to act alone and she said it would be all right to have Erick act as guardian- with him. Thereupon' Rikka Waugh petitioned for the appointment of Erick and John *307 as guardians for her property, stating therein that by reason of her age and certain infirmities, both physical and mental, and the disabilities arising therefrom, she did not feel herself able and competent to manage her affairs and look after her property rights in order to preserve the same for herself and family. Letters of guardianship were issued December 27, 1937.

Rikka Waugh was then a frail little woman of eighty-five, weighing about eighty-five pounds. She was nearly blind and was unable to read. Her blindness and feebleness apparently limited her writing to scrawling her name. Some of her signatures indicate that she was unable to see where she was signing. Although she was very feeble and nervous and exhibited some loss of memory, she was a fine, bright old .lady of deep religious convictions, loving and beloved by her children, grandchildren, and others who knew her. Her relations with her children and grandchildren were intimate.

Rikka continued to live in Roland for a few months after her husband’s death. About March 1938 she went to the home of her daughter and son-in-law, Bertha and Fritz Hansen, in Des Moines, for a short visit. She remained there until her death in 1943.

May 20, 1939, she executed the purported will, leaving $300 to each of her three surviving children, Erick, Nellie, and Bertha (Rikka’s son Frederic had died in 1937); $500 to each of three grandchildren; $300 to each of five grandchildren; and $1,000 to her church. Following these legacies the will gives Bertha the one-hundred-twenty-aere farm and the entire remainder- of the estate and nominates Bertha as executor.

July 25, 1941, she executed a codicil, paragraph 1 of which recites the death of her daughter, Nellie Josendal, and gives the $300 devised to Nellie in the original will to the widow of Rikka’s son Frederic.

Paragraph 2 cancels all indebtedness of Bertha and Fritz Hansen and directs that such cancellation shall not diminish the share that Bertha may be entitled to receive under the will and codicil.

Paragraph 3 states:

*308 “A few weeks after tbe death of my husband, Nelse E. Waugh, on October 25, 1937, my signature was fraudulently obtained to a petition for guardianship, and other papers, by my son, Erick Waugh, and son-in-law, John Josendal, and their attorney * * * solely for their own selfish interests, and all without my knowledge and consent. That my estate has been greatly diminished by litigation arising out of this guardianship, and the failure of the guardians to protect my interests in the estate of my husband and to protect my interests in my own property. The guardians having failed and also refused to keep me informed as to my income and expenditures of my estate, I now have no definite knowledge of the amount of my estate.

“That because of this fraud practiced upon me, I do not know whether there will be sufficient cash left in my estate to pay the legacies set out in my Last Will and Testament. Therefore, I am now reducing the legacy of One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars, to the Salem Lutheran Church at Roland, Iowa, as set out in Paragraph Four (4) of my Last Will and Testament, to Five Hundred ($500.00) Dollars.”

Paragraph 4 provides for the forfeiture of the' interest of any beneficiary who contests the will or attempts to have it construed or interpreted by a court. This paragraph further provides that it shall not be deemed to prevent Bertha from instituting any suit or proceedings for the construction or interpretation of the will.

The trial court fixed the value of Rikka’s estate, at that time, at approximately $35,000. Under the will and codicil Bertha was to receive more than $30,000; Bertha’s son $500; and all other members of Rikka’s family only $3,100.

Bertha Hansen offered the will and codicil for probate. The heirs contested on the ground that the execution of said instruments was procured by the exercise of undue influence upon Rikka Waugh by the proponent, Bertha Hansen, and her husband, Fritz Hansen. Trial to a jury resulted in a verdict for contestants. From the judgment thereon denying the probate of said instruments, proponent, Bertha Hansen, appeals.

*309 There was substantial evidence, some of which is disputed, as follows:

After Rikka' Waugh went to live with the Hansens in 1938 she was under their close supervision practically all of the time.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.W.2d 762, 237 Iowa 304, 1946 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-waugh-iowa-1946.