Hart v. Hines

263 S.W.2d 13
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 14, 1953
DocketNo. 43516
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 263 S.W.2d 13 (Hart v. Hines) 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
Hart v. Hines, 263 S.W.2d 13 (Mo. 1953).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

Charles, E. and Alice' E. Hart, husband and wife, executed a will on September 8, 1943, containing this language: “It is our intention in making this will to make a joint will wherein the survivor may enjoy all the property during his or her life time, with that intention we devise and bequeath to each other all our holdings whether it be real, personal or mixed property; and at the death of both of us, it is our wish and desire that the property be disposed of as follows: * * Then followed a direction as to debts and funeral expenses, specific bequests of money and personalty, and a specific devise of certain realty (not here involved)'. Item Fourth provided that the “residue of our estate” was to go in .equal shares to the sons of Charles E. Hart and to named nieces and nephews of Charles E. and Alice E. Hart, respectively.

Charles E. and Alice E. Hart continued to live together as husband and wife until [14]*14her death on January 18, 1949. They owned, by the entirety, a home in Cuba, Missouri, at the time the will was executed and at the time of Mrs. Hart’s death. Charles E. Hart conveyed by warranty deed the Cuba property to defendants Hines (husband and wife) on December 21, 1949. The joint will was first probated after Charles E. Hart’s death on February 15, 1952. Defendant Oscar J. Hines, named in the will as executor, qualified as such, and was so acting at the time of the trial.

Plaintiffs-respondents, all but two of the residuary legatees (the other two residuary legatees, Eugene Hart and Lulu Suckow, were made defendants), sought a judgment declaring the joint will irrevocable after the death of Alice E. Hart and setting aside and cancelling the deed from Charles E. Hart to defendants-appellants Oscar J. and Eltbie Hines.

The trial court found, among other things, that prior to the making of the will “a domestic pre-arrangement was made between the parties looking to a final equitable division of their property between his children and her heirs and relatives after the death of both parties, the survivor of which was to enjoy all the property during his or her life time, and which arrangement culminated in the joint will of the parties, * * * ”, and that the Cuba property, owned by the entirety, “fell under the provisions of the will and was included in the property of the parties making the will and accordingly, disposed of by them by the terms of the will”; and granted the relief sought by plaintiffs.

In reviewing this case, we weigh the evidence and reach our own conclusions as to its weight, taking into account the trial court’s position to judge the credibility of witnesses. McElroy v. Mathews, Mo. Sup., 263 S.W.2d 1; J. E. Blank, Inc., v. Lennox Land Co., 351 Mo. 932, 952[1], 174 S.W.2d 862, 865 [1,2].

The parties have briefed several matters. The view we take,' however, makes a determination of a single proposition decisive of the case. Equity will under proper circumstances enforce a prior agreement that a joint will remain irrevocable after the death of one of the testators. And a husband and wife may by prior agreement between them include within the dispositive terms of a joint will property held by the entirety. Stewart v. Shelton, 356 Mo. 258, 264, 265[3], 201 S.W.2d 395, 398 [7], [8,9], [10,11]; Plemmons v. Pemberton, 346 Mo. 45, 52 [ 1 ], 53 [2], 54, 139 S.W.2d 910, 914[1,2], 915[3,4], 916 [5,7], For the purposes of this opinion, we shall assume, without deciding, that instant testators entered into a definite, unambiguous agreement to make a joint will which was to be irrevocable by the survivor and that such agreement as originally made included as part of the property to be disposed of by the joint will, their Cuba home held by the entirety. And we shall further assume, without deciding, that but for the testimony to be presently noted, there was sufficient circumstantial evidence which, together with the above-quoted terms of the will, constituted sufficient substantial probative evidence to support a finding that a prior agreement existed as to irrevocability of the proposed joint will. Making these assumptions, we are confronted with the uncon-tradicted testimony of the lawyer who drew the will. The pertinent parts of his testimony, to which no objection was made, were:

“Q. Now, Mr. Roberts, did Mr. and Mrs. Plart come to your office together on that occasion ? A. They did. I think they were in there a day or so before I prepared this.
“Q. You think they came to your office on two different occasions with respect to the will? A. Yes sir; that is right.
“Q. Now, on the first occasion that they came there, would you relate to the Court just what the conversation was between you and them with reference to preparation of this will? A. Yes, they brought with them a New [15]*15York will, if I remember right, a will that had been drawn in New York. And it was a joint will, man and wife, and asked me about preparing their will, and gave me that as a form or something to go by.
“Q. Now, on that occasion did you discuss with them who they wanted to name as the 'beneficiaries in their will ? A. I am sure I brought the stenographer in after a little while, and they gave me the names of those they wanted to have named in the will.
“Q. And did you make notes of those statements? A. I made notes of that.
“Q. Now, Mr. Roberts, in that conversation was there anything said with reference to the Hart home, where Mr. and Mrs. Hart lived in Cuba? A. Yes. I asked them about the extent of their property, and the kind of property each one had. And they had, I think, maybe cash of some twenty-five or thirty may be a little more than that in cash — and some bank stock, and I believe there is a piece of property down on the river that was probably in Mrs. Hart’s name. And then, when we came to the home, I asked them about how the property was held, and they said ‘by the entirety’, or, they didn’t say ‘by the entirety’, but they said ‘man and wife’- — they both owned it, and I said ‘by the entirety’. And I said, ‘Well, your will wouldn’t cover that’. It was my impression in drawing a will, that where a man and wife owned it together, that that was already fixed by law, and on the death of one it passed to the other.
“Q. And did you so advise Mr. and Mrs. Hart? A. I so advised them, that any will drawn would not affect that property. And they further stated in that conversation that was really the way they wanted it anyway, because they might want to dispose of it in a different way.
“Q. Well, did either of them say what different way they might want to dispose of the home? A. Well, they talked about Mr. and Mrs. Hines, and it was suggested by one or the other— I am not going to say which one of them made the statement — that Mr. Hines ought to have the home, Mr. and Mrs. Hines ought to have the home.
“Q. Well, was the other one present when one of them made that statement? A. Yes sir; I wouldn’t say which one made the suggestion, whether it was Mr. or Mrs. Hart that made the suggestion. * * *
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
263 S.W.2d 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-hines-mo-1953.