Heaston v. Krieg

77 N.E. 805, 167 Ind. 101, 1906 Ind. LEXIS 15
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1906
DocketNo. 20,504
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 77 N.E. 805 (Heaston v. Krieg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heaston v. Krieg, 77 N.E. 805, 167 Ind. 101, 1906 Ind. LEXIS 15 (Ind. 1906).

Opinion

Gillett, C. J.

Appellee instituted this action against John Heaston, as executor of the probated will of Esther McGlinn, deceased, and the persons named as devisees and legatees under said instrument, to contest the validity of such will and to probate in its stead an alleged subsequent will of said decedent. The document assailed bore date of April 30, 1903, and the later writing, under which appel[105]*105lee claimed as a legatee, was signed September 1, 1903. The action resulted in a judgment revoking the probate of said former instrument and establishing as the last will and testament of said decedent the writing brought forward by appellee.

As the complaint appears in the record, there are two exhibits attached, one of which was a copy of the writing last mentioned and the other a copy of the will of John McGlinn, the deceased husband of said Esther. The exhibit of the alleged will of which appellee was the proponent is in the words and figures following, viz.:

“Contract.
This agreement is entered into by and between Esther McGlinn, of Huntington county, Indiana, and Emma L. Krieg, of Huntington county, Indiana, party of the second part, and its provisions are as follows, to wit:
(1) Said party of the second part, Emma L. Krieg, is to take care of the first party, Esther MeGlinn, during the balance of her natural life, including boarding, lodging, washing, furnish her with all reasonable and necessary wearing apparel, medical attendance, and nurse her in sickness as required, and furnish and do all such things as may be reasonably required for her comfort and support during her remaining years, said home to be furnished in Huntington, Indiana, the free use of the property on East Franklin street where said parties now reside being permitted for said purpose, as well as a residence for the other members of the family of the second party.
(2) In consideration of the things to be done and furnished by said Emma L. Krieg, for and on behalf of said Esther McGlinn, and also the love and affection which each of said parties has for the other, said Esther McGlinn is to convey, by proper deed of conveyance to said Emma L. Krieg, the undivided one-half interest in lot No. 133 in the original plat of the city of Huntington, Indiana, in addition to which there shall be paid to said Emma L. Krieg, at the [106]*106death of said Esther McGlinn, the whole of the residue of the estate, real, personal and mixed, of which she shall die seized, after deducting the following, to wit: (a) The undivided one-half of said estate which is to go to the brothers, sisters, and descendants of said John McGlinn, deceased, by the provisions of item one of his will, which provisions are to be carried out. (b) There shall also be deducted from the residue of the estate the sum of $200 to be paid to John M. Krieg and a like sum—$200—to be paid to Esther Ellen Bailey. All the remainder, however, shall be paid by the legal representative or representatives of my estate to said Emma L. Krieg.
(3) The provisions of this instrument being .required for the comfortable and reasonable support of said Esther McGlinn, the same are to supersede any and all wills or codicils which have been or may hereafter be made by her.
Witness our hands this 1st day of September, 1903.
Esther McGlinn.
Emma L. Krieg.
This instrument was signed by the parties thereto in our presence and signed by us in their presence, this 1st day of September, 1903.
U. S. Leah,
Eben Lesh.”

The will of said John McGlinn, according to the copy thereof which is made an exhibit to the complaint, gave to his wife all of his property for and during her natural life, and, in the following language, it gave her authority to dispose of the same:

“I do hereby authorize her, with advice of my executors hereafter named, to sell and with said executors to execute all necessary titles, papers, deed, and contract for whatever portion of said property my said wife may deem necessary for her support and comfort, and with the further power to dispose of the one-half of the residue of surplus if any shall remain at her death by will or executory devise, and I will and direct that the other half of said residue shall be equally divided amongst my brothers and sisters, if living, and if deceased then to their descendants.”

[107]*1071. The first assignment of error is based on the overruling of a demurrer to the complaint, and the first objection which appellants’ counsel make to said pleading is thus stated by them: “The exhibits to the complaint are not parts thereof, and hence Emma L. Krieg is not a party in interest, and cannot legally contest the will of Esther McGlinn.” It is alleged in the complaint, among other things, “that on September 1, 1903, said Esther McGlinn duly revoked said alleged will by an instrument in writing, signed by her and attested and subscribed by two competent witnesses, as required by law, a copy of which is hereto attached and made a part hereof and referred to as exhibit A.” It is further alleged “that the plaintiff is a foster daughter of said decedent, and by the terms of her last will is named as a legatee, and. as such is entitled to maintain this action.” The specific relief prayed for is “that the probate of said will be annulled, and that the one herein proposed be admitted to probate in lieu thereof.” Appellants admit in their brief that the copy of the will of John McGlinn, deceased, was attached to the complaint by order of the court, on their motion, so, although it is not necessary to meet the objection stated to examine said exhibit, we may say in passing, as applied to other objections urged against the complaint, that appellants, by their conduct, are estopped to deny that the copy of that will is a proper exhibit.

2. [108]*1083. 4. [107]*107As to the copy of the instrument of September 1, 1903, appellants’ counsel cite, as authority for the proposition that said copy is not a proper exihibt, certain decisions of this court to the effect that in an action to contest a will a copy of the instrument in contest cannot properly be attached as an exhibit. These cases are not in point, for the copy in question is the one under which appellee claims; the fact that she made it an exhibit tends to show, as does also the general structure of the complaint, that her effort in part was to procure the probate of said [108]*108instrument. She had a right, in the action to contest the earlier will, which she claimed had been revoked by the subsequent instrument, to propound said instrument for probate, if it amounted to a will. So in the strictest sense of the term, it was the foundation of her cause of action. It was not mere evidence of a right; it was her right of action. Tier complaint in that respect would not have -been good unless she had incorporated the copy in such pleading, or made it an exhibit. The-rule of the code (§365 Burns 1901, §362 R. S. 1881) that where a pleading is founded on a written instrument the original or a copy thereof must be filed is imperative, and in this respect the rule of practice in this State is stricter than at common law. Price v.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.E. 805, 167 Ind. 101, 1906 Ind. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heaston-v-krieg-ind-1906.