Heinbach v. Heinbach

170 S.W. 1143, 262 Mo. 69, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 170 S.W. 1143 (Heinbach v. Heinbach) 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
Heinbach v. Heinbach, 170 S.W. 1143, 262 Mo. 69, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 145 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

FARIS, J.

This is a procéeding under the statute to probate, in solemn form, the will of one Samuel Heinbach, deceased. The plaintiff is the widow and (except for merely nominal bequests to decedent’s three children) the sole devisee under the alleged will. The defendants Jesse Heinbach, Naomi Summers and Edith Britton are the children and heirs at law of deceased, and William P. True is the administrator of the estate of deceased.

Samuel Heinbach made the alleged will in controversy on September 27,1909, and died in Ralls county, Missouri, on January 3,1910. When the paper writing in controversy (hereinafter for brevity we beg the question and call said paper a will, and designate Samuel Heinbach as the testator) was presented to the judge of the Ralls County Probate Court, it was rejected and probate thereof refused. Thereupon the plaintiff brought this action in the circuit court of said county, and being cast therein, appealed to this court.

The petition was in the usual form; no point turns either upon its form or contents; so we need not cumber the record with it.

[77]*77The answer, after admitting the formal allegations of heirship of defendants, the death of testator, the rejection of the will by the probate court, and the appointment of defendant True as administrator, averred as affirmative defenses, lack of testamentary capacity in testator, arising from an unsound mind, superinduced by old age and the excessive use of intoxicants, and that the said will was the result of undue influence exerted upon testator’s mind in its alleged weakened state. But there was no sufficient proof adduced upon the latter point, so the learned judge nisi properly took this phase of the case from the jury, and thus it falls out of the case.

In the view which we are forced to take of the case, it will not become necessary to set out in detail the facts shown by the testimony of each of the several witnesses. The record is voluminous, containing as it does, over six hundred pages, and so we shall here content us with a sort of shorthand sketch of the salient facts in the case.

Samuel Heinbach, the testator, was a native of Indiana, where he married in 1872. Nine years later he abandoned his wife and children, of the latter of whom there seems then to have been two living, and came to Pike county, Illinois. Here at a point on the Mississippi River, about opposite the present village of Basco, he located himself and began to cut cordwood and do other work in the timber for a livelihood. One period of reconciliation with his first wife and family is shown, but whether this occurred within the nine years prior to 1881 or subsequent thereto and between the latter date and 1885, is dark and obscure in the record. There are both evidence and inferences in the record supporting either view. 'Likewise, it may be said in passing, there is some vague but hardly credible support for the view that his wife and family deserted him. But neither point is directly in issue or necessary to be Rifled on. We but refer to it in fairness.

[78]*78When the final separation occurred (the date whereof is upon the .whole record exceedingly obscure), testator returned to the eastern banks of the Mississippi River, leaving his wife and young family in an indigent and poverty-stricken condition, and again took up his labors as a wood-chopper and a worker in the forests. For many years he lived with one Theodore Johnson and kept “batch,” as the witnesses express it in the vernacular. About 1888 testator moved across the Mississippi River to a point in Ralls county some three miles south of Hannibal, Missouri. There he and Johnson had purchased together as tenants in common a tract of land containing some fifty-two acres. Johnson married about 1887 and went to live on this land, and verbal partition (subsequently consummated by mutual conveyances before this cause of action arose) between him and testator of this land seems to have been had, after which testator lived alone on his twenty-six-acre tract, subsisting by the cultivation of his land as a truck-farm and the sale, of vegetables and produce therefrom.

In 1901 a large factory for the manufacture of Portland cement was constructed on a'tract of 1800 acres of land near, or immediately adjacent to, the said land of testator. Testators’ land thereupon came into demand as building sites for the houses of employees at this cement factory, and for sites for shops and store's, so that a small village, called Ilasco, grew up thereon. This land is the bone of contention here, forming as it does practically the whole estate of testator.

When testator and Johnson purchased the land in 1887, they paid only some ten dollars per acre for it, but when this case was tried the value of testator’s part of it was laid at from $12,000 to $15,000.

Shortly after the construction of the cement factory testator began to lease building lots (pursuant to a rough plat made by Jack Briscoe, then his agent, now [79]*79of counsel for defendants)- on the basis, as a rule, of what the witnesses style “ground-rent” of one dollar per lot per month. There were something over a hundred of these leased lots (to be exact, 106) held by testator’s tenants upon leases- running from their several dates for ten, fifteen, twenty and twenty-five years, the ground-rent from which had for several years been bringing testator an annual gross income of from $1065 to $1120.

From about the middle of September, 1905, down to the date of. testator’s death, he had an agent (at first, and from September or October, 1905, to October, 1906, said Briscoe, and thereafter till his death, one H. F. Fleurdelis), who collected his rents and for the most part prepared his leases and receipts, or, to be more exact, filled in the blanks therein, as both the receipts and the leases (for the major part) were upon printed blanks. But seven out of some fifty-six leases are shown by the proof as having been made prior to October, 1906, and presumably therefore by testator himself. In 1906 the latter procured by default a divorce from his first wife on the ground of desertion. This wife had then ten years before remarried, apparently without the prior formality of procuring a divorce from testator.

Testator, as far back as the witnesses are able to recall, was intemperate, and this -condition grew on him with the years and after dramshops became plentiful and liquor more convenient at Ilasco. Touching the fact of his excessive use of strong drink the witnesses are practically unanimous, differing for the most part only in the degree of sottishness which they attribute to him. Some of them say that in thirty years’ acquaintance with him they never saw him wholly from under the influence of intoxicants; still others say that he was the worst drunkard they had ever known; others yet, on the contrary, say they have sometimes seen him sober, once for a period of two [80]*80weeks, continuously. Two physicians, one of them his family physician, say that he died of alcoholic dementia. One of these, testifying largely from the history of his case and partially hypothetically, says that this condition of dementia must have existed for as much as a year before his death, and it therefore included the time at which the will was made. Per contra, another physician, who had formerly likewise long been his physician, and with opportunities equal to any other witness in the case to know and observe his condition, swears that he was not a senile or alcoholic dement, but was of sound mind.

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Bluebook (online)
170 S.W. 1143, 262 Mo. 69, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heinbach-v-heinbach-mo-1914.