Hennings v. Hallar

149 S.W.2d 338, 347 Mo. 827, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 740
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 3, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 149 S.W.2d 338 (Hennings v. Hallar) 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
Hennings v. Hallar, 149 S.W.2d 338, 347 Mo. 827, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 740 (Mo. 1941).

Opinion

*830 TIPTON, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of -Johnson County, Missouri; setting- aside the will of John P: Ayler, dated September 7, 1938. Throughout this opinion the proponents will be. referred to as the appellants, while the contestants will be referred to as the respondents.

Respondents have filed a motion to dismiss this appeal for the reasons that appellants’ brief does not comply with Section 1060, R. S. Mo. 1929, and our Rule 15, in that it does not contain a clear and concise statement of the facts, and that the assignments of error and points and authorities do- not separately and distinctly enumerate the errors which appellants contend the trial court committed. The statement sets out the substance of the pleadings with a synopsis of the testimony of each witness. Some of the assignments of error, and points and authorities are too general and are subject to respondents’ contention, but the question as to whether the demurrer to the evidence-should have been sustained is sufficiently stated to review the evidence. -The motion to dismiss is therefore overruled.

■ The court’s instructions withdrew from the jury the issue of undue influence and .submitted the case on the issue of mental capacity. Was there any substantial evidence to support the verdict and judg- ■ ment setting aside the will ?

This necessitates a rather full statement of the facts bearing upon the question of mental capacity of the testator, who died October 11, . 1938, at the age of nearly eighty-one. This testator and his younger brother William lived together and neither was married. William .died in the year of 1930, leaving the bulk of his estate to the testator. Testator owned 7-71 acres of land in Johnson County, Missouri, and some real estate in Kansas at the time of his death. After the death *831 of Ills brother William, testator continued to live alone on the farm formerly occupied by them until September 3, 1938, when, by reason of distress caused by urinary retention, he went to Holden and consulted a physician, Dr. W. G. Thompson, who took him to a hospital in Kansas City, Missouri. His will was drawn by J. Walter Farrar, a Kansas City lawyer, and was executed on September 7, 1938. This will gave $5 to his sister Rhoda E. Hennings, $5 to his brother Perry B. Ayler, and the residue of his estate to Jesse E.- Ludlam, who had for several years rented parts of testator’s land and was at that time engaged in a joint enterprise with testator in feeding cattle. The will was probated in the Probate Court of Johnson County in October, 1938.

Farrar testified that he wrote the will at the specific directions of the testator; it was carefully read over to testator; it was fully understood by him; he signed both sheets of paper on which the will was written; he had known testator about fifty years and he was during all that time a self-reliant, hard headed business man and was so at the time the will was executed; and that the will was signed by this witness and Frank Herrington, who died shortly before the trial, as witnesses, in the presence of the testator.

On behalf of respondents there was evidence that tended to show that testator was one of a family of four sons and two daughters. Two of the brothers and one sister predeceased the testator. There was testimony to the effect that testator had on several occasions since the death of his brother William expressed a purpose to leave his property at his death to his heirs at law.

Rhoda Hennings testified that she was the sister of testator; .she went to see him the day after he entered the hospital; she told him who she was but he did not answer and he looked like he did not know anything.

George Hennings, husband of Rhoda Hennings, testified to the same effect.

Albert Dean testified that he saw testator in the hospital on October 2, 1938, and that he did not know the witness until he told him who he was. On cross-examination he testified that when the testator was aroused, he talked intelligently and he saw no difference in his mental condition from that which it had always been.

Bernita Shackleford testified that she went to the hospital September 10, 1938, to see her uncle, the testator; it would be hard to tell how he was as he had taken a lot of medicine; the nurse told her to talk to him but for him not to talk; he did not talk much and she did not remember anything in particular he said.

John Shackleford testified that he did not think testator’s mind was “just right” for a year before his death, and he based his conclusion on the fact that he was forgetful, and, also, that testator told him he had tried to get several young girls to marry him.

*832 Julia Burnham testified that she was a niece of testator; she went to 'see him on October 4, 1938; she asked him if he knew her, to which he replied: “Sure, I know Julia;” and he was apparently in a stupor for that was all he said.

Harry Wright testified that he rented some property from testator, located in Kansas. On September 8, 1938, he went to the hospital to see testator and told him he was going to Texas but he had a man who wanted to rent testator’s house, and he took $10 to him as payment on the rent. The witness wrote out a receipt and told him he would have to sign it. The witness had to read the receipt three times to testator before he understood; he then signed it.

Goldie Wright’s testimony was similar to that of her husband.

Respondents had no medical testimony tending to show the mental condition of testator. In rebuttal, they offered Dr. O. B. Hall, but his testimony was stricken from the record because it was not properly rebuttal evidence. The record shows that if Dr. Harkless had testified he would have testified to the same state of facts but that it would also have been excluded because it was not rebuttal testimony.

By agreement of parties, the hospital records were admitted in evidence. They show the condition of testator, as follows: “9-4 Retention catheter in place. Rectal examination revealed large prostate. Patient upset this evening. Threatened orderly with knife. Had maniacal phase. Thought he was going to be operated tonight and was afraid to sleep and threatened to leave. Refused everything per os. (Meaning mouth.) Given somnose. Sleeping.”

The records for September 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th show his temperature, pulse, the medicine he took, the amount he ate and drank, and the amount of urine and bowel movement. But they were all within the normal range and nothing was shown that did not indicate that he was mentally normal. In fact, the records were about the same until a few days before his death.

Appellants had testimony to the effect that testator had made a statement that he did not intend to leave property to any of his relatives.

Dr. Park Neil had testator in his professional care, seeing him several times on September 3rd, and thereafter morning and evening. He explained the chart and described his mental condition up until testator’s death. He testified that on “the morning of the 5th he seemed to be. mentally clear and aside from the notes here that he talked loudly, which I might modify by saying that I went to the hospital to see him and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W.2d 338, 347 Mo. 827, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hennings-v-hallar-mo-1941.