In Re Estate of Carrie M. Ruedy

66 N.W.2d 387, 245 Iowa 1307, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 490
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 19, 1954
Docket48595
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 66 N.W.2d 387 (In Re Estate of Carrie M. Ruedy) 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
In Re Estate of Carrie M. Ruedy, 66 N.W.2d 387, 245 Iowa 1307, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 490 (iowa 1954).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

— Carrie M. Ruedy died a resident of Clinton Couxxty on October 22, 1-953. On October 27, 1953, proponentsappellees filed for probate axx instrument, executed June 26, 1953, which purported to be her last will and testament. To this her son, Ralph Wilsoxx, filed objections, raising the issues of lack of proper executioxx, undue ixifiuenee, and lack of mental capacity. The trial court having directed a verdict for the-proponents axxd rendered its judgment admitting the will to probate, the contestant appealed. The only error assigxxed or argued ixx this court concerns the mental capacity of the testatrix, so that under familiar rules the questions of proper execution and uxxdue influence are deemed abandoned axxd no further attention will be givexi to them.

The will challenged by contestant, after providing for payment of debts, makes specific bequests of $750 each to Lea Bor char dt axxd Yerxxon Nelson; of $500 to a niece, Helen Moore Grigsby; axxd of $250 each to Annie Lee and C. K. Lee. Except as to Helexx Moore Grigsby we are xxot told whether these beneficiaries were related to the testatrix. Neither are we told the amouxxt of her property; but there is some evidence she had rexital realty which was of sxxbstantial value, and we assxxme the specific bequests above detailed were not large enough ixx amount to reduce the estate seriously.

There is also a bequest of $1000 to Clem Wilson, the oldest soxx of testatrix. It is provided, however, that if he were deceased at the time of the death of testatrix the bequest should be paid to his childrexx in eqxxal shares; and if he left no children the bequest should revert back to and become a part of-the remainder of the estate. The record shows that Clem Wilson had not been heard from for many years, since about the exxd of World War I.

The remaixxder and apparently the greater part of the estate is left in trust to the City Natioxial Bank of Clinton with directions to pay the net income to the contestant during his natural life. At his death the income is to be paid to his two *1310 sons in equal shares until the youngest reaches the age of twenty-one, when the trust is to terminate and the principal is to be paid to the two grandsons. A previous will, revoked by the terms of the contested instrument, had left the remainder of the estate outright to the contestant.

I. For the contestant there is the usual procession of witnesses who tell of forgetfulnesses, eccentricities, unclean personal habits and delusions of the testatrix. Edward L. Nye, whose wife sold insurance for a woman’s fraternal insurance company, testified that testatrix constantly forgot to pay her premiums, and he or his wife found it necessary to call her or go to her home for them. Her home was shabby and dirty; she sometimes was not coherent in her conversation; sometimes she would not answer questions. She would talk of her son Clem, who had disappeared about the time of World War I. Mrs. Nye attempted to get her to eliminate him as one of the beneficiaries in her insurance policy, also to have her change the designation of a deceased sister, but she did not make the suggested changes. Although this witness fixed no dates for the observations made, other than that in the last year and one-half of her life testatrix was confused “at most times”, he expressed the opinion she was of unsound mind at the time of making her will. His wife’s testimony was much the same, except that she added that Mrs. Ruedy said she had no money to send to her son, the contestant, who was ill, when in fact she had rents coming in regularly.

Effie Olson, Isabelle Perryman, the latter’s husband, Arthur Perryman, and Blanche Brown, all neighbors or former tenants of testatrix in her apartments, were each of the opinion she was of unsound mind, or did not know what she was doing, or was unable to take care of her business. (It may be said in passing there is no evidence she did not care for her business almost until the date of her death.) In support of their conclusions as- to testatrix’s mental incapacity, these witnesses told of the dirt in her home; that she would save cartons, boxes, old newspapers, and other discarded objects, and her rooms were filled with them. They testified she was given to searching in .garbage cans and retrieving partly spoiled food therefrom. She would then cut out the spoiled parts and use what she *1311 could save. She accused Mrs. Perryman of trying to poison her to get her money. She said she held conversations with a deceased grandson, Maynard Wilson, a son of contestant, whom she had adopted and reared. She accused Mrs. Perryman of stealing $50, which was later found in testatrix’s closet. She forgot payments made by her tenants, and accused them of delinquencies, and when they produced receipts she denied her handwriting. She,thought her properties were worth $12,000 to $15,000 apiece, according to the witness Brown, who testified they were in a bad state of repair and if inspected would have been condemned. When the Perrymans moved from her apartment she claimed a bed and a chair they had loaded on the truck as hers, and although the property was theirs they let her take it rather than have a quarrel.

The witnesses Olson and Brown testified also .to an apparent infatuation of the testatrix with one Johns. Mrs. Ruedy said she was going to marry him. He' was a man about forty to forty-five years old, testatrix being much older. (Her age is given at one point in the record as seventy-eight, at another as sixty-eight.) She said Johns was going to buy her a nice car, and took Mrs. Olson down and showed her the car in a show window. Johns helped her collect rents. None of these witnesses gave accurate dates when their observations were made. Mrs. Brown saw her last on the day she drew the will in question, and says “in my opinion she was confused.” But no definite dates are fixed for- the incidents which she relates, and she does not give any detail supporting her conclusion Mrs. Ruedy was “confused” on June 26, 1953, the date of execution of the will.

Three doctors also were called by the contestant. Their testimony is chiefly illuminating for what they did not say. Dr. Bernard B. Dwyer, who was called on October 7, 1953, to treat testatrix in her last illness, said she was suffering from peritonitis due to a subacute appendix. .She had high blood pressure and arteriosclerosis, and a skin cancer. She died on October 27 of a cerebral hemorrhage. While he detailed the effects of arteriosclerosis and said testatrix had had it for some time, he declined to say for how long. He was apparently not asked as to Mrs. Ruedy’s mental condition during the time he *1312 treated her. Dr. Joseph E. 0’Donnell had treated Mrs. Ruedy for carcinoma of the neck since April of 1953. He saw her in September in her home. She had a slight stroke. He sent her to the hospital, where he discovered she had arteriosclerosis. It is a progressive disease and has varying effects. “It may cause cerebral brain changes. In her case it was a stroke that might have affected a portion of her brain. As to whether she was sane on September 28, there is always a question of degree involved and you expect people of sixty-eight with strokes and so on and dimming of some of their functions and such people [are] certainly somewhat confused. I could interpret it more or less of the end of the picture of a person of elderly age who had arteriosclerosis, a stroke, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.W.2d 387, 245 Iowa 1307, 1954 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-carrie-m-ruedy-iowa-1954.