In Re Estate of Kenny

10 N.W.2d 73, 233 Iowa 600
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 15, 1943
DocketNo. 46200.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 10 N.W.2d 73 (In Re Estate of Kenny) 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 Kenny, 10 N.W.2d 73, 233 Iowa 600 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Miller, J.

On May 25, 1941, Nina G. Kenny, age fifty, a childless widow, became a patient at the Jones-Clark Hospital at Manchester. On the following day she executed a will. Four days later she died. The will revoked all prior wills, directed the sale of a farm of 120 acres, payment of debts including last illness, burial, etc., therefrom, that the balance of the proceeds of the sale of the farm be paid to Dr. James K. Stepp; a fur coat was bequeathed to a sister-in-law; all other property was devised and bequeathed to the brothers and sisters living at time of death. The will was filed for probate and Dr. Stepp became proponent thereof. Mrs. Jennie Guthrie, mother of decedent, contested .its probate, asserting lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence. At the trial the contestant withdrew the issue of undue influence. Proponent’s motion for a directed verdict on the issue of testamentary capacity was overruled. On that issue, the jury found for contestant. Proponent appeals to this court.

I. The proponent challenged the contestant’s standing in court. As the mother of the deceased, who died leaving no spouse or issue, contestant is the sole heir at law. The basis for *602 proponent’s challenge of contestant’s standing in court was that deceased had made a will in 1938 which disinherited contestant, so that, if the present will should be rejected, the 1938 will would be valid and contestant would not participate in the estate, and, accordingly, she has no interest in the estate such as would entitle her to contest the present will. Proponent offered to prove the execution and contents of the 1938 will and offered to produce that will. The evidence was offered solely upon the issue of contestant’s standing* in court. Contestant objected to the offer. The objection was sustained. Error is assigned here because of such ruling.

In the case of In re Estate of Duffy, 228 Iowa 426, 430, 292 N. W. 165, 167, 128 A. L. R. 943, we state:

"It is generally recognized by the courts and other authorities that no one has any standing to object to the probate of a will,'or to bring any action to set aside its probate, unless he has an interest in property which the testator owned at his death and attempted to dispose of by will.”

The above pronouncement is followed by an extensive review of the authorities that hold to the same effect. Prior decisions of this court on the question include Burk v. Morain, 223 Iowa 399, 272 N. W. 441, 112 A. L. R. 79; In re Will of Adkins, 179 Iowa 1025, 1029, 162 N. W. 193; In re Estate of Livingston, 179 Iowa 183, 190, 153 N. W. 200; In re Estate of Jones, 130 Iowa 177, 179, 106 N. W. 610; In re Will of Fallon, 107 Iowa 120, 77 N. W. 575; In re Estate of Stewart, 107 Iowa 117, 77 N. W. 574; Kostelecky v. Scherhart, 99 Iowa 120, 68 N. W. 591.

In the case of Kostelecky v. Scherhart, supra,, we held that a contestant might show her interest in the estate of decedent by proof o'f the fact that she was a devisee under a prior will. Proponent asserts that this is authority'for his contention that the interest of the contestant herein might be disproven by a showing that she was disinherited by a former will. However, we think that a somewhat different question is presented.

Since a contestant must show that he has an interest in the estate as a prerequisite to contesting the will, if that interest arises by reason of a devise in a prior will, proof thereof is *603 indispensable to maintenance of the action. Here, however, contestant proved her standing in court by showing that she is the sole heir at law. This entitled her to contest the will. When proponent sought to disprove her standing in court by offering to show that she was disinherited by a prior will, proponent sought to change the course of the trial into a determination of the question whether the decedent died testate or intestate rather than whether the proposed will is valid. This course of conduct raised a question similar to that decided by us in the case of In re Estate of Cocklin, 230 Iowa 415, 297 N. W. 864.

In the Cocklin case, decedent had executed three wills, one in September 1939, one in December 1939, and the third in February 1940. The February will was offered for probate. A contest resulted. The contestant asserted that there were two prior wills and asked that a consolidated trial be had as to all three wills. The proponent moved to strike the cross-petition. The court sustained the. motion to strike and overruled the motion to consolidate. On appeal the cause was affirmed. At pages 418 and 419 of 230 Iowa, page 865 of 297 N. W., we state:

“In the present lawsuit it is not a question as to whether Lewis A. Cocklin died testate or intestate, but the question is, was the will dated February 3, 1940 a valid one; and the appellant can plead nothing in this case except what would raise an issue on the question of probation of said will. The single issue involved is the validity of the February Will and that issue alone should be tried and submitted to the jury for its consideration without having such issue clouded with wills which had been made, revoked and destroyed.”

To sustain proponent’s contention herein would seem to require us to recede somewhat from the foregoing pronouncement. We are unwilling, to do so. We adhere to the proposition that, whenever possible, the issue as to the validity of the will in question should not be clouded with questions as to the validity of prior wills. Otherwise, the jury might become lost in a maze of collateral issues. Had proponent offered evidence to dispute the relationship of contestant to decedent, a different question would have been presented. That would have been a challenge of the very basis upon which claimant rested her standing in *604 court. But that relationship was conceded by stipulation. The proof offered by proponent did not controvert the proof of claimant as to her standing in court. It sought to change the issue and require a determination whether decedent died testate or intestate. We refused to permit a similar course of conduct in the Cocklin case. We adhere to that position here.

There is a practical aspect of the case which strengthens our position herein. Proponent challenged the contestant’s standing in court without first pleading the issue in advance of trial. Had the issue been specifically pleaded, it might have been determined or avoided without the confusion which the trial court undertook to avoid. The 1938 will devised and bequeathed the entire estate, after payment of debts and expenses, to decedent’s brothers and sisters, who are residuary legatees under the 1941 will. Some of these brothers and sisters testified for contestant herein. The situation is unusual. Had the decedent executed only the 1941 will, the mother alone, as sole heir at law, could contest that will. But if the 1938 will is valid, the brothers and sisters, as devisees and legatees, and not the mother, as an heir, would be entitled to contest the 1941 will. Had this issue beeii raised in advance of trial, some of the brothers and sisters would have been in a position to intervene to perpetuate the contest in the event that the sole heir was disqualified.

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10 N.W.2d 73, 233 Iowa 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-kenny-iowa-1943.