In Re Estate of Koll

206 N.W. 40, 200 Iowa 1122
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 24, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 206 N.W. 40 (In Re Estate of Koll) 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 Koll, 206 N.W. 40, 200 Iowa 1122 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

*1123 Vermilion, J.

The Only question presented is one of fact,— the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict.

The testatrix was a woman over 91 years of age at the time she executed, in June, 1918, the instrument offered for probate as her will. She was familiar with the German language, and she and her husband had used it in the family. Her husband had died in 1915. She had had eleven children. The will gave $300 to the pastor of a Catholic church in Ft. Dodge, to pay any indebtedness on the church property; $5.00 to the widow and $200 to the daughter of a deceased son; $200 to each of six children of a deceased daughter; $200 to the widow and $10 to each of the three children of another deceased son; and all the remainder of her estate to six living children, five sons and one daughter, share and share alike. The grandchildren to whom legacies were given were named in the will, and they are the contestants. After the death of her husband, she had conveyed certain real estate to the six children who are the residuary legatees in her will; and her estate at her death amounted to $4,000 or $5,000. In March, 1921, a guardian of her property was appointed. In the same month she was taken to a sanitarium in Dubuque, where she remained until in December of that year. From the death of her husband in 1915 until she was taken to Dubuque, she maintained her own home, a companion or nurse living with her practically all of the time. On her return from Dubuque, she lived with her daughter Mrs. Francis, one of the proponents, until her last illness, when she ivas taken to a hospital about three iveeks before her death in January, 1923.

The testimony of four of the contestants and the husbands of two of them was to the effect that at times when they called upon testatrix, she would fail to recognize them until told who they were, and that she cried when talking of deceased members of her family. One of them testified that she talked at random; another that at times she would not answer, and would talk of other things; another that, after she returned from the sanitarium at Dubuque, she said that a daughter, then deceased, had nursed her there; and that she put flowers on the grave of a deceased son after his body had been removed to another place. Two of them testified that in 1916 she mistook the hus *1124 band of a granddaughter for her deceased son. Some of these witnesses testified that the testatrix was insane. A considerable part of their testimony related to the time after her return from Dubuque.

A nurse who attended testatrix for ten days shortly before she was taken to Dubuque testified, in substance, that during that time testatrix was not suffering from any real sickness or temporary illness; that at times she was quite rational, but most of the time was depressed, and suspected her family of wanting to poison, starve, or injure her; that she Avanted the doors and AvindoAvs closed, so that they could not enter, to put poison into her bed or food; that she ahvays dusted off her plate and cup, to be sure there Avas no poison, and on retiring shook her clothes out of the AvindoAv, to remoA^e a poAvder she imagined Avas put there to irritate her skin; that she Avould get up in- the night to bar the doors and windows, and Avould put a table across the door AAÚth a crucifix on it, to protect her from evil spirits and the family; that she Avould suspect the doctors, said they Avere poisoning her, and would throAV aAvay the medicine; that she said her children had alAvays been kind to her until recently. The Avitness testified that she Avas insane.

A physician AAdio had attended her three or four times a year after her husband’s death, but aaIio did not see her during 1918, testified, in substance, that as early as 1917 she was breaking doAvn rapidly; that she Avas childish, Avith a faulty memory; that she Avould fail to recognize him until some member of the family Avould tell her Avho he Avas; that her mental condition Avas such that her statements about herself and her condition AA'ere unreliable; that she Avas suffering from senile dementia; that it is a gradually developing process; that, from 1916 on, she seemed to be failing physically and mentally; that she got no better; that she had no ravings of delirium in 1917, and he did not notice any delusions; that her mental condition was not such that she could take care of herself, and in that ■sense she Avas insane; that she never discussed her property or relatives with him; that in 1919 or 1920 she spoke to him about the poisoning, and Avas suffering from fixed delusions. He testified that from 1917 he did not consider her entirely sane; that senile dementia is a form of insanity; that she was insane; that *1125 senile dementia is progressive; that it may be arrested from time to time in its development, bnt is never cured; that few people lived to her age that had her mental strength; that people with senile dementia continue to transact business for varying lengths of time and with varying degrees of success.

This is substantially all of the testimony on behalf of contestants upon the subject of the mental capacity of the testatrix. None of it relates to her condition at or near the date of the execution of the will. The nurse testified to a time shortly before her removal to Dubuque, which was over two and a half years after the Avill Avas made. It is conceded that at that time she had a delusion that people were trying to poison her. The doctor did not see her from some time in 1917 until in 1919,— the exact dates are not shoAvn. Some of the other witnesses testified to her condition in 1918 and to occurrences in that year, but none of them fixed any time closer to the date of the will than that.

The doctor also testified that in ordinary senile dementia there are other indications of disease, such as variations of personal habits and normal habits, slight thickening of speech, a slight drooping of the eyelids, symptoms similar to paralysis in the movement of the hand, a weak hand, variation in the pupil or reflection of the eye. There was no testimony that testatrix manifested any of these symptoms.

On the other hand, it appears without contradiction that, up until the appointment of her guardian, she had attended to the business of her household, either making necessary purchases herself or directing that they be made, examining the bills, and paying them in cash or by check. After the conveyance of her real estate to’ her children, she had exercised no control over it. There is a contention that that conveyance was merely to enable the children to manage the property, inferentially because of her inability to do so. Upon this we express no opinion. Prior to going to Dubuque, she received visits from neighbors and friends, occasionally visited them, and conversed intelligently with them; she looked after her garden and chickens; her personal habits continued to be cleanly and orderly.

It is shoAvn that she had made a previous Avill before her husband’s death; that she then said she wanted to give some *1126 money to her grandchildren, and the income from her property to her husband for life; and that after the life estate the property should go to her living children. The former will was drawn by M. F. Healy, who also drafted the present one. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 40, 200 Iowa 1122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-koll-iowa-1925.