In Re Estate of Sinift

10 N.W.2d 550, 233 Iowa 800
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 27, 1943
DocketNo. 46183.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 10 N.W.2d 550 (In Re Estate of Sinift) 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 Sinift, 10 N.W.2d 550, 233 Iowa 800 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Miller, J.

Nan B. Sinift died November 25, 1941, a childless widow, about eighty-eight years of age. On April 14, 1939, she had executed a will which directed payment of debts, expenses, etc., bequeathed $500 to. Silas Baxter, a half, brother, and devised and bequeathed all the residue of her estate to two half brothers, B. W. Baxter and Leonard Baxter. Norman F. Baker was nominated' to be executor. He promptly filed the will for probate the day following her death. Various heirs contested its probate, asserting insufficient execution, lack, of testamentary capacity, and undue influence. Trial ivas had which resulted in a directed verdict for proponents. Contestants appeal to this court. The only error assigned here asserts that the evidence presented a jury question on the issue of testamentary capacity.

In this ease, as in most eases, there are certain facts about which there was no substantial dispute in the evidence. They form a background for consideration of the facts which are in dispute. Some of the undisputed facts are the following:

The decedent was the defendant in the case of Sinift v. Sinift, 229 Iowa 56, 284 N. W. 91, 293 N. W. 841, originally decided by this court on February 7, 1939, and, after the granting of a rehearing, again decided September 24, 1940. A second petition for rehearing was overruled January 17, 1941. The will in question was executed April 14, 1939, while said case was pending in this court. The final opinion of this court in that case gives a background of the manner in which Nan Sinift and her husband John acquired substantial wealth during their married life. Part of that wealth is an inducement for this contest.

*802 Nan Sinift had been previously married. She had ho children from either marriage. Her heirs, therefore, are collateral ones. Her mother’s maiden name was Christena Wells. She first married one Crawford and had one son, John Crawford. She later married Tom Curtis and had four children, Susan A. Knight, Ruth Lyeburger, Ed Curtis, and Nan Sinift. Thereafter she married Benjamin Baxter and had three sons, Leonard, Ben, and Silas Baxter, the three of whom were the legatees under Nan’s will.

The three Curtis children, other than Nan, were all deceased when Nan’s will was executed, each leaving no child or spouse. John Crawford was also deceased. He left surviving him a daughter, Mary Hickman, one of the contestants herein. Silas Baxter died in June 1939, leaving two children, Helen Smith and Oral Baxter, contestants herein. Several other contestants assert that they are heirs of Nan, but their exact relationships to her are a bit difficult to determine from the record before us.

Nan Sinift and her husband John had lived on a farm in Warren county until a few months before John died on March 29, 1935. After his death Nan purchased a home in Chariton and moved there in the spring of .1936. Nan and John had been very frugal and had become wealthy. Nan lived to herself in her home in Chariton. In spite of her wealth, she continued her frugal habits, which she had always known and which were responsible in large measure for that wealth.

O. M. Slaymaker of Osceola was counsel for Nan Sinift in the litigation of Sinift v. Sinift, supra. The will in question was drawn by him in his office in Osceola and was there executed. The only people pi*esent at the time of its preparation and execution were Mrs. Sinift, Mr. Slaymaker, and two stenographers who signed as witnesses to the will. When the will was prepared, only Mrs. Sinift, Mr. Slaymaker and his private secretary, Gretta Crosby, were in the room. The three of them were there while the will was dictated by Mr. Slaymaker. As it was typed, an original and one copy were 'prepared. After it was typed, Mr. Slaymaker took one copy and Mrs. Sinift the other. Mr. Slay-maker read his copy aloud to her while she was reading her copy. *803 Mrs. Sinift said it was the way she wanted it. The other stenographer, Florence Thornton, was then called into the room and the will was executed.

As above indicated, the foregoing facts form a background for consideration of the testimony on the issue of testamentary capacity. The testimony on that issue is solely that of the contestants. Proponents, introduced evidence of the due and legal execution of the will, above reviewed. Contestants then introduced evidence on the issue of testamentary capacity. At the conclusion of contestants’ evidence, proponents made a motion for directed verdict. Contestants concede here that the only debatable issue was that of testamentary capacity. One of the grounds for proponents’ motion was that “if the Court were to submit this case to the jury under the record as it now stands, and if the jury were to return a verdict in favor of the contestants and against these proponents, it would be the duty of the Court to set the same aside as being contrary to the record evidence and contrary to law,’ and that being true, it would be the duty of the Court in the first instance to direct the jury to return a verdict against the contestants and in favor of the proponents. ”

After very careful consideration of the record, as evidenced by a well-considered opinion, the court reached the following conclusion:

“As I listened to this record, I am compelled to but one conclusion, and that is that the Court could not let that verdict stand were the jury to bring in a verdict on the evidence thus far adduced to the effect that this testatrix was of unsound mind to the extent that she did not have capacity, to make the will at that time.”

The correctness of the foregoing decision presents the only question for our decision herein.

The first witness for contestants testified that he went to school with decedent in 1861 and 1862; she was seven months older than he, her birthday was September 15, 1853. The next witness testified that, in the fall of 1938 or 1939, he sold decedent a slab as a grave marker for her burial lot and placed *804 the same thereon and at her direction inscribed her birth as occurring in 18.60.

Norman Baker, the executor, testified that he operates a bank at Lucas, Iowa, and was decedent’s banker; on April 14, 1939, she had $1,965.73 in her checking account, $9,100 on certificate of deposit, a note and mortgage on real estate, signed by Ben Baxter, for $3,000, 520 acres of land in Warren county, the income for life and half of the fee to a house in Liberty Center that rénted for about $7 per month, annuities with John Hancock Life Insurance Company paying $60 or $65 per month, the income from $40,000 of government bonds belonging to her husband’s estate, and her home in Chariton for which she paid $4,000. On January 1, 1941, her checking account was $3,312 and the certificate of deposit was $10,395. Her net income was at least $100 per month. She drew checks on the bank from 1935 to the time of her death. A number of checks were identified. The body of the checks ivas written by someone else but, they were all signed by Mrs. Sinift. On February 10, 1940, she made a settlement of her lawsuit over her husband’s will which involved a payment to her of $25,000.

A neighbor that lived across the street from decedent testified that in 1938 she talked about getting an old-age pension. In the fall of 1940 she told of having a boy friend.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.W.2d 550, 233 Iowa 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-sinift-iowa-1943.