In re the Removal of Mohn

184 N.W. 14, 149 Minn. 373, 1921 Minn. LEXIS 675
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 8, 1921
DocketNo. 20,299
StatusPublished

This text of 184 N.W. 14 (In re the Removal of Mohn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Removal of Mohn, 184 N.W. 14, 149 Minn. 373, 1921 Minn. LEXIS 675 (Mich. 1921).

Opinions

Hallam, J.

This is an application for the removal of Thomas Mohn from his office as attorney at law. The charge is that sometime during the year 1913 he affixed his signature as attesting witness to a codicil to the will of Mrs. Emma M. Hack, after the death of Mrs. Hack, and thereafter used the codicil as so attested in procuring the settlement of a lawsuit. The charge was made by a witness on the stand in a lawsuit in November, 1915. The petition in this proceeding was filed in January, 1917, and the court promptly ordered a reference for the taking of testimony and appointed attorneys to prosecute the ease. After the lapse of more than four years the matter was presented to this court.

Bespondent was admitted to the bar of Minnesota in 1897, has practiced in Goodhue county ever since, and in Bed Wing since 1905. He was twice elected county attorney of Goodhue county and was holding that office at the time of the alleged misconduct. It is conceded that he is a capable lawyer, has enjoyed a large practice, and, save for this charge, has borne a good reputation.

John Hack has for many years been a citizen of Bed Wing and a man of substantial fortune. About 30 years ago, then a man of about 65, he married Emma M. Gallasch, a woman about half his age. Soon thereafter he became blind. In the course of years a large part of the family property found its way into the name of Mrs. Hack and on her death on April 34, 1913, a substantial part of the property which had belonged to Mrs. Hack was found in the name or possession of Eugenia Gallasch, a sister of Mrs. Hack. The only testamentary remembrance by Mrs. Hack of her husband was that in a certain contingency, her father would “take well care” of him “and give him all the comforts he needs in his natural life and pay all his personal expenses.”

In August, 1903, Mrs. Hack prepared a will and one day stepped into [375]*375a store in Bed Wing and signed it and asked two men of her acquaintance there present to sign as witnesses, and they did so. This will gave all her estate to her sister Eugenia, and her brother, Adolph G. Gallasch. In 1911 her brother died. Under date of September 3, 1912, Mrs. Hack wrote, in her own handwriting, a second will complete in itself, but reciting that “this writing be- added to my as in part to the will I made on the second day of August, 1902.” This will is spoken of in these proceedings as the “codicil” and is the document respondent is charged with mutilating.

The so-called codicil consists of three pages. The writing on the first and second completely fills the pages. The second page closes with the words: “This is my last will and only a codicil to my previous will of August 2nd, 1902,” and is signed: “Emma M. Hack.” The third page contains, in the middle of the page, matter apparently an afterthought and is signed at the end but near the middle of the page: “Emma M. Hack.” Below the signature is written: “This is my last will composed of three papers and my name.

Signed by myself (Maggie Stewart is witness)

(Thomas Mohn is witness)

Emma M. Hack, Bed Wing, Minn.

Thomas Mohn

Maggie Stewart.”

Maggie Stewart was a servant in the Hack home. It is conceded that she signed as a witness at or about the time Mrs. Hack- signed the document and that respondent did not sign and was not present at that time. It is conceded that he did thereafter affix his signature. Petitioner claims that he did so after Mrs. Hack’s death, respondent that he did so during Mrs. Hack’s lifetime and in her presence and at her request. This is the question in the case.

The 1902 will was presented for probate By Miss Gallasch in May, 1913. It was contested by the husband of deceased. It was undoubtedly intended by Mrs. Hack as her will, but probate was refused because of some alleged defect in the execution. An appeal was taken to the district court.' Bespondent was attorney for Miss Gallasch and he had taken the ease on. a contingent fee. After the appeal was taken, this codicil was produced by respondent and was used in the interest of Miss [376]*376Gallasch in negotiations which followed for a settlement of the case. The case was settled before trial in the district court. Later respondent and Miss Gallasch fell out over the matter 'of respondent’s fees and matters in connection with the settlement. John Hack commenced an action to set aside the settlement. Several other actions between the Hacks and Miss Gallasch followed in rapid succession. It was in one of these actions that Miss Gallasch, testifying about two years after the codicil was first produced, made the charge on which this proceeding is based.

The testimony of Miss Gallasch and of Maggie Stewart is to the effect that they found this codicil in a safe at the Hack home a short time after the will had been found and taken to respondent, that these two and Hedvig Federle, a young lady relative of Miss Gallasch, who had studied law, together took the codicil to respondent, that he looked it over and told them that it was of no value because it had but one witness. Miss Gallasch testified that she did not examine the codicil, but Maggie Stewart testified that she did and that hers was the only attesting signature at that time. Maggie Stewart testified that the codicil produced by the three ladies in respondent’s office' was the same codicil which was afterwards produced by respondent with his signature affixed.

Respondent’s story is that Miss Gallasch and Miss Federle did bring to him a document, purporting to be a codicil executed in the name of Mrs. Hack, but that it was not the same document as now 'bears his signature; that the signature of Mrs. Hack to the codicil brought to his office had been affixed by Miss Gallasch.; that she stated that she had affixed it at the direction of Mrs. Hack, and that it was witnessed by Maggie Stewart and no one else. He testified that the codicil signed by him had the following history: That on February 25, 1913, he was called to the home of Mrs. Hack to give legal advice; that, while he was there, she produced this codicil which was signed .by Mrs. Hack and already witnessed by Maggie Stewart, and asked him to sign it as a witness ; that he advised her to have a new will prepared and she said she would, but on her insistence he did sign the codicil as a witness; that, after the will had been presented for probate and disallowed, this codicil was found by his brother and law partner, Albert Mohn, in a bank book of deceased and among some of her papers in a vault of a Red Wing bank.

[377]*377The testimony is in direct conflict.. For the petitioner there is the testimony of Miss Gallasch and Maggie Stewart. Miss Gallaseh’s testimony is much discredited. We need only mention one or two of many impeaching circumstances. It is in evidence that Judge Converse, in a memorandum attached to a decision in one of the cases tried, said that Miss Gallasch’s testimony was of little assistance to him save as it was corroborated by other credible evidence. Judge Erickson, probate judge of Goodhue county, expressed himself similarly after a hearing in which she testified. For example^ he said that on one occasion she asked his leave to make an important insertion of figures in an inventory which she had previously filed in his court, and, after considerable discussion, she made the insertion, and that afterwards, while on the stand as a witness before him, denied that she had made the insertion or that she had ever asked to do so and said that she thought Mr. Mohn had inserted the figures.

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Related

State v. Ettenberg
176 N.W. 171 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
184 N.W. 14, 149 Minn. 373, 1921 Minn. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-removal-of-mohn-minn-1921.