Jones v. Roberts

37 Mo. App. 163, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 343
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 37 Mo. App. 163 (Jones v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Roberts, 37 Mo. App. 163, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 343 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered tlie opinion of the court.

This was a petition under section 3980, Revised Statutes, to contest the validity of a will which had been admitted to probate by the probate court of Pike county. The will was.that of Charlotte Bennett, who died on the twenty-fifth of December, 1884, about sixty-five years of age, leaving no bodily issue. The will was executed on December 1, 1884, and was admitted to probate on January 1, 1885. The contestants are the nephews and nieces of the alleged testatrix, children of certain of her brothers, who died prior to her decease. The defendants are legatees under the will, — the principal defendants being Mina Roberts and Frederick Roberts, her husband, who are jointly made the residuary legatees in the will. The petition challenges the validity of the will on three grounds :—

First. Because, at the time of the execution of said instrument and for a long time previous thereto, the said Charlotte Bennett was old and infirm, and her mind had been so greatly weakened and impaired by old age, domestic trouble and disease, that she was incapable of making an intelligent disposition of her property, and had not sufficient mind to comprehend and understand the nature and consequences of said will or the disposition of her property attempted to be made therein.

Second. Because the said Charlotte Bennett was induced to execute said pretended will on account of threats, coercion and undue influence on the part of the defendants, Mina Roberts and Frederick Roberts, her husband.

Third. Because the said Charlotte was induced to execute said pretended will on account of an undue influence exercised over her by the defendant Sophia Fritz.

The answer consisted of a special traverse of each of these grounds. There was a trial before a jury, and a [168]*168verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, setting aside the will.

The evidence adduced at the trial tended to show that the maiden name of Charlotte Bennett was Hicks; that her family resided in West Virginia; that when she .was about sixteen years of age she married one Jacob Linder, and that in 1839, she came with him to Louisiana, Missouri, where she resided until the time of her death. Her husband, Jacob Linder, died about 1870, and she continued to carry on, a small notion store, which they were conducting at the time of his death, and continued to reside in the back and upper room of the store building until her death. Four or five years prior to her death she married one Dr. Bennett, but was shortly after divorced from him upon his petition. Dr. Bennett had let her have five hundred dollars to make a part payment of a debt due by her to Sophia Fritz, which was secured by a mortgage on her real estate. After the divorce, Dr. Bennett brought an action against Mrs. Bennett to recover this sum and interest, and this action was pending at the time of her death. After her divorce from Dr. Bennett she continued to live entirely alone, carrying on the little store and residing in the back room and also in the upper room of the house in which the store was carried on. While so residing she became subject to the hallucination that Dr. Bennett was trying to poison her, and in order to prevent him from poisoning her well, she had a house built over it. Her family relatives continued to live in West Virginia, except such as had removed to other parts of the country. A total cessation of intercourse had taken place between them; for thirty years no communication had passed between them; and they did not learn of her death until a year after it had occurred. Indeed, she never spoke of her relatives to her most intimate friends, and they did not know that she had relatives living. She had made a will, bequeathing all of her property to the Christian church of Louisiana, Missouri, [169]*169in consideration of the church caring for her during such portion of her life as she might be unable to care for herself. This will was in existence in August, 1884, when she was stricken with partial paralysis. She recovered from this stroke sufficiently to get about the store with the aid of a cane, and to look after her business as she had done before. She was, however, unable to take care of herself and to attend to her housekeeping, and she received attention and help from the ladies of the church; but, whether justly or unjustly,she conceived that the church was neglecting her, and of her own motion destroyed the will which she had made to them. She then employed help, not keeping any one very long. Finally she seems to have tired of depending upon hired help, and made an arrangement with the defendant Mrs. Roberts to come and stay with her. She and Mrs. Roberts had known each other for many years, and were intimate friends. Mrs. Roberts stayed with her at first for a couple of weeks, until the services of a hired attendant were secured. This attendant left some time in November, the month before that in which Mrs. Bennett died, and Mrs. Roberts again came to wait upon her and take care of her. The latter part of November, Mrs. Bennett was again stricken with paralysis, and was not thereafter able to leave her bed until her death. She was a very large woman, and Mrs. Roberts, being unable to handle her alone, called in the aid of her husband, and they attended to her faithfully, kindly and attentively, as the evidence tends to show, until she died. This latter stroke of paralysis was so severe as to paralyze the entire right side of Mrs. Bennett, and so impaired her speech that only those who were accustomed to be with her could understand her. Indeed, she seems to have communicated for the most part by making signs.

In this condition Mrs. Bennett sent for the lawyer, who was her counsel in her litigation with Dr. Bennett, for the purpose of having him make her will; A [170]*170description of the scene at the bedside, when the will was drawn and signed, was of a nature strongly to-impress one with the belief that Mrs. Bennett had passed the period at which she was capable of making a will. Aside from the hallucination which she had conceived, that Dr. Bennett, her late husband, was trying to poison her, there was some evidence — we will not observe upon its credibility — to the effect that she had formed the same conception in regard to members of the church. One old friend, formerly her family physician, had called to visit her with his wife; and she, on his coming in, . broke out into a sudden fit of laughter, threw up one of her hands and said : “ Help me up; I want to stand up long enough to get married to brother Keith.” This was previous to the second stroke of paralysis. The medical testimony tends to show that the seat of the paralysis was in her brain ; and that she was not only peculiar, but also somewhat imbecile, prior to the last stroke. -When the alleged will was made Mrs. Bennett lay in bed, her entire right side paralyzed, and, as the testimony of the subscribing witnesses tends to show, unable to communicate except by signs. The lawyer who drew the will would write a sentence and read it over to her, desiring to know if it was right, and she would indicate by signs whether it was right or wrong, and, if it was not right, have it erased and corrected. One of the subscribing witnesses testified as follows : ,“Q. All the instructions she could give was by signs ? A. But she could use her left hand. She could make a sign, but I could not understand it. Q. Was her tongue paralyzed? A. Apparently so. Q. Where were you sitting ? A. At the foot of her bed. Q. Where you could hear her ? A. Yes, sir. Q. But you could not.understand what she meant? A. No, sir. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Mo. App. 163, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-roberts-moctapp-1889.