Kiefer's Ex'r and Ex'x v. Deibel

166 S.W.2d 430, 292 Ky. 318, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 4, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 166 S.W.2d 430 (Kiefer's Ex'r and Ex'x v. Deibel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kiefer's Ex'r and Ex'x v. Deibel, 166 S.W.2d 430, 292 Ky. 318, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 79 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Sims, Commissioner

Reversing.

This appeal is prosecuted from tbe judgment of tbe Jefferson Circuit Court, Common Pleas Branch, Third Division, adjudging: (a) that a paper executed by Mrs. Minnie Kiefer was not her will and certifying that fact to the Jefferson Circuit Court; (b) that two deeds executed by Mrs. Kiefer conveying certain real estate to her son, Henry Kiefer, and to her daughter, Mrs. Eliz *320 abeth Hartman, were not the act and deed of the grant- or.

Appellants, Henry Kiefer, and his sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Hartman, executor and executrix of their mother, seek a reversal of the judgment because: 1. The circuit court placed on them as contes tees the burden of proving there was no undue influence exerted on testatrix; 2. a peremptory instruction was given against the will; 3. the deeds executed by Mrs. Kiefer were held not to be her act and deed, which deeds were not in issue on the appeal from the judgment of the county court probating the will.

It may be of some assistance to give a brief background of this case. Mrs. Kiefer, a widow of some 20 years, was, 85 years of age when she made her will on .February 20, 1936. She lived until May 13, 1940, residing in her own home with a housekeeper-nurse where Iher two daughters visited her almost daily. Four children were born to Mrs. Kiefer; Henry, Elizabeth, Louise and Josephine, the latter dying in 1920 without leaving-issue. Mrs. Kiefer’s estate had consisted of about $75,-000, most of which was in the form of securities kept in her lock-box in The Louisville Trust Company, there being only some $10,000 in real estate represented by a half dozen houses and iots. In 1925, 1932 and 1935, she made gifts aggregating $42,000 in equal proportions to her three living children, Henry,QElizabeth and Louise. Mrs. Kiefer being quite old, in bad health and very fleshy, her two daughters had access to her lock-box and largely attended to their mother’s business where moving about was required.

Louise Deibel separated from her husband in 1930 and died on February 7,1936, leaving three children, who are the contestants in this litigation. Upon Mrs. Deibel’s death, the state taxing authorities sealed Mrs. Kiefer’s lock-box until they could make an inventory of its contents. This angered her and it appears in the testimony that Mrs. Kiefer had her son and surviving- daughter remove the contents of the lock-box and bring them to her home. She then divided about $20,000 in securities between her son and daughter.

By her will made thirteen days after the death of her daughter, Mrs. Deibel, bequests ranging from $50 to $200 were made to each of her nine grandchildren, and *321 after devising ber household goods to Mrs. Hartman, and $385 to the Cave Hill Investment Company for the perpetual care of the family cemetery lot, the residue of her estate was devised equally to her son and daughter. The will recited no greater part of the estate was given to Mrs. Deibel’s children because she had received her part thereof while living apart from her husband.

Simultaneously with making her will, Mrs. Kiefer executed separate deeds to her son and daughter conveying to Henry and Mrs. Hartman her real estate in seemingly equal portions, reserving to herself a life estate in the property conveyed. Due to the gift of the $20,000 in securities to her son and daughter shortly before the will was made and to the two deeds, the residue of the estate amounted to only about $2,100.

This action was instituted in the circuit court by filing an appeal from the judgment of the county court probating the will, as is provided in Sections 23.030, 394240 and 394.250, KRS, Sections 978, 4850 and 4851, KS, and by following the procedure outlined in Section 724, Civil Code of Practice. The statement of the appeal merely denied the paper probated in the county court was the true last will and testament of Mrs. Kiefer. The personal 'representatives of the testatrix proved the due execution of the will. Thereupon the contestants assumed the burden and confined their proof to lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence.

A grandson, Kenneth Deibel, testified as to Mrs. Kiefer’s poor physical condition and as to her lack of testamentary capacity at the time the will was made; that she was bed-ridden, was in a stupor, did not recognize him for some time and did not realize his mother was dead and inquired several times why she did not come to see her. Mrs. Kiefer denied to him that she had executed deeds or that she had given away her property. He further testified his grandmother was easily influenced ; and that when he told his aunt, Mrs. Hartman, there would be a day of reckoning, Mrs. Hartman replied to him that had she died and if his mother and Uncle Henry had lived, they would have done the same thing that she (Mrs. Hartman) did. The two deeds were introduced in evidence by this witness.

Irvin Deibel, another grandson, described Mrs. Kiefer’s mental and physical condition to be about as his *322 brother testified it was. He likewise did. not think she possessed testamentary capacity.

Dr. Hiram S. Eggers, a physician who had examined testatrix shortly before the death of Mrs. Deibel, testified she was suffering ftom a complication of diseases and her condition included hardening of the arteries, heart trouble and kidney trouble; that she answered questions poorly and was - forgetful. In answer to the question embodying the elements of testamentary capacity, the doctor gave as his opinion that she did not have sufficient mind and memory to make a will.

At this stage of the trial the court ruled the burden shifted to the propounders; also, that the two deeds mentioned in the evidence were testamentary in character. The propounders saved the proper exceptions to this ruling of the court and proceeded with their testimony.

Without going into details it will suffice to say that the propounders introduced many witnesses who testified that Mrs. Kiefer was a woman possessing a strong will, insisted upon having her own way, and was not susceptible to undue influence. When asked the usual question containing the approved test of testamentary capacity, they gave it as their judgment, based upon their observations of her, that she possessed mental capacity to make a will.

At the conclusion of the propounders’ evidence, the court peremptorily instructed the jury to find against the will, and to find that the two deeds executed by Mrs. Kiefer at the time she made the will were not her act and deed.

From the oral opinion of the judge delivered at the time he gave the peremptory instruction, as well as from his written opinion overruling contestees’ motion for a new trial, he considered the three papers (the two deeds and the will) as constituting the last will and testament of Mrs. Kiefer. He brushed aside the question of mental incapacity and while he said' there was no definite testimony of actual undue influence exerted at any particular time, the judge based his directed verdict on the fact that Mrs. Hartman furnished as coming from her mother the data to the lawyer who drew the will and the two deeds without testifying, as to what transpired between -her and her mother when she obtained such data.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W.2d 430, 292 Ky. 318, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kiefers-exr-and-exx-v-deibel-kyctapphigh-1942.