Lee v. Ullery

140 S.W.2d 5, 346 Mo. 236, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 523
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 7, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 140 S.W.2d 5 (Lee v. Ullery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Ullery, 140 S.W.2d 5, 346 Mo. 236, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 523 (Mo. 1940).

Opinions

This is a will contest. Plaintiffs seek to set aside an alleged will of Martin W. Lee dated January 18, 1934. A trial was had to a jury; a verdict was returned against the alleged will; and judgment was entered thereon. A motion for new trial was filed and overruled, and proponents appealed.

Lee died January 25, 1934, one week after the execution of the alleged will. The petition alleges, and it is conceded, that he died seized and possessed of real and personal property; and that he *Page 239 left surviving him no wife or children. The will names Charles W. Lee, a brother, as principal beneficiary, while other brothers and a number of nieces and nephews are not provided for. Frank Lee, a brother, and certain beneficiaries of an earlier will, filed this suit.

The petition is in two counts. The first count seeks to have the alleged will of January 18, 1934, declared not to be the will of Martin W. Lee, and the second count seeks to have an earlier writing established as his last will. A demurrer to the evidence on the second count was sustained, since there was a failure to show that probate of the earlier document had been refused.

The issues joined on the first count were as to (1) mental incompetency to make a will and (2) the exercise of undue influence by Charles W. Lee. Both issues were submitted to the jury. No complaint is made as to the instructions.

Appellants, intending to present the sole issue as to the competency, relevancy and materiality of certain evidence offered by the contestants on the issue of mental incompetency, have expressly omitted the part of the pleadings and evidence dealing with the issue of undue influence and all of the instructions. The bill of exceptions discloses that a prima facie case was made by the proponents of the will of January 18, 1934, by offering in evidence the alleged will, proof of its probate in common form, and certain testimony as to the due execution of the alleged will. The contestants to sustain the issues on their part offered some forty witnesses. Twenty-eight of these, who were lay witnesses, testified that they had known Martin W. Lee over a period of years; that they had seen him frequently during the last few years of his life; that during the last few months of his life, and prior to the execution of the said will, they had noticed a change in his mental condition. These witnesses testified that, in their opinion, the said Martin W. Lee was insane at and before the date of the execution of the alleged will. The questions by which this evidence was elicited, were objected to, and exceptions saved as hereinafter stated.

Appellants' abstract for the most part omits all of the cross-examination of these witnesses. It omits all of the rebuttal evidence of proponents, and all of the medical testimony as to the mental incompetency of Martin W. Lee. It presents only a brief outline of the other evidence of contestants.

The abstract shows that the first time the question of the admission of the disputed evidence arose, was while witness Allie Lee was on the stand. She testified that she was the wife of Frank Lee, a brother of the deceased, and that she had known the deceased about 37 years. She detailed her association with him. It is unnecessary to repeat the evidence here except to say that the witness and deceased had been closely associated over a long period of years. At different times the deceased and his wife had made their home with the witness and *Page 240 her husband. At other times the deceased resided in the same community, so that they were closely associated. The witness was also closely associated with the deceased during the closing period of his life. The record is as follows:

"Q. Up until the time he was taken to the hospital did you notice any change in his mental condition, and if so, when did you notice such a change?

"By Mr. BLAIR: Object to that, for the reason she is a lay witness, and not qualified to testify without first detailing facts and circumstances upon which the testimony is based.

"By the COURT: I am permitting it from the showing of her long continued knowledge and acquaintance and relationship with him, following those authorities in this State that support that ruling. They are both ways; and I will overrule your objection, and allow you an exception.

(Exception saved.)

"By Mr. BOND: The objection should be, object to the testimony, for the reason a lay witness is not permitted to testify a person is of unsound mind without detailing the facts and circumstances upon which the opinion is based. That is the objection. . . .

"By the COURT: Overruled.

"Q. (By Mr. NORMAN) I asked you if you noticed any change in his mental condition, and if so, when you noticed that change? A. (BY THE WITNESS) About four or five months before his death.

"Q. Four or five months before his death. I will ask you to tell the jury whether or not, in your opinion, he was sane, or insane, beginning four or five months from the time of his death and up until the time of his death?

"By Mr. BOND: Object to that, for the reason a lay witness is not competent to testify as to whether he was insane, without first stating facts upon which the opinion was based. Even then, it is a question for the Court.

"By the COURT: I am, in this case, following the other line of decisions. They are both ways; and I am following the others. I may be in error. I will permit it, and allow you an exception.

"Q. (By Mr. NORMAN) I will ask you this question: Beginning back four months, or approximately that, before his death, and up to the time of his death, whether, in your opinion, he was sane, or insane?

"By Mr. BOND: We make the same objection.

"By the COURT: It is practically the same question. The same ruling. You may answer.

"A. By the WITNESS) He was not in his right mind. *Page 241

"Q. (By Mr. NORMAN) That is not the question, Mrs. Lee.

"A. He was insane. . . ."

To further illustrate the manner in which the challenged evidence came into the record we set out the testimony of two other witnesses.

Direct examination of Vernie Hine by Mr. Norman:

"I live in Joplin, have known Martin Lee for twenty-five or twenty-seven years, and saw him many, many times; I visited him in his home; I knew him intimately; I knew him during the last four or five or six months of his life.

"Q. Tell the jury whether or not you noticed any change in his mental condition?

"By Mr. BOND: We object. The witness has not made the proper basis — has not laid the proper foundation. He is a lay witness.

"By the COURT: Same ruling. Same exception allowed.

(Exceptions saved.)

"Q. (By Mr. NORMAN) Did you notice any change in his mental condition? A. Yes, sir.

"Q. I will ask you when you first noticed that change — in your best opinion? A. Three or four months before his death.

"Q. From what you observed, I will ask you to tell if he was sane or insane?

"By Mr. BOND: We object, for the reason he is a lay witness. No testimony he would give would have a proper basis. He does not give the facts and circumstances on which he bases his testimony.

"By the COURT: His long acquaintance would give him the right. I am overruling your objection, and allowing the exception.

"A. (By the WITNESS) He was a crazy man, gentlemen, the last years of his life. . . . He was insane."

Direct examination of W.J. Narrell by Mr. Norman:

"I knew Martin Lee during the last four or five years of his life, and had occasion to see and converse with him once or twice a month; sometimes less or sometimes more, at the hotel; I was well acquainted with him.

"Q.

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140 S.W.2d 5, 346 Mo. 236, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-ullery-mo-1940.