Lockie v. Estate of Baker

227 N.W. 160, 208 Iowa 1293
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 22, 1929
DocketNo. 39846.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 227 N.W. 160 (Lockie v. Estate of Baker) 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
Lockie v. Estate of Baker, 227 N.W. 160, 208 Iowa 1293 (iowa 1929).

Opinion

Grimm, J.

Mary E. Baker, the testatrix in this case, executed the will in controversy on November 28, 1924. She died August 20, 1926. Mrs. Baker was approximately 79 years old . at the time of her death. The will was filed September 1, 1926. It was admitted to probate on the 4th day of October, 1926. This suit was begun by M. Avis Lockie, plaintiff, daughter of the testatrix, on the 26th day of November, 1928. The husband of testatrix died in 1911. Mr. Baker was a farmer, owning and operating a farm just out of the corporate limits of the town of Akron. After Mr. Baker’s death, testatrix lived at the same place until her death. A short time after her husband’s death, her son, Alanson, lived with her, but for a number of years prior to her death, she lived alone. The husband of the testatrix died intestate, leaving a substantial estate. The testatrix had three children: Alanson Baker, a son, and Sarah R. Talbott and the plaintiff, M. Avis Lockie, daughters. The Alanson Bakers had two children, Elizabeth and Charlotte. The Talbotts had three children, Ruth, Ora, and Muriel. The Lockies had two children, Lionel and Helen. The will provided for the payment of debts and funeral expenses, and gave to Alanson Baker, the son, what is known as the home place, valued at approximately $22,000, but claimed by the appellant to be worth $32,000. It gave to the daughter Mrs. Talbott another farm, of 132 acres, valued at approximately $20,000. By the terms of the will, the daughter Mrs. Lockie was given a life estate in four lots in the town of Akron, which the appellant claims was worth $3,000, the ownership of which, after her death, passed to her two children. The balance of the property, valued at about $6,000, was bequeathed in equal shares to the seven grandchildren hereinbefore named. Alanson Baker was named as executor.

The appellant contests the will, claiming that the testatrix *1295 was the victim of insane delusions, and therefore did not have testamentary capacity at the time the will was made. She also claims that Alanson Baker, the executor, exercised undue influence over the testatrix at the time of the execution of the will.

I. it appears that, at the September; 1928, term of the Plymouth County court, this ease was originally brought on for hearing. After a jury was impaneled and sworn and the taking of testimony had started, plaintiff filed an amendment to the petition, alleging, in substance, "that, during the month of October, 1926, there were negotiations for a settlement of the difficulties between the plaintiff and the other heirs in the Baker estate, by the terms of which Mrs. Talbott and Alan-son Baker agreed to pay to the plaintiff herein certain sums of money, in consideration that M. Avis Loekie would withdraw all objections to the will, and permitting the probate of the will." Later Mrs. Lockie brought an action for specific performance of the said alleged oral contract which she claimed was entered into just before the will was probated. This case was IlnaJly determined adversely to Mrs. Lockie in this court (see Lockie v. Baker, 206 Iowa 21). The defendants filed a motion to strike the amendment, and the court sustained the motion, and the trial proceeded. After a considerable amount of testimony had been taken, plaintiff filed a motion for continuance, and it was granted. The case came on the second time some two months thereafter; and after the jury had been impaneled and sworn and the opening statements of counsel made, the amendment was again tendered by the plaintiff, over the objections of the defendants. The court rejected the tender, principally on the ground that the pleading came too late. In ruling upon the amendment, the trial court said:

"When the pleading in question was stricken at the preceding trial, counsel for the defendants had a iight to assume it was out of the case, and were under no obligations to give it any further consideration in preparation for this trial; and the presentation of this amendment at this time is, in my opinion, too late, and would of itself be sufticient warrant for refusing the tender. The court, however, makes its rulings generally, and bases it not alone upon the fact that the pleading is filed too late, but also upon the other objections made by counsel for *1296 the defendants when the same was stricken at the preceding trial.”

The record does not disclose the objections made to the amendment when first filed, but manifestly, under the well established rules of procedure in this state, concerning which citations are unnecessary, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting the amendment.

II. As previously stated, the plaintiff charged Alanson Baker with exercising undue influence over the mother, the testatrix,. at the time of making the will. The appellant, in the first few pages of the abstract, presented very briefly the testimony of a Mr. Shoulberg, a banker, C. H. Maxon, a realtor, the plaintiff, Mrs. Lockie, and Charles Lockie, her husband, after which the appellant states:

‘ ‘ The foregoing brief abstract of the evidence. is all -the material evidence that in our opinion is necessary, for the court to clearly understand the plaintiff’s proof concerning the delusion complained of, and as set out in Paragraphs 4 and 5 of the petition. It is not contended that the evidence sustains any of the other counts of the petition.”

There were no other witnesses presented on behalf of the plaintiff. It would appear from the foregoing that the plaintiff has abandoned the claim of undue influence. At another point in the abstract, the testimony given by each of the foregoing four witnesses is set forth at greater length. The evidence shows that the son, Alanson, assisted his mother in looking after her bank account; and there is some evidence to show that, for some little time prior to her death, he drew some of her checks. She had a safety deposit box, and her son had access to it. For the last few years prior to the death of the testatrix, plaintiff and her husband lived ,at Sioux City, about 30 miles from Akron, where testatrix livecl. Frequent visits were made by the daughter and her husband at the home of the testatrix. There is some evidence given by the plaintiff to the effect that the brother, Alanson, and the sister, Mrs. Talbott, tried at times to discourage the plaintiff from visiting her mother. It appears, however, that what little there was of this was largely by Mrs. Talbott. We have examined the whole record carefully on the subject, and find that there is an utter failure of testimony in support of *1297 the charge that Alanson Baker exercised any undue influence over the testatrix at the time she made the will in controversy.

III. It is claimed by the appellant -that the testatrix was, at the time of the making of the will, suffering from an insane delusion, and therefore was lacking in testamentary capacity. The witness Maxon testified on the subject as follows:

‘ ‘ That he had talked with the deceased some three years before she died, and before the will in question was made, in which she said she understood that Mr. Lockie [plaintiff’s husband] had got most of the property away from her daughter Avis; and that Mrs. Baker liked the way a neighbor’s will was made, as he left his children only a life estate, and she believed she might make hers that way.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lawyer v. Stansell
250 N.W. 887 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1933)
Hult v. Home Life Insurance
240 N.W. 218 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 N.W. 160, 208 Iowa 1293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockie-v-estate-of-baker-iowa-1929.