Matter of Estate of Wagner

265 N.W.2d 459, 1978 N.D. LEXIS 229
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1978
DocketCiv. 9403
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 265 N.W.2d 459 (Matter of Estate of Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Estate of Wagner, 265 N.W.2d 459, 1978 N.D. LEXIS 229 (N.D. 1978).

Opinion

SAND, Justice.

This is an appeal from a Williams County district court judgment based on a jury verdict finding the 1973 will of Freddie E. Wagner valid and not the result of undue influence, and from an order denying a new trial.

*460 Initially, the 1973 will of Freddie E. Wagner was admitted to probate by the Williams County court with increased jurisdiction acting in its probate court capacity. Thereafter Berta R. Miller, Shirley Green and Lola Hayden [hereinafter contestants] filed a petition to revoke probate or in the alternative to impress a constructive trust. The Williams County court, after a trial, held that the 1973 will of Freddie Wagner was the result of undue influence and accordingly revoked the probate of the 1973 will and admitted the earlier 1970 will of Freddie Wagner to probate.

Lee Evelyn Kraft, et al. [hereinafter proponents] appealed the Williams County court judgment to the Williams County district court, where the parties became entitled to a trial anew. (Section 30-26-23, North Dakota Century Code.) The proponents in the district court moved for a summary judgment to dismiss the “action” of the contestants on the grounds that certain jurisdictional requirements had not been met. The motion for summary judgment was denied. The contestants, in their appeal to the district court, demanded a trial by jury.

The jury rendered a verdict for the proponents of the will, whereupon judgment was entered. The contestants then made a motion for a new trial, which the court denied. This appeal followed.

A brief summary of background information will be helpful in understanding the situation.

In 1938, Freddie E. Wagner, a 30-year old bachelor, married Ruth B. Codings, a widow who was the mother of five children, namely, Berta Codings Miller, Shirley Codings Green, Lola Codings Hayden, Conrad Cod-ings, and Glen Codings. Only one child, Lee Evelyn Wagner Kraft, was born to this marriage. They ad lived as a family on a farm in the vicinity of Ray, and later moved into Williston.

Freddie E. Wagner treated the children of Ruth Codings as his own. In 1970 he executed a will substantially leaving everything to his wife Ruth, and if she did not survive him to his natural daughter Lee and his stepchildren and stepgrandchildren in equal share per stirpes. His wife, Ruth Codings Wagner, died in 1973 after a long illness. Conrad Codings, a divorced man, was killed in an automobile accident on 22 May 1973. Glen Codings died in 1964. After the death of his wife, Freddie E. Wagner, on 30 May 1973, executed a second will leaving his entire estate to Lee Evelyn Kraft, his only child. Freddie E. Wagner died 21 November 1974, whereupon the 1973 will was filed for probate, bringing about the sequence of legal actions culminating in an appeal to this court.

The contestants, on appeal, primarily contend that the trial court erred by not giving the following instruction:

“UNDUE INFLUENCE — PROOF OF SPECIFIC CONDUCT AND INFLUENCE FROM FIDUCIARY RELATIONSHIP
“The Petitioners may establish undue influence as ground of invalidity in two ways.
“First, they may introduce proof of specific conduct alleged to constitute undue influence.
“Second, they may establish undue influence as a ground of invalidity by proving each of the following propositions:
1. That Freddie E. Wagner reposed trust and confidence in Lee Evelyn Kraft and her husband, Larry Kraft, to such an extent that Lee Evelyn Kraft and Larry Kraft could have exerted undue influence, as I have defined that term, on the mind of Freddie E. Wagner.
2. That Larry Kraft, the husband of Lee Evelyn Kraft, prepared or caused the preparation of the document purporting to be the Last Will and Testament of Freddie Wagner.
3. That Lee Evelyn Kraft, the wife of Larry Kraft, received a substantial benefit under the terms of the document.
“If you find that the Petitioners have proved undue influence by evidence of specific conduct, then your verdict should be for the Petitioners.
*461 “If you find that each of the three propositions has been proved, the law raises an inference or suspicion that the document was executed as a result of undue influence and the Respondents [proponents] then have the burden of going forward with the evidence to overcome the inference of undue influence.
“If the Respondents [proponents] do not overcome the inference of undue influence, then your verdict should be for the Petitioners [contestants].
“If any of the three propositions has not been proved, or if you believe from all the evidence in the ease that, even though the three propositions have been proved, the document was nonetheless executed as the free and voluntary act of Freddie E. Wagner, then your verdict should be for the Respondents [proponents].” [Illinois Pattern Jury Instruction No. 200.03, Stormon v. Weiss, 65 N.W.2d 475 (N.D.1954)] 1

The following instruction was given:

“A testator, not subjected to undue influence, may dispose of his property as he wishes without regard to the desires of prospective beneficiaries or the views of juries or courts.
“Every testator has the right to change the manner of disposing of his property, and in the absence of undue influence, his changed will is valid.
“A Will must be a true expression of the testator’s wishes. If, instead, it is the product of undue influence of another, it must be denied probate on that ground. To be ‘undue,’ the influence must amount to coercion destroying free agency of the testator, substituting for his own another’s will and compelling the testator to make a disposition he would not otherwise have made.
“The word ‘undue’ should be emphasized, because the law does not condemn all influence. It condemns only that degree of intrusion which destroys the testator’s own judgment and volition. Accordingly, probate will not be denied because a testator was influenced by affection, gratitude, family and personal relationships, or ordinary advice and argument. These motivating factors commonly enter into a testator’s consideration and are proper, because they do not deprive the testator of his own free will.
“The elements necessary to be established to warrant the rejection of a will on the ground of undue influence are:
“One, that the testator was subject to such influence; and
“Two that the opportunity to exercise it existed; and
“Three, that there was a disposition to exercise it; and
“Four, that the result appears to be the effect of such influence.

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Bluebook (online)
265 N.W.2d 459, 1978 N.D. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-estate-of-wagner-nd-1978.