Meyers v. Drake

24 S.W.2d 116, 324 Mo. 612, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 476
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 3, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 116 (Meyers v. Drake) 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
Meyers v. Drake, 24 S.W.2d 116, 324 Mo. 612, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 476 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

This is an action under the statute (Sec. 525, R.S. 1919), commenced on October 21, 1924, to contest the validity of the will of Madison C. Drake, deceased (who died a bachelor, at the age of 75 years, on January 7, 1924), which will was admitted to probate by the Probate Court of Ralls County on January 24, 1924. The testator, Madison C. Drake, after making a bequest of $500 in cash to Darwin Brooks, a boy friend of the testator, and a bequest of $1,000 in cash to William Joseph Drake, a nephew of testator, devised his residence realty, comprising approximately three-fourths of an acre, and situate in the town of Oakwood, in Ralls County, Missouri, to his sister Drucilla M. Hawkins; and the residuary estate, real, personal and mixed, of the testator, was bequeathed and devised *Page 619 to William Madison Hawkins, a nephew of testator and the son of testator's sister Drucilla M. Hawkins. The testator, by his will, nominated William Madison Hawkins as the executor of his estate, and such appointment was made by the Probate Court of Ralls County. The will was signed and published by the testator on September 9, 1922, and the signing and publication of the will was witnessed by Berryman Henwood and Robert M. Clayton, who attested the signing and publication of the will by subscribing their names to the will in the presence of the testator, and in the presence of each other.

The contestants of the will (who are the parties plaintiff in the action) are Fannie Meyers, Martha Schrage, Mary Dettle and Catherine Rood, nieces of the testator, being the daughters of George W. Drake, a predeceased brother of testator. The parties defendant in the action are the respective beneficiaries named in the will of testator. William Madison Hawkins is named as a party defendant in the capacity of executor of testator's estate, as well as in his individual capacity. The minor beneficiary, Darwin Brooks, having died after the commencement of the action, his surviving parents, J.L. Brooks and Annie Brooks, were substituted as parties defendant in the stead of Darwin Brooks, deceased.

The petition is conventional in form, alleging that the paper writing of September 9, 1922, purporting to be the last will and testament of Madison C. Drake, is not the will of said testator, for the reason that the said testator, at the time of the alleged signing and execution of such purported will, was not of sound mind and had not mental capacity sufficient to make a will, and for the further reason that the purported making and signing of said written instrument was procured by the undue influence of the defendant and chief beneficiary, William Madison Hawkins, upon and over the mind of said testator. The petition prayed that the issue whether said instrument of writing is, in fact, the last will of testator be submitted to a jury, and that said purported will be declared void and of no effect. The joint answer of defendants joined the issues raised and presented by the petition.

At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court instructed the jury that there is no evidence in the cause as to undue influence, upon the part of William Madison Hawkins, over the mind of the testator, and, as to such issue or claim, their verdict must be to sustain the will of testator. The issue or claim of testator's mental incapacity to make the will was submitted to the jury, resulting in a finding and verdict by nine of the jurors that the instrument of writing dated September 9, 1922, is the last will and testament of Madison C. Drake, deceased, and judgment was entered in accordance with such verdict. After an unsuccessful motion for a new *Page 620 trial, the plaintiffs (contestants) were allowed an appeal to this court. This court takes jurisdiction of the appeal for the reason that the record discloses that the pecuniary value of testator's estate, in controversy, exceeds the sum of $7,500.

The proponents of the will (defendants) educed the testimony of Berryman Henwood and Robert H. Clayton, the attesting witnesses to the signing and publication of the will, both of whom testified that the will was signed and published by the testator, Madison C. Drake, in their presence; that the testator was of sound mind at the time of the signing and publication of the will; and that they had subscribed their names to the will, as attesting witnesses, at the request and in the presence of the testator, and in the presence of each other.

The witness Berryman Henwood further testified that he was a practicing attorney in Hannibal, Missouri, on and long prior to the month of September, 1922; that Madison C. Drake came alone, and unaccompanied, to the law office of Mr. Henwood in Hannibal early in the month of September, 1922, and requested that Mr. Henwood write his will; that no one else was present in the office at the time; that Madison C. Drake discussed with Mr. Henwood the terms of the contemplated will at considerable length; that he discussed the matter of his property, in a general way, and his relationships, and how he wanted to divide and distribute his property by will; and, furthermore, Madison C. Drake discussed the matter of his relatives, his attachment for certain relatives, and his lack of attachment for other relatives; that, in the course of the conversation, Mr. Drake mentioned the plaintiffs (contestants), and said that he had not been close to them, or had they been close to him, since they had grown up, and he did not feel that they were interested in him; that was why, Mr. Drake explained to Mr. Henwood, he was leaving them (plaintiffs) out of the provisions of his will; that Mr. Henwood, during the course of the conversation, made a memorandum of the desires of Mr. Drake respecting the disposition of his property, from which memorandum Mr. Henwood thereafter dictated the will in controversy to his stenographer; that, several days after the typewritten will had been prepared by Mr. Henwood, Madison C. Drake returned to Mr. Henwood's office and himself, unaided by Mr. Henwood, read the typewritten will, and, after reading the will twice, Mr. Drake signed the will in the presence of both Mr. Henwood and Mr. Clayton, both of whom thereupon attested the signing of the will in the presence of Madison C. Drake; whereupon, Mr. Henwood delivered the will to Mr. Drake, who took the will from Mr. Henwood's office, after it had been enclosed in a large envelope labeled, "Last Will and Testament of Madison C. Drake." Mr. Henwood testified further that he had been reared in the town of Oakwood, and in *Page 621 the immediate neighborhood where the testator, Madison C. Drake, resided, and had been well acquainted with testator from Mr. Henwood's boyhood until testator's death; that never a month passed that Mr. Henwood did not see testator at least once, and often he saw testator two or three times a month; that, at times, he had been the legal adviser of testator, but that testator never had much business in which he required the advice and aid of a lawyer; that testator was always industrious, and worked at something every day, but that, in the last ten or fifteen years of testator's life, he was what Mr. Henwood would call a "tinkerer," fixing the fence about his home place, feeding and caring for the live stock and poultry thereon, milking the cows and peddling milk about the neighborhood, and driving a horse and buggy about the principal streets of Hannibal; and that Mr. Henwood had never observed testator, at any time during such long acquaintance, "when he did not impress me as being of perfectly sound mind."

Robert M.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 116, 324 Mo. 612, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-drake-mo-1930.