Miller v. Miller

210 N.W. 537, 203 Iowa 888
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 26, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 210 N.W. 537 (Miller v. Miller) 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
Miller v. Miller, 210 N.W. 537, 203 Iowa 888 (iowa 1926).

Opinion

Albert, J.

By way of preliminary statement, it may be said that Henry M. Miller was a resident of Lucas County, Iowa, for many years. His family consisted of his wife, Martha E. Miller, his son, Harry Miller, and his daughter, Mary E. Ream. He was possessed of two farms in that county, one of 300 and one of 400 acres, approximately. He lived on what is designated in the record as the “home” or “south” farm, consisting of about 300 acres. He died on the 25th day of September, 1923. His wife predeceased him, on the 15th of January, 1923. Harry Miller, the son, was married, and had one child, a son. Mary Ream, the daughter, was also married, and had' one child, known in the record as Miller Ream. These were the respective families during all of the time of the controversy herein.

The petitioner herein offering for probate the alleged lost will was H. H. Miller, the son of Harry Miller, and the contestants were Harry Miller, Mary Ream, and Miller Ream.

In 1907, the said Henry M. Miller was determined to be insane, and was later confined in a sanitarium, where he remained practically until the time of his death. His wife was appointed guardian, and continued to act as such until the time of her death; whereupon the court appointed one Goodkin, who served as such guardian until the death of the said Henry M. Miller.

*890 It is the claim of plaintiffs that in 1905 the said Henry M. Miller made and executed the purported will which is sought to be probated herein as his last will. This will is known in the record as the “Bartholomew will.” The answer of the respondents is:

(1) They deny the existence of the Bartholomew will, and (2) they say that, if it ever did exist, it was specifically revoked by a later will made by the said Henry M. Miller in the spring or early summer of 1906, which will was claimed to have been drawn by T. M. & C. W. Stuart, who were father and son, practicing law together.' This will is referred to in the record as thé “Stuart will,” and is claimed to have contained, among other provisions, the following:

“Hereby make and declare the following to be my last will and testament and hereby revoke any and all former wills by me made at any time.”

This is a general outline of this contest. The district court held that the Bartholomew will was sufficiently established, and-that there had been-a failure to sufficiently prove the existence of the Stuart will, and therefore admitted the Bartholomew will to probate.

There are some well established principles of law that control cases of this character. The burden of proof is on the proponents to establish two things:

1st. That the will was executed as provided by law.

2d. Its contents.

In each instance, both of these matters must be established by clear and satisfactory evidence. In re Will of Dunahugh, 130 Iowa 692, at 696; McCarn v. Rundall, 111 Iowa 406; In re Estate of Thorman, 162 Iowa 237.

We turn now, to the record, to determine whether or not the appellee successfully carried this burden. He tendered by his pleading the will which was lost, the material part of which he said was a “bequeathing and devising of all of his property, both personal and real, as follows: An undivided one-half interest--in all of his said property to Mary Ream, with remainder over to Miller Ream; an undivided half interest in all of said property to Harry Miller, for his use and benefit during his lifetime only, and at his death to pass to and become the property of the plaintiff, H. H. Miller.”

*891 Later, he withdrew the above allegations, and .by way of amendment, says that H. M. Miller in his, will- disposed of. his property.as follows: “To Harry Miller a life estate in and,to what was known as, the ‘north place’ or farm, and at his -death the same should go to the heirs of the said .Harry Miller. To Mary Ream, the ‘south’ or ‘home place,’ a life estate/and at-her death, to her heirs, if any.” . Hé:further alleges that any other property of which the said Henry M. Miller might-die possessed was devised in equal shares to Harry Miller and Mary Ream during their lifetime, and at their death to their heirs, if any.

To support his position,- appellee introduced one L. E-. Bartholomew, who at one .time practiced law with- his -father at Chariton, and who.is now vice-president of the--Bankers-Trust Company, of -Des Moines. He 'testifies that he was acquainted with Henry M. Miller, who appeared at their office in 1905 or 1906, and that his father and he' together drew .a will for the said-Miller, but that the same was not signed by-Miller, in the witnesses’ presence; that Miller left their office, saying- that he was going to the First National Bank to have it sighed; that the witnesses never saw'the purported will afterwards. ■ He said:

-‘ ‘ It is impossible for me .to state absolutely what was' in that will. I simply had a remembran'ce-^-that is, I. think I do — of the contents of the will generally, but I would not say absolutely what was in-it, at this time. My-remembrance was that-he had two farms; that he gave a life estate in-one of the farms to his son, with remainder fee in his-grandson, to .his .son’s son, and the other farm was given to his daughter, — a life estate to the daughter, and-the remainder-or fee to-her child.” :

He-testifies that he doesn’t remember which farm went do the son or which to the daughter; that the -wife (.Henry Miller’s)was to have the use of the property for her. lifetime; .that he cannot remember whether there were any • easements -given -to either Mary Ream or- Harry- Miller over or across.any part of the farms.- Being pressed, he further said: ' -

“I cannot state absolutely-what was in -that will. -1 can ■ give you my remembrance-of it, — that Is,-my recollection..”

This would-not be the will described in the amended petition, as-it-varies greatly therefrom. '. A • . /

Mrs. Barbara Daugherty says that she is a physician and surgeon,'and=has lived in .Chariton since 18.89., where-,, together *892 with her husband, she ran a drug store; that she knew Henry M. Miller in his lifetime, and his children, and that her husband in a professional way attended Henry M. Miller; that Miller was a frequenter of the drug store, and that she saw him, off and on, from the date of his mental trouble, in 1907, until his last illness, in 1924; that the witness, with the wife of Henry M. Miller, went to the First National Bank and got some papers and brought them down to her place of business, and the wife gave them to the witness, to put in the safe, which she did; that among these papers, mostly insurance papers, the witness says, was the will of Henry M. Miller; that this was on February 5, 1908, after the failure of the First National Bank; that they remained in her possession until March 28, 1914, during which time they were kept in her safe, to which no one had access, except herself and her husband; that T. M. Stuart and Corwin Stuart both saw this will while it was in witness’s possession; that T. M. opened it and read it; and that later, at the request of Harry Miller, witness read the purported will.

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210 N.W. 537, 203 Iowa 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-miller-iowa-1926.