Moore v. McNulty

64 S.W. 159, 164 Mo. 111, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 202
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 28, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 64 S.W. 159 (Moore v. McNulty) 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
Moore v. McNulty, 64 S.W. 159, 164 Mo. 111, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 202 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

GANTT, J.-

— This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Shelby county establishing the last will of [116]*116Charles Moore, deceased.

Charles Moore was a widower and childless. He had for many years prior to his death lived to himself and in the last year or two when he was sick he boarded with Sylvester Mc-Nulty. In this manner he became attached to a little daughter of McNulty. McNulty was a poor man and Moore sold him forty acres of land and took his note for $800. He concluded McNulty could not pay for the land and repeatedly said he should not be turned out of the property. Mr. Moore was afflicted with enlargement of the prostate gland and retention of the urine, superinduced by la grippe.

The testator had little or no communication with his relatives, nephews and nieces, and expressed a determination, long before his last illness, not to will them his property. On the day before he died his physician found he was rapidly failing in strength and advised him that if he desired to make any disposition of his property it would be well to do so at once, and a neighbor who had visited him made a like suggestion, but neither indicated how nor to whom he should give his estate. He requested the doctor to send Mr. Lear, a justice of the peace, to his house to draft his will. Lear came and the old gentleman dictated the will, and Lear wrote. He requested two or three of his neighbors to attest the will, which they did. When the will was ready for his signature he sat up in the bed and took the pen to sign his name, but said he was too nervous to write, and thereupon the justice signed his name in the presence of the witnesses, and he made his mark.

By his will he gave his relatives $50, and to Sylvester Mc-Nulty he gave the forty acres which he had sold him, and to little Annie McNulty he gave the remainder of his estate, con- • sisting of seventy-five acres of land. The whole property wa3 valued at about $2,300. He was indebted about $500.

The cause was tried to a jury under instructions from the [117]*117court and they found the paper writing propounded to be the last will and testament of Charles Moore.

The will was assailed by plaintiffs, who are the collateral heirs at law of the testator, on two grounds: the incapacity of the testator to make a will, and the undue influence of the executor therein named, Jesse Hardy, and Sylvester McNulty and his little daughter Annie, the legatees and devisees named in the will.

To sustain the charge of incapacity, plaintiffs relied upon the evidence that the testator was seventy-two years old when he made the will and died within eight hours after its execution. In his young manhood, Mr. Moore had been a teacher, a man of exemplary habits, and scrupulous in his dress. In his old agie, he had lived alone and paid little attention to his dress. He had become subject to periodical attacks of suppression of the urine. The physicians testified that retention of urine results in blood poison, which affects the nerve centers and has a tendency to produce coma and sometimes convulsions. On the evening that he made his will he was weak and failing, but went more rapidly than the physician anticipated. Dr. Smith testified that he discovered “nothing wrong mentally with him.” When Mr. Lear, the justice who drew the will, came, the testator was asleep and he expressed the opinion that he (Lear) was too late, but Mr. Hardy aroused him and he then dictated the will. Lear says he was very precise in dictating the will. When he dictated that fifty dollars should be given his relatives, Lear told him to be more definite and name them, he said, “No, let it go that way.” “The only thing that impressed me,” says Lear, “was by his condition when I got there.... He was precise as to making disposition of his property.” He named the witnesses and his executor without any suggestion, as he did in naming his devisees and the property he gave them. The scrivener wrote a clause to which he objected and that paper was torn up.

[118]*118On the other hand, the proponents point to the fact that the testator selected Mr. Lear in preference to Mr. Cleek to prepare his will; that he would not suffer any dictation from Mr. Lear in naming his relatives; that he was precise in making his dispositions, showing- that he had the objects of his bounty and his property in mind“named his executor and the witnesses without suggestion.”

He had not lived with any of his relatives for a long time and there is no evidence that they had ministered to him in his old age; he lived in McNulty’s family and became attached to the family, particularly the little girl, Annie, and had said before he became sick that he intended to provide for her.

Under these circumstances, it obviously was a question of fact for the jury to determine his capacity to make a will.

At the instance of the contestants the court on this point instructed the jury that it devolved upon defendants, the proponents, “to show by the greater weight of the evidence... that at the time of signing, attesting and publishing the said paper writing as and for his last will and testament, said testator was of sound and disposing mind and memory — that is, that he. understood the business at which he was engaged — had a mind and memory capable of presenting to him the extent and nature of his property and the persons who were the natural objects of his bounty and of understanding the disposition made of his property by such alleged last will and testament, and that unless they so establish such facts to your reasonable satisfaction by the greater weight of the evidence, your verdict will be for the plaintiffs, Thomas J. Moore et al.,” and in another instruction told the jury that if they believed that at the time of signing said paper writing as his will, “Charles L. Moore was old, feeble in mind and body, from sickness or other cause, and had not sufficient understanding and intelligence to transact his ordinary business affairs, and to comprehend the transaction then [119]*119in question, the nature and extent of his property and the natural objects of Ms bounty and to -whom he was giving said property, then he had not sufficient capacity to make a will and their verdict would be for plaintiffs.” Eor the defendants the court instructed the jury that “a man has 'the right to dispose of his property by will as he chooses even to the exclusion of Ms nearest relatives, and the mere fact that the jury may believe the disposition unjust or unfair will not of itself justify the jury in finding such instrument not the last will of the deceased.”

These instructions fairly and fully presented the law on the question of capacity, and as there was substantial evidence to justify the finding that he had such capacity, tMs court can not interfere with that finding.

A proceeding to contest a will is an action at law, in which the parties are entitled to a jury, and its verdict will not be disturbed on appeal on the ground that it is against the mere weight of evidence. [Garland v. Smith, 127 Mo. 567; Young v. Ridenbaugh, 67 Mo. 589; Lyne v. Marcus, 1 Mo. 410; Appleby v. Brock, 76 Mo. 314.]

II. As to the execution of the will, the court, at the request of plaintiffs, directed the jury that the burden rested on defendants to show by the greater weight of the evidence that the paper writing described in the petition and read in evidence was signed by the testator, Charles L. Moore, deceased, or by T. B.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W. 159, 164 Mo. 111, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-mcnulty-mo-1901.