Mott v. Willman

24 S.W.2d 311, 232 Ky. 594, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 450
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 17, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 311 (Mott v. Willman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mott v. Willman, 24 S.W.2d 311, 232 Ky. 594, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 450 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Hobson

Reversing.

The will of Minnie K. Gallagher was duly probated in the Boyd county court. Appellants prosecuted an appeal to the. circuit court. On the trial of the case in the circuit court, there was a majority verdict of the jury against the will. The court granted a new trial on the ground that he had erred in submitting the question of undue influence to the jury. The case was tried again, and there was a majority verdict in favor of the will. Appellants moved the court to enter judgment upon the first verdict. The court overruled the motion, and entered judgment upon the second verdict. They appeal.

The facts are these:

Minnie K. Gallagher was the widow of Jerry Gallagher; he having died late in August, 1926. They had no children. After his death she continued to live at the old home. George Kobs, who had worked for many years with her husband and was unmarried, lived with her; *595 also her niece Kizzie Clay Lindsey. Mrs. Gallagher had been in bad health for some years, before her husband died, of kidney trouble. This had affected her eyes so that she was practically blind. She was a sister of M. S. Burns, who was the father of Kizzie Clay Lindsey and Shirley B. Wellman. She had a sister Sophia, who lived in Missouri and was in very reduced circumstances; her husband was paralyzed. She had another sister, Mrs. Katherine Mott, who lived at Ceredo, W. Va., about 3 miles from where Mrs. Gallagher lived. In addition to this she had a number of nephews and nieces, and as they testify she was on very friendly terms with them. She had real estate of considerable value, and personal property, including stocks, of value $30,000, according to the proof for the appellants. All the property she had came to her under the will of her husband, who left everything to her. M. S. Burns testified that, about three weeks after her husband’s death, his sister requested him to write her will for her, telling him how she wanted it written; that he went home, wrote out the will, and about two weeks later sent it to her by his wife, Mrs. Cora Burns. He lived at Louisa, and she lived at Catlettsburg. By this will certain real property owned by her was willed to George Kobs, except her residence property, and this was willed to him for life and at his death to Shirley Wellman and Kizzie Clay Lindsey. She devised to Maud Wilson $250 and all the rest of her property she left to Shirley B. Wellman and Kizzie Clay Lindsey, share and share alike, and, if either died, the survivor took it all. He testified that when he next saw his sister she said that she was thinking about the will.

Thus things ran along until Sunday the 12th of December. That night she was taken very sick. At 4 a. m. she had a convulsion. At 8 a. m. a trained nurse came, and the doctor, who had been with her for some time, then told the nurse that she was dying. George Kobs telephoned to M. S. Burns the situation. Burns testified that he left his home at Louisa on the train at 11 a. m. and reached Catlettsburg about 12 m. He went from the train straight to the house and went to his sister’s room. He asked her about the will, and she said she wanted to leave the land to Kobs without restriction and wanted the $250 paid to Maud Wilson in six months. Kobs got the will out of the drawer. He and Burns went downstairs to the sun parlor, and there Burns took a pen and crossed out of the will all the words limiting the *596 estate of G-eorge Kobs to Ms life, and added after the clause about Maud Wilson the words, “not later than six months after my decease.” He and Kobs then went back upstairs together. He read the will to Mrs. Gallagher. He says that she said then, “That is just what I want.” She touched the pencil, and her signature was witnessed by the doctor and the nurse, who both testify that she was then competent.

On the other hand, for the contestants it is clearly shown that they gave her morphine at 8 o ’clock; that at 10 o’clock she had another convulsion; that they gave her morphine again and put her in a hot wrap, and at 12:30 she had another convulsion. At 8 o’clock she had another, and after this passed into a state of coma and died at 2 o ’clock the next morning. About noon the Catholic priest was sent for. He came, he says, at 12:30. He testifies at great length as to the condition he found her in, and the substance of his testimony is that she did not know anything. According to his testimony, his visit was about the time the will was made; but, according to the testimony for the propounders, his visit was at least an hour after the will was made. Still, as the train did not get there until 12 o ’clock and after this Burns went to the house and saw his sister and made the changes in the will, it could not have well been executed long before 12:30, and she had the third convulsion at 12:30. Burns, on being recalled, testified that he got to Catlettsburg at 11 a. m., but he testifies that he got to the house in not “over an hour or so,” and this would place the execution of the will almost as late as 12 m. Some of the witnesses who were present testified that she said.“Yes” when asked questions, while others say she did use other words. She was breathing heavily all that day. Her breathing could be heard over the house. One of her nephews came there at 10 o ’clock, and Kobs saw Mm and told him that she was sick and they allowed nobody to see her.

Considering the evidence as to her feeble condition when this will was made, clearly there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury on the question of her capacity at that time. In view of the ruling of the circuit court in granting the new trial, the material question presented now is: Was there sufficient evidence of undue influence to submit this question to the jury?

Margaret Gallagher, who was a niece of her husband, testifies that nine days before she died Mrs. Galla *597 gher said to her that she would commit suicide only she knew that she would never see her uncle Jerry’s face if she died that way; that nobody knew what she was going through; that she said: “I haven’t made a will, but I want to. I haven’t been able to get one to suit me. I love all my people. I want to remember them all, especially my sister Sophia in Missouri, for she needs it more than any of them and I suppose all my people need it with the exception of uncle Milt and his daughters. I think a lot of them, but they are well provided for. Brother Milt is very wealthy. You know, Marg, ‘I won’t never marry. I don’t know why but Milt’s wife keeps asking me, ‘Now, Minnie, don’t sign anything.’ ”

Caroline Burns Meek testified that two weeks before her aunt died she was talking to her, and her aunt said that, if she did what she wanted with her money, she would like to leave it to the education of children; that her sister Sophia, who lived in Missouri, was poor and she needed the money, and she would like to leave her money where it was needed.

Maud Wilson testified that after she died George Kobs said to her that Milt Burns began to hound Min (testatrix) the next day after Jerry was buried, and that he hounded the life out of her to make a will. He said Min did not want to make a will and he did not think she was in any condition to make a will. She also testified that Kobs said to her that he was very much hurt when they limited his rights to a life estate, and that he told Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 311, 232 Ky. 594, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mott-v-willman-kyctapphigh-1929.