Murphy v. Clancy

163 S.W. 915, 177 Mo. App. 429, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 87
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 915 (Murphy v. Clancy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Clancy, 163 S.W. 915, 177 Mo. App. 429, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 87 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

ROBERTSON, P. J.

On March 5, 1910, Richard McDonough, an aged bachelor, made his will devising all of his property to his nephew and appointing one Wm. H. Horine, of Springfield, Missouri, his. executor. On May 21, 1910, he made a codicil thereto, in which he provided that any indebtedness which he had against his niece, Mary A. Steffy, should be released and discharged and any evidence of indebtedness in possession of his estate should be surrendered to and not charged against her. This niece and the testator had [433]*433lived a considerable portion of tbeir time together or as neighbors. During the summer of 1911 the niece was living on a farm in Douglas county, Missouri, and the testator was at a hospital in Springfield. The niece traded her farm in Douglas county for a hotel in Neodesha, Kansas. On her way to Kansas she stopped at Springfield and visited her uncle, whom she met at Holland’s Bank on Monday, June 19, 1911. He expressed a desire to go to some other place than where he was then stopping and she invited him to visit her, asking him to go with her at that time, but he said he could not get ready to go until later. While at the bank the testator said he had papers he wanted to get fixed before' he went out with her and upon her asking what papers they were, he said: “I have a will drawn up and Horine has it and he is administrator and I want to get the papers and will Mr. Horine has.” She went to Kansas returning to Springfield the latter part of that week and the testator went home with her, walking to the depot in Springfield, and was then in his normal state of health. He was subject to strokes of paralysis, and after he had been at Mrs. Stefi'y’s hotel a short time he had another stroke of paralysis, and upon being helped into the hotel and into bed he stated that he wished Thomas Murphy, a brother of the niece, was there and she told him if he wanted her brother she would get him. She got into communication with her brother at some other point over the long distance telephone and he arrived there that evening at about five o ’clock. The testator said he wanted the nephew to look after his papers, that be wanted him to go to Springfield, but the nephew advised him that it was unnecessary to go to Springfield, that the same object could be accomplished by writing. After being reassured by the nephew that such could be accomplished, the testator stated that it was all right, that he wanted to get his papers and the will [434]*434that Mr. Horine had. Then the nephew told the testator that there would have to be. two witnesses to what he wrote and the testator remarked that Mr. Arnold and his niece, Mrs. Steffy, would do for witnesses. Mr. Arnold was the former owner of the hotel and was yet occupying a room there and was one ■of the parties who assisted in taking the testator to his room at the time this stroke of paralysis occurred. 'Thereupon, at the dictation of the testator, the following instrument, the one in question here, was written by the nephew, on two sheets of paper:

Neodasha, June, 30-1911.

No. 1.

Mr. T. B. Holland, President Banking Co., Springfield, Mo.

Hear Sir:

I wish you would see Mr. Horine and ask for my ■papers that he has as I now declare and wish them to be null and void I will thank you in advance for ■troubling you by asking you again to secure those pa-pers from Mr. Horine As I want Father Miles of St. .Johns Church Springfield Mo To Administer my Estate.

No. 2

As I have secured his consent to the use of his .'Name as Administrator.

Written By my Nephew,

Thomas F. Murphy.

Richard McDonough,

By his mark X.

.J. L. P. Arnold, Witness,

.Mrs. Mary A. Steeey, Witness.

Thereupon the nephew called Mr. Arnold in, the ■niece being present during all of this time, and the nephew read this instrument over to his uncle in the presence of both of these witnesses, the uncle asking 'if that would cancel everything that Mr. Horine had, to which the nephew replied, “Yes;” and the uncle [435]*435then expressed his satisfaction therewith. The testator was assisted to his feet to enable him to make his mark on the paper and the witnesses then signed it. The mental capacity of the testator is admitted. No question of undue influence is involved.

The testator died July 9, 1911. Thereafter in the probate court of Greene county, Missouri, the first above referred to will and codicil were presented, proved and ordered admitted to probate. The instrument executed • on June 30, 1911, as above set forth, was later presented to said probate court of Greene county but it was refused to be admitted to probate. Whereupon this action was brought by Thomas F. Murphy, William Murphy, Margaret E. Clancy, Mary T. Clancy, Anna Clancy and John Richard Clancy, as plaintiffs, against Thomas Clancy, Michael Clancy, Margaret Clancy, Thomas C. Walsh, Anna Walsh, John Walsh, a minor, Mary A. Steffy and William H. Horine, Executor, as defendants, seeking to have this last writing declared as the last will and testament of said testator and so admitted to probate, and seeking to have the first executed will and codicil, which had been admitted to probate, rejected and declared null and void. The testator owned no real estate at the date of his death.

The testimony disclosed that the first will was drafted by Mr. Horine but that he did not retain possession of it; that it was delivered to the testator who took it to Holland’s Bank in Springfield. It appears that Mr. Horine was the regular attorney for the testator and attended to considerable business for him, but that the testator did not at any time leave the papers with him, but kept them in the bank. The testimony also discloses that there was no priest in Springfield by the name of Father Miles, nor had there ever been a Catholic church there known as St. John’s Church. The hospital at which the testator had been stopping was St. John’s Hospital, a Catholic institution, and a Fa[436]*436ther Mauras of Springfield had transacted some business for the testator, who was a Catholic.

There was a jury trial and instructions were given at the request of the plaintiffs as follows:

“1. The court instructs the jury that this is an action to contest the will of Richard McDonough, dated March 5, 1910s. It stands admitted by the plaintiffs that that will was duly executed by him at the time, and it is for the jury to say whether it is his last will, or whether it was revoked by the later instrument, dated June 30, 1911.

“If you believe from the evidence that the instrument dated June 30, 1911, was written by the direction of McDonough and his name was signed thereto at his request, and that Mary A. Steffy and J. L. P. Arnold signed the same as witnesses in his presence and understood its effect as explained in other instructions, then said instrument operated to revoke the mil dated March 5, 1910, so that it was not his last will, and you will so find.

“2. You are instructed that if you believe from the evidence that the paper dated June 30, 1911, was written at the request of Richard McDonough and duly executed and witnessed in the manner and for the purpose as explained in other instructions, then the same was his last will, and had the effect to revoke his former will dated March 5, 1910, and if you so find from the evidence, you will answer that the instrument dated March 5, 1910, was not the last will of said Richard McDonough.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 915, 177 Mo. App. 429, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-clancy-moctapp-1914.