Norton v. Johnson

226 S.W.2d 689, 359 Mo. 1214, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 557
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 9, 1950
DocketNo. 41322
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 226 S.W.2d 689 (Norton v. Johnson) 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
Norton v. Johnson, 226 S.W.2d 689, 359 Mo. 1214, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 557 (Mo. 1950).

Opinion

BRADLEY, C.

This cause contests the purported will of Ellen A. Ricker, deceased. The jury returned a verdict against the will; judgment went accordingly and this appeal followed. Respondent filed motion to dismiss the appeal for the alleged reason that appellants violated Rule 1.08 in failing to make a fair and concise statement without argument. The motion is overruled. -

The will was executed July 6, 1944; testatrix died April 4, 1946, in her 88th year. April 26, the will was admitted to probate in the probate court of the City of St. Louis, and letters testamentary were issued to the executors, appellants St. Louis Union Trust Company and Mabel Johnson. The estate was of the value of $1,042,670.99, and consisted almost entirely of stocks and bonds; there was no real property. Hereinafter, for the most part, we refer to the testatrix as Miss Ricker and to appellant Mabel Johnson as Miss Johnson; they are most generally so mentioned throughout the record of over 1,000 printed pages.

Miss Ricker was never married; her only heirs were six cousins, five on her mother’s side and one on her father’s side. These are Robert Ricker Norton, respondent, and defendants Jennie Day, Luella Irene Norton Cole, Edwin Knight Norton, Beth Reed, and Mary E. Nesmith. The last named is the cousin on the father’s side. None of the defendant cousins except Miss Nesmith filed answer. Respondent resides in San Mateo, California; Beth Reed resides in Stockton, California; Mary E. Nesmith in Portland, Maine; and the others reside in Weeping Water, Nebraska.

Item 1 of the will directed payment of debts and funeral expenses; item 2 bequeathed to each of the cousins $5,000.00, except Miss Nesmith; she had been otherwise provided for by a gift of $10,000.00 in government bonds; item 3 bequeathed to Miss Nesmith “my stamp [1224]*1224collection and such furniture as she shall designate within ninety days after my death”; item 4 directed the executors to purchase .a suitable tombstone for Miss Ricker and her deceased sister, Mrs. Grace Small, and to have proper inscriptions placed thereon and to have the same erected on the family burial lot in Portland, Maine. Item 5 authorized the executors to sell jewelry, furniture, pictures, etc., the proceeds to go to the residuary estate;.item 6 directed the executors to pay all estate, transfer, and inheritance taxes out of general assets and directed that such taxes should not be charged against any bequest; item 7 provided that if any legatee or legatees contested the. will then the bequest to such legatee or legatees would go to the residuary estate; item 8 bequeathed one half of the residuary estate to appellant Seamen’s Church Institute of New York City, and one fourth of the residuary estate to each of appellants Board of Trustees Missouri Botanical Gardens (Shaw’s Garden), and the St. Louis Chapter of the American Red Cross; item 9 named appellants Miss Johnson and the St. Louis Union Trust Company as executors, and provided that if. for any reason Miss Johnson could -not serve, then the trust company would be the .sole executor; the executors were to serve without bond; also, item 9 recited that Miss Ricker had advice of counsel relative to the will “from some person not under salary” from the St. Louis Union Trust Company.

Respondent (contestant) alleged that the purported will is void because at the time of its execution and for a long time prior thereto Miss Ricker “was feeble in both mind and body; that her mind and memory had become and were impaired, and that she had become of unsound mind”. It was further alleged that the purported will was void because appellant, Miss Johnson, knowing the condition of the deceased, unduly influenced and prejudiced her mind “in the making of said purported last will and testament, and by request, entreaties, misrepresentations, false statements, directions and over-persuasions, prevailed upon her to make said purported will * * * ”.

The executors answered jointly; denied allegations as to unsound mind and denied tne alleged undue influence on the part of Miss Johnson. The Seamen’s Church Institute, Shaw’s Garden, and the Red Cross filed joint answer to the same effect as the answer of rhe executors. Each of the answers alleged that the will was executed intelligently, understandingly, voluntarily and without control, dominance, influence or suggestion from anyone. As stated, none of the defendant cousins filed answer, except Miss Nesmith; it is not necessary to make any statement about her answer; she did not contest the alleged will, and was not represented at the trial.

Miss Ricker was the daughter of Colonel Robert E. Ricker and Ellen Sawyer Ricker. Colonel Ricker was a civil engineer; came to St. Louis with his family, his wife and two daughters, during the days when the Iron Mountain Railroad was building; he was one of [1225]*1225the inventors of the Westinghouse air brake arid received a substantial amount of Westinghouse stock which was the foundation of the family fortune. Colonel Ricker died intestate in 1894. The body was first interred at Weeping Water, Nebraska, and later moved to Portland, Maine. He left surviving his widow and the two daughters, Miss Ricker and her sister, Jessie Grace Ricker. In a year or so after the death of Colonel Ricker the widow and the two daughters moved from the home in St. Louis to the Southern Hotel. Mrs. Ricker, the widow, in 1909, became ill and employed appellant Miss Johnson, a trained nurse, to care for her. She was never thereafter well, and died intestate in 1914. Miss Johnson, upon the death of Mrs. Ricker, was employed by Miss Ricker and thereafter continued in her employ acting as a companion and nurse. Miss Ricker was born October 19, 1858, and was 51 years old when Miss Johnson came into the family and was 56 when she employed Miss Johnson. Jessie Grace Ricker, sometime prior to Í909 when Miss Johnson was employed, married a man named Small and did not thereafter live with the family until her husband died in the 1920s, perhaps in 1924. Mrs. Small came back to St. Louis in 1924, after her husband’s death. She died intestate and without descendants in 1927, and Miss Ricker thereupon became the owner of the entire Ricker fortune. The value of .the inheritance from Mrs. Small in 1927 was $350,000.00.

The Southern-Hotel closed in 1912, arid Mrs. Ricker, Miss Ricker and Miss Johnson went to the Planters Hotel, where Mrs. Ricker died in 1914, as stated. The Planters closed in 1922 and Miss Ricker and Miss Johnson went to the Jefferson Hotel. Miss Ricker, Mrs. Small, and Miss Johnson had separate rooms at the hotels where they resided, and Mrs. Small died at the Jefferson. The bodies of Mrs. Ricker, the mother, and Mrs. Small" were taken to Portland, Maine, for burial.

The evidence tended to show that Miss Ricker did not lead a normal life; never went to school, and what educational training she had was by private tutors; she never went to church or had a boy friend; she had none of the usual activities of 'youth. Until her death she dressed in the fashion of the old day; wore long black dresses and hightop lace shoes. For the most part she remained alone in her hotel room, and in,her home room before her father’s death.

Appellant makes 16 specifications or assignments of error. These may be grouped as follows: (1) On the refusal of the court to direct a verdict for the alleged will; (2) on what appellants term the submitting of the question of undue influence on the part of Miss Johnson; (3) on the admission and exclusion of evidence; (4) on the refusal of withdrawal instructions; and (5) on argument.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 S.W.2d 689, 359 Mo. 1214, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-johnson-mo-1950.