Patton v. Shelton

40 S.W.2d 706, 328 Mo. 631, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 394
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 40 S.W.2d 706 (Patton v. Shelton) 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
Patton v. Shelton, 40 S.W.2d 706, 328 Mo. 631, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 394 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

This is an action under the statute (Sec. 537, R.S. 1929) to contest the validity of the will of Mrs. Nannie Shelton, deceased. For many years Mrs. Shelton lived and in February, 1927, died in Jonesburg, Montgomery County. The action was begun there, but on application of plaintiffs the venue was changed to Warren County, where a trial was had. The jury by its verdict found that the purported will was not the last will and testament of Mrs. Shelton. Judgment was rendered accordingly. The motion for a new trial filed by Oliver M. Shelton, the sole beneficiary under the purported will, and its named executor, was overruled and he appealed to this court. The estimated value of the estate ranges from ten to fifteen thousand dollars. The plaintiffs and the minor defendant, Susie Mae Ellis, are Mrs. Nannie Shelton's sole heirs, they being descendants of Mrs. Shelton's brother.

Plaintiff Edward Patton is a nephew of Mrs. Nannie Shelton. He lives in Paris, Missouri, seventy-five miles by railroad from Jonesburg, Mrs. Nannie Shelton's home. The other plaintiffs and the minor defendant. Susie Mae Ellis, are grandnephews and grandnieces of Mrs. Nannie Shelton. Some live in Garden City, Kansas, and all of them at a distance from Jonesburg. *Page 635

Defendant Oliver Shelton was a half-brother of Mrs. Nannie Shelton's husband, Frank Shelton. Oliver Shelton lived in Arkansas, until about May, 1926, when he took up his abode with the Sheltons in Jonesburg. He returned to Arkansas several times, but he made a fairly permanent home in Jonesburg, especially after the death of his half-brother, Frank Shelton, who passed away July 8, 1926. It would seem that whatever property Mrs. Nannie Shelton had to dispose of by will she inherited or received from Frank Shelton, her husband.

Mrs. Shelton executed the will in suit on August 7, 1926, and as before said, she died in February, 1927. Mrs. Shelton, by the will, directed the payment of all her just debts, and left the remainder of her property "to my brother-in-law (the half-brother of my deceased husband) Oliver M. Shelton." She appointed Oliver Shelton executor without bond.

The petition charges that Mrs. Nannie Shelton, who was about seventy-six years old at the time that she executed the will in suit, had been "feeble in health for many years, and in consequence of which she was weak and feeble both in body and mind;" that defendant Oliver Shelton took up his residence in the Shelton home in Jonesburg some months before the execution of the will and while Frank Shelton, the husband of Nannie Shelton and half-brother of Oliver Shelton, was yet alive. The petition further recites:

"That after the death of the husband of the said Nannie Shelton, deceased, the said defendant Oliver M. Shelton remained in the home of the said Nannie Shelton, who was an invalid, and who had for many years been an invalid, and was her constant companion and nurse, and that by reason of his living within the home and nursing the said Nannie Shelton while she was an invalid, the said Oliver M. Shelton had gained full and complete confidence of the said Nannie Shelton, and complete influence over her."

The petition further charges that at the time of the execution of the will in suit. Nannie Shelton, deceased, was completely under the influence, domination and control of defendant Oliver M. Shelton; that she was not of a determined mind and that her mind and memory had become and was impaired; that she had become of unsound mind within the meaning of the law, incapable of understanding, realizing, or appreciating what disposition she had or was making of her property and affairs; "that defendant Oliver M. Shelton, knowing the exact condition of the said Nannie Shelton, deceased, and of her mind at said time, and knowing that, at the time, by reason of his nursing and caring for her and living within her home, and the confidential relation existing between himself and the said Nannie Shelton, deceased, and knowing that the said Nannie Shelton was weak in body and in mind, and was far advanced in years, by his request, entreaties and influence, over the mind of the said Nannie *Page 636 Shelton, prevailed upon her to make said pretended will." The petition further charged "that the defendant Oliver M. Shelton well knowing the confidential relation existing between himself and the said Nannie Shelton and knowing his influence over the mind of the said Nannie Shelton and in violation of said confidential relation existing between the said Oliver M. Shelton and the said Nannie Shelton, did by words, acts and entreaties towards her, the said Nannie Shelton, unduly influence and prejudice the mind of the said Nannie Shelton against these plaintiffs and the said defendant Susie Mae Ellis," and thereby brought about the execution of the will.

Defendant Oliver M. Shelton, by his answer, set up that the will in suit was the last will and testament of Nannie Shelton. He put in issue the allegations of the petition that the purported will was not her will for want of testamentary capacity and by reason of his undue influence. The guardian of the minor defendant, Susie Mae Ellis, filed an answer adopting the allegations of the petition.

At the trial, defendant Oliver Shelton, proponent of the will, and as such having the opening and closing to the jury (Teckenbrock v. McLaughlin, 209 Mo. 533, 108 S.W. 46; Benoist v. Murrin, 58 Mo. l.c. 321) first made a prima-facie proof of the execution of the will and of the competency of Mrs. Shelton at the time. Thereby he shifted to the contestants the burden of evidence which had been his in the first place. [Campbell v. Carlisle, 162 Mo. 644, 63 S.W. 701.] The contestants then introduced their evidence, and at the close of plaintiffs' case it became the right of defendant Oliver Shelton to offer evidence in rebuttal and to fortify his prima-facie case. [Harris v. Hays,53 Mo. 90.] But defendant offered no evidence in rebuttal and the case went to the jury with the result already stated.

At the close of the plaintiffs' case, defendant Oliver M. Shelton offered an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the effect that the paper writing produced in evidence was the last will and testament of Nannie Shelton, deceased. The court refused to give this instruction.

The court gave several instructions at the request of plaintiffs. One of these instructions shifted to defendant, Shelton, the burden of proof that the will was not the result of his undue influence. This instruction applied to the facts of this case, hypothetically stated in the instruction, the presumption of law, sometimes indulged in will contests, that by reason of the confidential and fiduciary relation which Shelton bore to Mrs. Shelton, he exercised undue influence over her in the making of the will and the jury should so find, unless Shelton overcame this presumption by proving by the greater weight of the evidence to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury that such will was not induced by coercion or undue influence on his part. *Page 637

The refused demurrer of defendant Shelton and the given instruction on the presumption of undue influence impose the duty to review the evidence. This review we shall make under classes or topics of facts rather than by resumes of the testimony of each witness.

1. As to Mrs. Shelton's physical and mental health and the care of her:

Dr. E.A. Ball and Mr. G.L. Wilson witnessed the will of Mrs. Shelton in her home at Jonesburg on the evening of August 7, 1926. After testifying on behalf of the proponent of the will, Oliver Shelton, as to its execution, Dr. Ball was cross-examined about her state of health.

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40 S.W.2d 706, 328 Mo. 631, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-shelton-mo-1931.