Pickett v. Cooper

192 S.W.2d 412, 354 Mo. 910, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 375
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 7, 1946
DocketNo. 39456.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 192 S.W.2d 412 (Pickett v. Cooper) 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
Pickett v. Cooper, 192 S.W.2d 412, 354 Mo. 910, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 375 (Mo. 1946).

Opinions

This is an action to contest the will of Walter S. McColly devising and bequeathing realty and personalty of approximate value, $21,000. Testator's mental capacity was the issue; and the jury found the purported will was not the last will and testament of deceased. Defendant-proponent, James F. Cooper, the residuary legatee, has appealed from the ensuing judgment.

Walter S. McColly died December 18, 1943, at the age of eighty years. The contested instrument had been made on November 3, 1943, while testator was confined in General Hospital at Mexico, Missouri. Testator was not survived by children or other descendants, and his wife had died April 5, 1938; but he was survived by two brothers, two sisters, two nephews and four nieces. The original contestants were the then living brothers and sisters, of testator, and his nephews and nieces who are the children of a deceased sister. A brother, contestant, has died since the trial of the cause and his executrix has been substituted as a party plaintiff.

By the contested will testator devised his eighty-acre farm to his brothers and sisters; town lots to a friend; bequeathed sums of money to churches, friends, and a niece; and gave the residue and major portion of his property to James F. Cooper, appellant, cashier of the First National Bank of Mexico. James F. Cooper was also designated executor with bond.

[1] As stated, the issue submitted to the jury was the mental capacity of Walter S. McColly to make a will; and it is contended by *Page 914 appellant there was no substantial evidence introduced to sustain the finding that McColly did not have the mental capacity to make testamentary disposition of his property. In the review of this contention, the evidence will be viewed in the most favorable light to plaintiffs (respondents), the verdict of the jury being in their favor. Dowling v. Luisetti, 351 Mo. 514,173 S.W.2d 381. In determining the sufficiency of plaintiffs' evidence we must put the defendants' evidence out of consideration, save as it may aid plaintiffs' case, and must accept plaintiffs' evidence as entirely true and give plaintiffs the benefit of every inference legitimately to be drawn therefrom. Fowler v. Fowler,318 Mo. 1078, 2 S.W.2d 707. As in other actions at law where an issue is submitted to the jury, so in an action to contest a will, an appellate court does not pass upon the weight of the evidence but may determine whether there was any substantial evidence to submit a given issue to the jury. Smith v. Fitzjohn,354 Mo. 137, 188 S.W.2d 832; Dowling v. Luisetti, supra.

[2] Testator for many years had resided on his eighty-acre farm, mentioned supra, situate in Audrain County near Rowena, until the death of his wife; and thereafter testator lived variously at the homes of others in Audrain and Boone counties. For about seventeen years preceding his death, he had been in ill health at times and had been treated at several hospitals. After the death of his wife, he had become dissatisfied and restless; "he could not get reconciled." Dr. F.L. McCormick, in whose hospital at Moberly testator was treated from January 13 to January 21, 1942, testified that testator was then in poor health. He suffered with "hydro-achloridia," or lack of acid in the stomach. He was mentally deranged. His mind was absolutely unsound. He was suspicious of the food. He would get out into the hall when he was supposed to be in bed. "We took his clothes out of the room and he would get out in the hall without any clothes on except his underclothes. He would pile chairs up against the door to keep people from coming into the room and he would talk to himself." [414] Testator had been brought to the McCormick hospital by Dr. M.C. McMurray of Paris. Dr. McCormick stated. ". . . I had to call Dr. McMurray to take him home because we could not care for that type of patient." It was Dr. McCormick's opinion that testator could not transact any business when he "was at my place . . ." because "he could not carry on a conversation . . . he didn't know anything." In the doctor's opinion, testator's condition would get worse.

Dr. McMurray, to whose hospital at Paris testator was taken January 21st, testified that testator was afflicted with senile dementia due to hardening of the arteries of the brain. When Dr. McMurray went to Dr. McCormick's hospital to get testator. "Mr. McColly was in the room and had the door barred with chairs and had a chair up in his *Page 915 arms. I pushed the door open and he was against the door and I pushed the door open and he was there with a chair up this way (indicating). I got hold of the chair. He was no trouble for me to handle and I finally got him quieted down . . . He acted very well, coming home. . . . and when we got out of the car McColly started on down the street . . . and he said he was going home . . . I got hold of him and took him up to the room. . . . and he hollowed and fought and we had to overpower him to get him in . . . Then for a week or ten days, we had to give him medicine to keep him quieted down. He would not eat. We had to force down what we got him to take and finally he began to get a little better . . ." Testator remained in the McMurray hospital until February 25, 1942. The doctor stated that testator never was mentally right while he was there. "I was satisfied that he would not get well, but he might temporarily get better." The doctor saw testator in the month of August, 1943, ". . . when I saw him he was not right but he could get around and do a little business, at times."

Dr. George M. Ragsdale, a physician of Paris, had examined testator at the McMurray hospital on January 22, 1942. Testator was incoherent and in a delirious state — "liable to tell you anything." He had pronounced arteriosclerosis and senile dementia. Witness again saw testator in February 1943, "He would get on a subject and before you could answer he would jump over to another . . . I could not at any time engage him in an intelligent conversation." Dr. Ragsdale saw testator "off and on all that summer" and could not see any improvement. "I say he was a person of unsound mind." In a pronounced case of arteriosclerosis, the "brain blood vessels can become so hard the brain doesn't get the proper nourishment and therefore the man is suffering, we say, with softening of the brain."

Plaintiffs' lay witnesses, including testator's two brothers, a sister, and a niece (and others) testified of the conduct of the testator in the latter years of his life.

Testator, who had moneys deposited in banks and invested in postal savings certificates, forgot where his postal savings certificates were; he got the First National Bank of Mexico confused with the First National Bank of Centralia. He threatened to take his life. He offered to will his property to a witness to whom he was in no way obligated or related. "He said that Potter (husband of a niece) was trying to rob him." He was fearful that somebody would take the money out of the estate of William E. McColly, an estate of testator's deceased brother which was then in process of administration. He bid his best suit in a newspaper and would complain of people stealing his clothes. He thought someone had stolen the door off a building on his farm.

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.W.2d 412, 354 Mo. 910, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickett-v-cooper-mo-1946.