Ranne v. Hodges

181 Iowa 162
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 181 Iowa 162 (Ranne v. Hodges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ranne v. Hodges, 181 Iowa 162 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

I. Henry Ranne was born March 8, 1819. He died November 23, 1914. His first wife had departed this life some time in 1896, and he was married again July 19, 1898. He was then over 79 years of age and she 54, again confirming a saying on high authority “that the mating instinct does not necessarily wane with advancing years.” Perkins v. Perkins, 116 Iowa 253. The second wife died September 3, 3914, leaving four children by a former husband surviving, the proponents in this case. He outlived her but a few months, leaving six children, one of whom, Jasper Ranne, is contestant, and another of whom, Catherine Whiteside, joined proponents by petition of intervention. On October 3, 1906, a paper purporting to be the will of decedent was signed by him in the presence of witnesses, giving to his widow one third of his estate, to a daughter, Ellen Boyd, $300, and the residue, share and share alike, to his other children, William, Henry and Jasper Ranne, Mrs. Whiteside and Alice Weaver. On May 11, 1909, a paper purporting to be a codicil was made, directing that, in lieu of the specific legacy to Mrs. Boyd, she share the residue of the estate equally with the other children. A paper purporting to be a second codicil was signed November 19, 1909, changing the will and first codicil so as to give his three daughters $5,000 each, his son William, $3,000, his son Henry, $2,000, his son Jasper, $1,000, and $2,000 to be divided among the children of Jasper, $1,000 to each of the children of Catherine Whiteside, $2,000 to his wife’s daughter Nora, and the homestead and residue of the estate to his wife. The estate at his death amounted to $61,000' and some accrued interest. Under the last codicil, then, $27,000 of this would pass to decedent’s children, and $34,000' to his stepchildren, of which $10,000 would pass to Nora Bourgeaux and $8,000' to each of the other [165]*165three. The circumstance that one of his children, Mrs. Whiteside, joined proponents, is explained by the circumstance that she and her four children would take $9,000 were the will to be admitted to probate, and little if any more if it were found to be invalid. The will, and also the last codicil, provided that any beneficiary contesting either should be cut off and take nothing thereunder, and this may account for there being but one contestant. His objections, duly filed, were that, when making the will and codicils, and. for many years prior thereto, decedent was of unsound mind, and that these Avere the product of undue influence. No evidence bearing on the latter objection was adduced, and that issue was withdrawn from the jury.

l. avills: testamentary capacity: unsoundness of mind: fieieney6: suf~ The proponents contend that the evideuce Avas insufficient to Avarrant the submission of the remaining. issue to the jury. The Avill was made Avhen testator was nearly 88 years of age. The only change from distribution without a Avill consisted in reducing a daughter’s share of the- estate to $300 and giving the wife one third of the property, instead of leaving her to elect between that and the homestead for life. The inequality as to the daughter Avas eliminated in the first codicil. The second codicil practically abandoned the Avill and first codicil, and in effect the second codicil was a neAV Avill. Besides discriminating betAveen his own children, he therein gave the larger part of his estate to his Avife, AAho was then 65 years of age, and his stepdaughter.

2' mentary capacunequeaiiams-e' tribution. The inequalities, if any, of the will and codicils, together Avith any explanations appearing, were appropriate for the jury’s . ^ ,. . ,. ., consideration, m connection with other evidence, as bearing on the condition of the decedent’s mind. Manatt v. Scott, 106 Iowa 203; Mileham v. Montagne, 148 Iowa 476; Sevening v. Smith, 153 Iowa 639; [166]*166Trotter v. Trotter, 117 Iowa 417. After the marriage in 1898, decedent, Avith his wife and her daughter, continued on the farm until the spring of 1906, Avhen they moved to Glenwood, where they liAred the remainder of his life. He had sold Ids farm the year previous at a price of about $10 per acre less than it was worth, according to some witnesses, and had paid $4,500 for his neAv home. All of his property except the home had been reduced to money, and this was loaned on certificates of deposit at four per cent per annum, the amount being distributed among foAir different banks. He appears to have collected the interest for a year or tAvo, and thereafter this service Avas rendered by Ms stepdaughter.

II. Contestant relied on three classes of testimony: (1) that of non-experts, Avho related incidents and based their opinions thereon; (2) that of physicians having personal knowledge of decedent; and (3) that of a physician who based his opinion on a hypothetical question. Six or seven witnesses related incidents and expressed the opinion that in 1906 he was of unsound mind. The incidents, in addition to ordinary forgetfulness due to old age, were: That he directed a neighbor to bring over hogs he said he had bought of him, when in fact there had been no deal; that he sold a cow to a neighbor, and when he came for it, denied the sale; inability to recognize acquaintances he had known 20 to 45 years; saying that his own son had been stealing his corn; pushing back and forth on posts to ascertain whether solid, day after day; seeing brick castles in the air, and asking Avitnesses if they could not see them; proposals to erect a brewery; asserting that his cattle Avere lost and were stolen, when he had none; claiming he had lost a horse, Avhen he had none to lose; buying a team without looking them over for blemishes or examining their mouths or inquiring as to their age; paying for work, and immediately thereafter offering to pay again; interrupting workmen repeat[167]*167edly while employed, by offering to pay them; directing work to be done, and after it was done, denying having given the directions; inability to appreciate relationship of grandchild; that he wandered about aimlessly, and wife had to turn him back to house; asserting that rails bad been stolen, when he had none; beginning conversation and before response, turning away; talking of going west and taking homestead; saying he had not enough hogs to follow cattle, when he had neither; saying that others lei cattle through gate, when there were no cattle to go through; and the like. Decedent had been a farmer all his life, and the unusual circumstances related were of a kind likely in case of a farmer, and were of more or less significance, as the witnesses and jury might have viewed them. Several witnesses related incidents, but expressed no opinion. Of course, the weight to be given to the opinions of the several witnesses depends largely on the incidents recited, and the length and intimacy of their acquaintance. See Schouler on Wills, Sections 133 and 142; Gates v. Cole, 137 Iowa 613.

3. Evidence : opinion evidence : non-experts : insanity : nature o£ facts detailed : wills. IIT. Objections were interposed to the expression by several non-expert witnesses of an opinion as to the condition of decedent’s mind, on the ground that the facts shown were insufficient as a basis thereof. These must have been somewhat inconsistent in their nature with the idea of mental soundness, as that his acts or conversation xvere unnatural or unusual or such as would not ordinarily be expected from a person of his character. In other Avords, there must have been such as tended to support the Avitness’s conclusion.

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105 N.W.2d 613 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1960)
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Bluebook (online)
181 Iowa 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ranne-v-hodges-iowa-1917.