Reidinger v. Adams

266 S.W.2d 610
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 12, 1954
Docket43793
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 266 S.W.2d 610 (Reidinger v. Adams) 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
Reidinger v. Adams, 266 S.W.2d 610 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

BOHLING, Commissioner.

This is a suit to set aside the last will and testament of Frank Walser, deceased, for want of mental capacity and the exercise of undue influence: The contestants (plaintiffs-appellants) are Jessie Reidinger and other next of kin, first cousins of testator. The proponents (defendants-respondents) are Mae Dorritt Adams, the beneficiary under, and Ralph Keith, the executor naffied in the will. The jury upheld the will. The contestants appeal and contend error was committed in the giving of instructions and that certain witnesses were incompetent to testify.

Testator’s' estate embraced real and personal property, valued at approximately $15,0.00, and the case. involves title to real estate.

Frank Walser died July 6, 1951, at the age of sixty-three years. He made Mae Dorritt Adams, a non-relative, his sole beneficiary and named Ralph Keith as executor of his estate. His will is dated June 2, 1951, and was probated July 10, 1951. Mr. Keith qualified as executor.

Frank Walser lived in St. Louis and worked for the Missouri Pacific railroad. He: started Acquiring real estate in Iron county, Missouri, about 1935 or 1936; By the middle of 1948 he had retired on a pension and moved to his farm in Iron county to live.

*611 R. O. Adams, the husband of proponent Mae Adams, operated the Comrfiercial hotel at Ironton Mr. Walser would come to the hotel when in Ironton and on occasions stay for the week end. He stayed at the hotel during the winters of. 1949-1950 and 1950-1951. He suffered from a heart ailment. Ruben Sullivan, who helped Mr. Walser on his farm, took him to Ironton on May 17, 1951. 'Mr. Walser consulted Dr.George W. Gay, who diagnosed his condition as angina pectoris and sent him to the Ironton hospital on May 18th. Mr. Walser was discharged from the hospital on May 25th. He returned to the Commercial hotel, where he continued under the care of Dr. Gay for approximately three weeks.

Someone telephoned to Mrs. Ralph Keith that Mr. Walser wanted to see her husband. Mr. Keith went to the hotel and Mrs. Adams told him Mr. Walser wanted to see him and directed him to Mr. Walser’s room. She did not say anything further or enter the room. Mr. Walser. told Mr. Keith he had a number of cousins whom he had not seen in years and who meant nothing to him that Mr. and Mrs. Adams had been kind to him and he wanted to leave his property to Mrs. Adams. He also talked about deeding his real estate to Mr. Adams, reserving a life estate for himself. He decided not to do so at the time, but to will his property to Mrs. Adams. He asked Mr. Keith to serve as executor. He told Mr. Keith what property he owned.

Mr. Keith, who was a court reporter, made notes of what Mr. Walser told him. He took the notes to his father, a practicing attorney, who dictated the will and Mr. Keith typed it. On June 2, 1951, Mr. Keith took the will to Mr. Walser, who asked him to secure witnesses to the will, Mr. Keith went out of the room, found W. Z. Miller and asked him to be a witness. Not finding anyone else, he told R. O. Adams Mr. Walser had a paper that needed some witnesses. After waiting for someone to come in, he asked Mr. Adams if he knew anyone he could get and Mr. Adams went across the street, and returned with his brother, K. L. Adams., Mr. Keith, Mr. Miller and Mr. K. L. Adams then went .to, Mr. Walser’s room where, Mr. Keith read, the will in the presence of, the four men, and Mr. Walser executed it, and Messrs. Miller-and K. L. Adams witnessed it at his request.

Mr. Miller and Mr. K. L; Adams, the attesting witnesses, also testified to the due execution of the will in the instant proceeding. Other' witnesses corroborated Mr. Keith’s testimony about Mr. Walser’s cousins’ lack of interest in him and his desire to leave, his property to Mrs. Adams.

Mr. Walser was admitted to the Veteran’s hospital at Poplar Bluff, Missouri, about June 12, 1951, where he remained until his death.

The probative evidence on the issue established that Mr. Walser was a man of average intelligence and mentally competent.

Proponents’ instruction No. 3, after defining undue influence, as it many times has been defined, continues: “ * * *' and such undue influence, to be effective in breaking a will, must have been present, in active exercise, and sufficient to destroy the free agency of the testator at the time of making the, will, so that the will is not in fact his own will but that of the party who was exercising the undue influence, and no amount of advice, suggestion, persuasion on influence which comes short of such effect will amount to undue influence.”

Contestants, say the instruction is erroneous in that it informed the jury that undue influence to invalidate a will must be exercised at the time of the execution of the will.

The criticised part of the instruction in Kaeehelen v. Barringer, Mo.Sup., 19 S.W. 2d 1033, 1038[14-16], told the jury in subr stance that, before it could find that the will was the product of undue influence, it must find, “that defendants or either of them, at the time and in the very act of making, and subscribing said purported will had, and actually exerted such an influence *612 over [testator] as amounted to over per-suasion, coercion, etc.” This was considered erroneous because it was calculated to mislead the jury into believing that a will was not to be set aside for undue influence “unless such influence was exerted or exercised on the day and at the time the will was executed.” The court had in mind as disclosed by its statement and the supporting authorities (Mowry v. Norman, 204 Mo. 173, 193, 103 S.W. 15, 20) that under the instruction the overt acts of undue influence required the presence of the person exercising such influence at the time or on the day of the execution of the will. Reference to the record in Clark v. Powell, 351 Mo. 1121, 175 S.W.2d 842, 849[21] (the other authority cited by contestants), shows that refused instruction four was to like effect.

The subject of the quoted clause of the instant instruction is the “undue influence,” which “must be present, in actual exercise,” at the time of making the will, and not the presence of the person and overt acts of undue influence by him at such time. 1 Underhill on Wills, pp. 187, 188 (cited in the Kaechelen case, supra) speaks of the “exercise of undue influence.” The term is used in the instruction in the sense that the undue influence is in operation, perhaps the better word, to the extent stated in the first part of the instruction for a verdict against the will on the ground of‘undue influence. Cases, prior and subsequent to the Kaechelen case, have stated the law on the instant issue as stated in proponents’ instruction. Beckmann v. Beckmann, 331 Mo. 133, 52 S.W.2d 818, 823[6]; Walter v. Alt, 348 Mo. 53, 152 S.W.2d 135, 143[15]; Baker v. Spears, 357 Mo. 601, 210 S.W.2d 13, 18[5]; State ex rel. Smith v. Hughes, 356 Mo. 1, 200 S.W.2d 360, 363[4]; Rapp v. Rapp, Mo.App., 238 S.W.2d 80, 91[5].

Moreover, one of contestants’ verdict directing instructions was to like effect.

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Bluebook (online)
266 S.W.2d 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reidinger-v-adams-mo-1954.