Rex v. Masonic Home

108 S.W.2d 72, 341 Mo. 589, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 455
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 108 S.W.2d 72 (Rex v. Masonic Home) 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
Rex v. Masonic Home, 108 S.W.2d 72, 341 Mo. 589, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 455 (Mo. 1937).

Opinions

This action was brought and tried in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County contesting the will of Mary Huthmaker theretofore admitted to probate in that county. Mary Huthmaker was eighty-one years of age at the time of her death, June 18, 1932, and eight years of age at the time she executed the contested instrument as her last will and testament. Her husband Peter Huthmaker died in 1925. No children were born of the marriage, Mrs. Huthmaker never remarried, and died without descendants leaving as her heirs at law her collateral kin, one brother, three nephews, seven nieces and one grandnephew; all are parties to this action. *Page 593 The will, executed under date of October 20, 1931, directed: (1) the payment of her "just debts and expenses of last illness and funeral;" (2) a legacy of $3000 to her grandnephew, Earl Knickmeyer (one of the proponents); (3) a legacy of $1000 to her niece, Irene Flynn (a contestant); (4) a legacy of $1000 to her brother, Gustav Walkenhorst (a contestant); (5) that all the residue and remainder of her estate go to the Masonic Home of Missouri, a corporation (one of the proponents); and (6) that the Trust Company of St. Louis County (one of the Proponents) be executor. All the collateral kin above mentioned except one niece Mamie Knickmeyer, mother of the legatee Earl Knickmeyer, and a niece Emma Culler, joined as contestants. The niece Emma Culler, named as a defendant, did not file an answer. The niece Mamie Knickmeyer, her son Earl, the Masonic Home of Missouri, a corporation, and Trust Company of St. Louis County, named as defendants, joined as proponents. The parties will therefore be referred to as contestants and proponents. Contestants allege: (1) testamentary incapacity of Mary Huthmaker; and (2) undue influence by "the agents, servants and representatives of the Masonic Home of Missouri." The cause was submitted to the jury on the issue of testamentary capacity alone. The jury found against the will. From the judgment, entered on the verdict, adjudging that the contested "instrument in writing is not the last will and testament of Mary Huthmaker," proponent Masonic Home of Missouri has appealed. Mrs. Huthmaker's estate was appraised at more than $38,000, composed as follows: notes secured by first mortgages on real estate, $6390; Bonds and coupons, $9960; Cash, $7699; and eighteen separate parcels of real estate, appraised at various values from $300 to $1540, and aggregating $14,330. Debts, if any, were comparatively small. It is apparent that we have jurisdiction of the appeal.

Proponents made a prima facie case of due and formal execution of the will and that at the time Mrs. Huthmaker possessed the requisite testamentary capacity and was of sound mind. Contestants then offered the evidence upon which they relied to sustain the two grounds of contest alleged which was followed by further evidence on the part of the proponents. At the close of all the evidence proponents, contending that there was no substantial evidence to sustain either ground of contest, timely and in proper form requested the trial court to give a peremptory instruction to the jury to find for them, on both grounds, and to establish the will, which the trial court refused to do. This action of the trial court is here assigned as error.

[1] On the threshold of our review and examination of the evidence, comprising the testimony of seventy-four witnesses, several documents and numerous exhibits making a voluminous record, it *Page 594 may be well to recall as a primary consideration that, "the law gives one possessed of mental capacity the right to dispose of his property according to his own way of thinking, and it is not for courts or juries to make a will for him." [Major v. Kidd,261 Mo. 607, 617, 170 S.W. 879, 881.] Therefore in a situation such as that before us the court will examine the evidence with diligence and care to determine whether there is substantial evidence upon either undue influence or testamentary incapacity. "Especially is this true of mental incapacity, for the reason that the opinions of lay witnesses (as in this case) often furnish the basis for the verdict" and we look closely to the facts detailed by such witnesses as the basis for the opinion. [Major v. Kidd, supra.]

Before summarizing the evidence upon which contestants rely as showing testamentary incapacity we first give a general outline of Mrs. Huthmaker's history derived from the uncontradicted evidence. Little appears as to her early life. Her maiden name was Walkenhorst. In her young womanhood she married Peter Huthmaker who owned two meat markets in St. Louis. He gave his personal attention to the one in Union Market and his wife had charge of the other on Cass Avenue. They operated these two markets in this way for about seven years. They then disposed of the markets and purchased a tract of land of more than eighty acres, the full acreage is not stated, at the edge of Kirkwood. This seems to have been somewhere between 1875 and 1880. They farmed this land until about two years prior to Peter's death. Mrs. Huthmaker worked at manual labor with her husband in the fields and about the outdoor work of the farm. Together they cut their fire wood from timber on their land. Their dwelling was a two-story, thirteen-room frame house in a large blue grass lawn. Numerous large, old trees shaded the lawn and the house. Mrs. Huthmaker took great pride in this lawn and personally attended to its upkeep, mowing the lawn with a lawn mower as late as the summer before her death. She was very fond of flowers and was much interested in her flower gardens. Mrs. Huthmaker was a strong, vigorous woman and seems to have had but little illness. She and her husband were industrious and frugal. They saved money and made investments. Some time, apparently many years, prior to Peter Huthmaker's death Mrs. Huthmaker's spinster sister, Mina Walkenhorst, who was, as the writer recalls, some six or seven years younger than Mrs. Huthmaker, came to make her home with them. She did much of the housework and continued to live in Mrs. Huthmaker's home until her (Mina's) death in March, 1931. Mina had no property or income and was wholly dependent upon her sister for support. About the time they ceased active farming operations the Huthmakers had some of their land along the north and east side of the main tract platted as lots fronting on streets and sold lots from time to time. Upon the death of her husband in 1925 all their *Page 595 property, real and personal, which apparently was owned by the entirety, passed to Mrs. Huthmaker. After her husband's death Mrs. Huthmaker continued to live, with her sister Mina, in the big frame house. She personally and successfully managed her large property interests, acting largely upon her own judgment, looked after the investments and made new investments, and made profitable real estate deals. She sold several of the lots in 1925. Mrs. Huthmaker had George Engel, the deputy county clerk, prepare all of her deeds and take her acknowledgment. He was a witness for proponents and gave an opinion that she was, throughout the period of his long acquaintance with her, of sound mind. Though she did not undertake to carry on farming operations she continued to do physical labor about her home, working about the lawn and her flowers, raising chickens and milking the one cow she retained. For some years next preceding the date of the contested will and until her death she did her banking business at the First National Bank of Clayton of which Walter D. Lindeman, one of the witnesses to the contested will, was president. She had a safety deposit box at the bank in which she kept her bonds, notes and mortgages, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.W.2d 72, 341 Mo. 589, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rex-v-masonic-home-mo-1937.