Riggin v. Board of Trustees of Westminster College

61 S.W. 803, 160 Mo. 570, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 12, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 61 S.W. 803 (Riggin v. Board of Trustees of Westminster College) 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
Riggin v. Board of Trustees of Westminster College, 61 S.W. 803, 160 Mo. 570, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 78 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This is a proceeding under the statute to contest the validity of the will of William Sausser, who died on the fourteenth day of January, 1892, at the advanced age of seventy-seven years.

The validity of the will is assailed upon various grounds set forth in the petition, including undue influence in the procurement of the execution of the will, by his wife, Adelaide Sausser, and the want of mental capacity in the testator 'to make a will. The.trial court excluded all other questions, and confined the issues to the single one as to whether there was in fact a will or not.

[575]*575The proponents having made due proof, by the subscribing witnesses to the will, of its proper execution, and of the sanity of the testator at the time of its execution, read the will in evidence and rested.

The testator left no children. The contestants are the son and daughter of a deceased half brother, who at the time of the execution of the will, lived in the city of Los Angeles, California, and were in moderately affluent circumstances. The will is a holographic one, having been written by the testator on the thirteenth day of February, 1889, about two years and eleven months before his death. By it, he disposed of his large estate by providing for his funeral expenses, and the erection of a monument at the graves of himself and wife, and then bequeaths and devises to her, should she survive him, the homestead estate for life or widowhood, with all the property thereon, absolutely, and an annuity of twenty-five hundred dollars per annum to be paid her in two equal sums semiannually. The remainder of his estate, subject to the annuity, is given to the Board of Trustees of Westminster College, in trust for the endowment of theological professorships and scholarships as therein provided for and directed. His wife survived him and is one of the defendants to this suit. She knew perfectly well how her husband was disposing of his property while he was preparing his will, and fully approved of its provisions.

Immediately after its execution the testator and his wife made a visit to the plaintiffs in California.

While the evidence shows the testator to have been a tall, spare man of delicate constitution, it also shows him to have been a man of indomitable energy, of extraordinary intelligence, and of shrewd business capacity. He took much care against exposure, and very rarely required the services of a physician, and had not had one for four or five years before [576]*576His last illness. He continued the management of His large business interests as He was accustomed to do down to and within a few days before his death.

Eor the purpose of showing the want of mental capacity in the testator to make the will, plaintiffs introduced evidence that the testator was a queer man, that he looked “really funny,” that “he talked kind of funny,” that “he seemed to be physically weak, his eyes seemed to be suffering from some cause,” that he said “he was making plug for a rupture on his own body,” “that he was very keen in his expression,” “he was afflicted with bowel trouble,” “he complained of headache-vertigo,” “years ago he had fits of frenzy,” that some forty-five years before his death he complained of being impotent, the use of intoxicating liquors, losing a hundred dollars gambling in a poker den, about which he cried, but got his money back, he pressed his debtors for money, was miserly, had been a dyspeptic, when he loaned money he would have the notes made payable to other parties and then indorsed to him to keep from paying taxes upon them, that he thought it was right and proper for a person to keep from paying taxes upon his property if he could, delusions as to inventions, cruelty to an inoffensive slave, and other matters of a similar character which are unnecessary to mention, and the fact that he gave his large estate, said to be worth $150,000, to his wife and a stranger, and disinherited his only heirs at law, the children of a half-brother, John Riggin.

At the close of all the evidence the court, over the objection and exception of plaintiffs, instructed the jury that under the pleadings and the evidence the verdict must be for the defendants, and the jury having so found, plaintiffs in due time filed their motion for a new trial, which being overruled, they appeal.

There have been three printed briefs filed by counsel for [577]*577plaintiffs in this case, containing in the aggregate two hundred and forty pages, and while there are only thirteen assignments of errors in the original brief these are discussed under eighty-four separate and distinct heads with marked ability, and in. a manner which shows great research. But we shall not undertake to follow them in their order, for we are not inclined to believe that it would subserve any useful purpose to do so, or that it is at all necessary to a proper disposition of the case from a legal standpoint.

It is argued that the testator had not the testamentary capacity to make a will at the time of the execution of the one in contest, and in support of this contention a large number of incidents of a peculiar and eccentric character heretofore specified which occurred during the last forty to fifty years of his life, are largely relied upon.

In passing upon the same character of evidence in Cauffman v. Long, 82 Pa. St. 72, which was a will contest, it was said:

“There was serious error in submitting the question of testamentary capacity to the jury at all. The learned judge should have withdrawn it altogether. At most there was but a scintilla of proof. The evidence of the defendant upon this point amounts to nothing. One witness, Kirk Haines, swears that he thought the testator was a weak-minded man, because when he came to the store with his wife, he allowed the latter to do the bargaining and never interfered. Sheriff Rinehart thought he was a monomaniac, because he told his pastor, with whom he appeared to have had some difficulty, that, ‘We want one to preach Christ and Him crucified, and not for money, money, all the time, as you do.’ Also, that at a church meeting there was a dispute about the control of the church property. During the controversy Shimp, the minister, said, ‘This was God’s house.’ Cauffman replied: ‘It is not your house, nor [578]*578God Almighty’s house. It is my house. I built it.’ This was not perhaps exactly orthodox, but when it is remembered that the testator, as was alleged, gave the lot and materially aided in building the church, it hardly shows testamentary incapacity. Upon another occasion, he expressed to the witness, Rinehart, his aversion to going to law, and thought he could not get justice. Abraham Long, another witness, says he thought his mind was wandering from the fact that when the witness made some remark about the time of day he merely said, ‘Hunck ?’ and that when he asked him where the women were, he said, ‘Was sag’t?’ and looked queerly. Isaac Wright thought he was not sound in his mind because he would not decide upon selling the witness his crop of grain. These are all the witnesses upon this point whose testimony is worth noting. I have not, of course, given all they said. What I have quoted is a fair specimen. We look in vain through the ■evidence for anything like insanity or delusion. A court has ■a higher duty to perform than merely to answer points of law. It is its duty to see that the law is faithfully administered.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W. 803, 160 Mo. 570, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riggin-v-board-of-trustees-of-westminster-college-mo-1901.