Small v. Field

102 Mo. 104
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 102 Mo. 104 (Small v. Field) 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
Small v. Field, 102 Mo. 104 (Mo. 1890).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

— This proceeding for the partition of lots 490, 491 and 492, in block 37, McGee’s addition to the City of Kansas, necessitates the construction of the will of Julia A. Rich ; and, upon this construction of [111]*111the will, the point must be determined whether Mrs. Kate Greene, the daughter of the testatrix, took an estate in fee.

The will is as follows :

“ In the name of God, Amen. I, Julia A. Rich, of the county of Leavenworth, in the state of Kansas, being of sound mind, do make and declare this to be my last will and testament.
First. All my just debts and funeral expenses to-be fully paid.
“Second. I will and bequeath to my beloved daughter, Kate Greene, wife of Oliver I). Greene, all my personal effects, including silver, bedding, jewelry and clothing, at her death to be equally divided between her two daughters, Mary and Kate Greene, and my adopted granddaughter, Medora Annie Rich.
Third. I will and bequeath to my son, James W. Rich, my house, now occupied by him and his family, and the one hundred and thirty acres of land, more or less, upon which it stands, and which I hold a mortgage upon during his natural life ; at his death property to be sold and the proceeds invested for. the benefit of my adopted daughter, Medora Annie Rich, to clothe and educate her; also, the sum of $350 a year, to be paid him in money, semi-annually; at his death it goes to his daughter, Medora Annie Rich.
‘! Fourth. In consideration of the deep affection I have for my beloved daughter, Kate Greene, and her tender love and' sympathy for me in all my trials and troubles in this life, I will and bequeath her all the rest of my money, notes, real and personal estate, for the sole use of herself and children.
“Fifth. Should my brother, Thomas H. Wilson,, survive me, I will and bequeath him $300, in consideration of his kindness and attention to me during the last eight months of my failing health. This money to be paid him from the amount willed my daughter, Kate-Greene, and which I beg she vill see that he gets.
[112]*112“ Sixth. In case of the death of Medora Annie Rich, I will and bequeath her portion to my daughter, Kate Greene, deducting $300 to be paid Julia Eliza Rich, youngest daughter of James W. Rich.
“Executed at Salt Creek, Leavenworth county, state of Kansas, June 30, 1874, in the presence of witnesses whose names are hereunto affixed.
“ Julia A. Rioi-i.
“Witnesses:
“Richard W. Moses,
“ Richard Moses.”

On the hearing of the cause, the following facts were shown in evidence :

Julia A. Rich was the widow of Hiram Rich, and lived, at the time of her death (October 11, 1875), in Leavenworth county, Kansas, and at that time and the time she made her will, to-wit, June 30, 1874, she had two children living, James W. Rich and Mrs. Kate Greene, the wife of Oliver D. Greene, an officer in the United States army. Hiram Rich died intestate in the year 1862, at Leavenworth, leaving his widow, Julia A. Rich, his three children, Hiram Rich, Jr., James W. Rich and Mrs. Kate Greene and a grandson, Bradley Rich, son of Lucius Rich, deceased, as his only heirs at law, and under the statutes of Kansas one-half of the property, real and personal, of said Hiram Rich, deceased, descended to his widow, and the other half to his children and said grandson, in equal parts. In 1863, Julia A. Rich was appointed administratrix of the estate of Hiram Rich, deceased. The property left by said Hiram Rich consisted of a farm of about two hundred and seventy-six acres, located in Salt Creek valley, in Leavenworth county, and personal property of the appraised value of $56,083.32. Julia A. Rich qualified as such administratrix and gave bond in the sum of $114,000. On July 22, 1864, she made final settlement m the probate court of Leavenworth county, and showed a balance due the estate in her hands of $23,892.29, after [113]*113the payment of all debts, and besides reported a large amount of uncollected assets, to-wit, about $20,000 which the year before had been appraised at par, all of which the court ordered her to distribute among the heirs of Hiram Rich.

Hiram Rich, Jr., and Bradley Rich both died without issue and intestate before the decease of said Julia A. Rich, and before she made her will. Mrs. Kate Greene never received from her mother any part of the estate of her father, real or personal, to which she was entitled, and never asked her mother to make a settle-for her interest or any part thereof, but allowed her entire portion to remain in her mother’s possession, and under her control for her support, as long as she lived, but James W. Rich exacted, and was paid by his mother, all that was coming to him from his father’s estate, and besides, at the time she made her will, had become indebted to her in the sum of about (principal and interest) $4,000 for which she had a mortgage upon his house and farm. Mrs. Greene, testifying in this case, said: “My mother had both family afflictions and troubles, and financial losses, in administering her husband’s estate. Those were the troubles to which she referred in clause 4 of her will. ’ ’

At the time of making her wiil, and at the time of her death, Mrs. Julia A. Rich owned the following property :

The Salt Creek farm of two hundred and seventy-six acres, which had formerly belonged to her husband, except about forty acres, the interest which had descended to Mrs. Kate Greene, which had never been deeded to her, but which she had been permitted, by Mrs. Greene, to remain in possession and control of, as before stated, which was worth, at the time she made her will, according to the evidence of her administrator and the witnesses to her will, from $25 to $30 an acre, and for which she offered to take $35 per acre in the [114]*114spring of 1874, making the value of her interest in the farm at that time about $7,000 or $8,000. These three lots in Kansas City, which, with the foundry then upon them, and machinery contained in it, were then worth from $2,500 to $3,000, but were incumbered with state, county and city taxes for the years 1868, 1£¡69, 1871, 1872, 1873 and 1874, to the amount of $1,143, exclusive of interest and penalties, and with penalties and interest to probably about $2,000. She had, for several years, derived no income from this property in Kansas City, the foundry not being in operation, but in an abandoned condition. Thirty-three shares of stock in the Merchants’ National Bank of Little Rock, Arkansas, worth, at that time, about $1,650. A promissory note against one Whitney for $4,000 ; two notes against her son, James W. Rich, one for $2,000, and one for $850, which, with interest due for several years, amounted to about $4,000, secured by a mortgage on his house and farm.

At the time of her death she was indebted in the sum of about $800. The foregoing was her total estate and its condition ; it was worth, at the time she wrote her will in 1874, and at the time of her death in 1875, hardly $18,000.

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Bluebook (online)
102 Mo. 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/small-v-field-mo-1890.