Snell v. Seek

250 S.W.2d 336, 363 Mo. 225, 1952 Mo. LEXIS 648
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 14, 1952
Docket42875
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 250 S.W.2d 336 (Snell v. Seek) 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
Snell v. Seek, 250 S.W.2d 336, 363 Mo. 225, 1952 Mo. LEXIS 648 (Mo. 1952).

Opinion

*227 COIL, C.

Plaintiffs-respondents, adopted children of Damaris Summers Seek, contested her will. They alleged both mental incapacity and undue influence upon testatrix by her husband, Joseph E. Seek. The purported will bequeathed $1,000 to each of the two adopted children, with the residue to the husband. The value of the estate, shown by an inventory, was approximately $38,000. Defendant Seek, individually and as executor, has appealed from a judgment entered on the verdict of the jury finding against the will.

At the close of plaintiffs’ (contestants’) case, the court withdrew the issue of mental incapacity. The cause was submitted on undue influence. Defendant (proponent) here contends that plaintiffs failed to make a submissible case on that issue. In determining whether there was sufficient evidence to make a submissible case on that issue, we accept contestants’ evidence as true, disregard proponent’s evidence except as it aids contestants, and afford contestants all favorable inferences which reasonably may be drawn from the whole evidence. But we consider contestants’ evidence in its entirety and isolated parts thereof only in their proper relation to the whole of contestants’ evidence. Walter v. Alt, 348 Mo. 53, 67, 152 S.W. 2d 135, 142; Hahn v. Brueseke, 348 Mo. 708, 713, 155 S.W. 2d 98, 100.

Prior to her marriage to defendant Seek, testatrix was the wife of John Summers, a farmer and onetime county judge who, with testatrix, had resided on a farm east of Excelsior Springs, and who died possessed of considerable farm acreage. Shortly after 1901, Mr. and Mrs. Summers adopted two small children, Reba and Omer (contestants), both of whom lived in the Summers home as adopted children until their respective marriages. Mr. Summers died in 1939 and, apparently, by his will devised about 160 acres of Texas land jointly to his adopted children, Reba Snell and Omer E. Summers, and left the residue of his estate to his widow. About two years later, in 1941, Mrs. Summers married Seek. The Seeks lived together until her death in June 1950. She was then 83 and Seek was 73. Prior to and at the time of his marriage, Seek was a minister in the Christian Union Church and at times had been also a coal [338] miner, paper hanger, and painter. He had been pastor of churches near Excelsior Springs and, although partially retired, continued active in church affairs to the time of trial.

The only evidence pertaining to the execution of the will was adduced by proponents. On June 17, 1949, Mr. Seek appeared at the office of Richard E. Moore, a lawyer in Excelsior Springs, and handed to him some “handwritten notes.” Mr. Moore was not acquainted with either Mr. or Mrs. Seek. Seek told Moore than his wife wanted a will prepared from the notes. To Moore’s inquiry as to why Mrs. Seek was not present, Seek replied that her health was bad and that she wanted the will written and brought to her house to be signed. Mr. Moore agreed to have the will prepared by the next morning *228 and suggested that “they” have witnesses present at the home so the will could be properly signed. Mr. Moore drew the will from the notes. He said they were in the form of a will and that he needed to do little more than have the proposed will typed. The next morning, Seek called Moore and advised him that the witnesses were at the home and requested that Moore bring the will for signature. Mr. Moore took the will to the home. In the front room with Seek were a Mr. Holman and a Mr. Cooper. Mrs. Seek was in a bedroom “propped up in bed.” Moore informed the others that he wished to talk with Mrs. Seek privately. He went into the bedroom and there talked generally with her for a few moments, read to her the proposed will, and explained the meaning of its provisions. He told her: “ ‘Now, Mrs. Seek, you realize that by this will you’re giving one thousand dollars to each of your adopted children; that you’re giving the balance of your estate to your husband, and that you’re further providing that in the event anyone contests this will unsuccessfully they shall receive nothing?’ She said, ‘Yes, that’s what I understand.’ And I said, ‘Now, is this what you want?’ She says ‘Yes, that’s the way I want my will drawn.’ ” Mr. Moore was satisfied that the will corresponded to her wishes. He called in Holman and Cooper who, together with Mr. Moore, witnessed the will after it had been signed by Mrs. Seek. Moore was satisfied that Mrs. Seek was of sound mind. Seek did not say or do anything at the time in the nature of any direction or suggestion concerning the execution of the will. Moore thought he took the will and delivered it to the bank to be put in Mrs. Seek’s safe-deposit box, but he may have left it at the home. In any event, he knew that the will was placed in the safe-deposit box to which both Mr. and Mrs. Seek had access. Mr. Moore had not preserved the notes and did not know in whose handwriting they were.

Holman and Cooper were present in response to Seek’s telephone requests to appear and assist in a business matter. Both were well acquainted with the Seeks. Holman was a minister in the Christian Union Church; he had been the pastor at Excelsior Springs from 1945 to 1949. Cooper was a first elder in the same church. Both testified as to the due execution of the will by Mrs. Seek and their attestation. In their opinions she was of sound mind at the time. Both said that Seek had never discussed the will with them.

Mrs. Seek was quite active in affairs of the same church and had taught a Sunday School class for a number of years prior to June 1946. At least after June 1946 Mrs. Seek was not 'in good health.’ While, as noted, lack of testamentary capacity was not submitted to the jury, nevertheless, the physical and mental condition of the testatrix at the time of the execution of the will is important on the issue of undue influence. There was no direct evidence as to her physical and mental condition on the day the will was executed other *229 than that she was “propped up in bed” and the opinions of Moore, Holman, and Cooper that she was of sound mind.

Contestants’ evidence as to Mrs. Seek’s physical and mental condition was directed chiefly to the period 1946 to 1950. During this period, Mrs. Seek was “up and down.” She usually dressed in the morning, but spent much time lying down. A neighbor, Mrs. Kiley, said that sometimes Mrs. Seek was in bed and at other times she was going about her household duties. Nina Edmonston testified that, on occasions when she visited at the home of testatrix, Mrs. Seek [339] would wonder why she hadn’t heard from Reba, then later during the visit Mrs. Seek would display a letter from Reba which had been received that same day; that once (no date given) Mrs. Seek failed to recognize witness when they were both patients in an Excelsior Springs clinic. Mrs. Parsons, who stayed at the Seek home when Seek was away, said that on one occasion in 1948, Mrs. Seek took a bottle of nerve medicine and began to drink it and that witness took it away from her, and that Mrs. Seek then ran outdoors and had to be brought back by the witness. She also said that Mrs. Seek was forgetful but was unable to give any instance upon which she based the conclusion. Mrs. Gladys Summers, one of the proponent’s witnesses, said that Mrs. Seek would repeat things at times. Ezra O’Dell, who had known Mrs. Seek for 30 years and who operated the Summers “home place” after Summers’ death, testified that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W.2d 336, 363 Mo. 225, 1952 Mo. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snell-v-seek-mo-1952.