Stewart v. Shelton

201 S.W.2d 395, 356 Mo. 258, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 566
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 21, 1947
DocketNo. 39928.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 201 S.W.2d 395 (Stewart v. Shelton) 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
Stewart v. Shelton, 201 S.W.2d 395, 356 Mo. 258, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 566 (Mo. 1947).

Opinion

*261 CONKLING, J.

Suit in equity and for a declaratory judgment decreeing the joint will of J. T. Stewart and Josie Stewart, his wife, executed August 6, 1943, to have been irrevocable by Josie Stewart from and after the death of J. T. Stewart, and praying a decree setting aside four certain deeds to the lands devised by the joint will, which deeds were executed by Josie Stewart after the death of J. T. Stewart. The decree of the court below declared that upon the death of J. T. Stewart the joint will became and was the irrevocable last will of the widow, Josie Stewart, and set aside the four deeds in question. Defendants appealed.

Study of the transcript .of the evidence discloses that the “Finding of Facts” made by the trial court correctly and fairly states the material matters which the evidence adduced tended to prove and we here use some of it without quotation marks. J. T. Stewart and Josie *262 Stewart owned 320 acres of land in Greene Comity as tenants by the entirety. They had no children. J. T. Stewart had five brothers and sisters, Josie had three. The above were the next of kin and the probable heirs. In the spring of 1943, both being well advanced in years, J. T. and Josie Stewart discussed the disposition of their.real estate. Bach understood that the survivor would take absolute title on the death of one of them, and unless some provision was made, the heirs of the survivor would eventually get all the land, to the exclusion of the heirs of 'the. first to die. On August 5, 1943, J. T. and Josie drove to Republic, Missouri, and advised Bruce DeWitt, a lawyer, that they desired to make a joint will. The next day DeWitt and his daughter went to the Stewart home. The Stewarts and the attorney discussed the full situation of the proposed joint will. Josie participated in the discussion and both Stewarts fully agreed as to how they desired the will drawn. The Stewarts explained that they had no children; that J. T. had five brothel’s and sisters and-Josie had threethat they desired the survivor of the two of them to have full enjoyment of the land as long as he or she lived and that at the death of the survivor each of their eight brothers and sisters were to have an undivided one-eighth interest in the 320 acres. The joint will as written so disposed of the land. DeWitt told the Stew-arts that such a joint will as they desired him to prepare could be revoked by either while both lived, but that after the death of one, the survivor could not revoke it. Both Stewarts said that ivas their agreement, and that was the way they wanted it. DeWitt dictated the will to his daughter, who there typed it as he dictated. The will was read to the Stewarts who said that was the way they wanted it. The will, a single instrument, was then signed by both J. T. Stewart and Josie Stewart, and was published in the presence of witnesses. In May, 1944, J. T. Stewart died. The joint will had not been theretofore revoked by either J. T. or Josie Stewart. The will was probated in July, 1944. Thereafter Josie went to live with one of her brothers, Wm. T. Shelton. Soon thereafter, and without consideration, she executed the four deeds conveying the land, eighty acres to her brother, Wm. T. Shelton; eighty acres to Wallace B. Shelton (son of Wm. T.) and his bodily heirs; eighty acres to Frank Shelton (another brother) and his bodily heirs, and eighty acres to Theodore Shelton (son of Frank) and his bodily heirs. The amended petition alleged these four deeds were procured by fraud and coercion of Wm. T. Shelton, but at the trial that charge was abandoned. Later Josie repented the execution of those deeds and wrote letters (which were in evidence and are now filed here) stating she executed the deeds as the result of grief and weakness caused by talk of her relatives having a guardian appointed for her; that she was sorry she had signed the deeds and desired to undo “those unlawful deeds”; that she had no right to deed the land as she had only a lifetime claim *263 on it; that she did not want to take Tommy’s (her husband’s) land and “give it to my people”; that she had so stated to Tommy; that the will was just and right; that she had signed it cheerfully and willingly and wanted it to stand. Later Josie told others the same things saying also that she had tried to get the deeds back and. could not. Josie was greatly distressed over having signed the deeds. She told neighbors that she and her husband had agreed on a disposition of the land and had made a joint will accordingly. In the fall of 1945 Josie instituted this action in the Greene County Circuit Court as sole plaintiff against the grantees in the deeds, as defendants, alleging the joint will was executed pursuant to a prior agreement with her husband, and charging fraud and coercion of ¥m. T. Shelton in procuring the execution of the four deeds. Thereafter all the devisees under the will, except ¥m. T. and Frank Shelton, became additional parties plaintiff to this action. Those devisees are now plaintiffs herein. Later Josie executed a stipulation to dismiss this action. It was dismissed as to her but not as to the six devisee plaintiffs. An amended petition was then filed making Josie a party defendant. The joint will in question, denominating itself to be the “Joint Will, Last Will and Testament of J. T. Stewart and Josie Stewart, Husband and Wife”, disposes of “our property”, in “our joint will and testament”. 'By the joint will nothing at all was left by either testator to the other and nothing passed under the will on the death of the first to die. The will provided “this joint will shall be in full force and effect from and after the death of the survivor herein.”

Appellants first contend that the amended petition upon which the case was tried is fatally defective because it states no cause of action and is wholly insufficient to permit the relief decreed, and contend respondents should be compelled to resort to an action at law for damages for a breach of the contract to make an irrevocable will. With these contentions of appellants with respect to the insufficiency of the petition and as to the propriety of the form of the action we cannot agree.

The character of the action, the issues raised by the pleadings and the relief sought in the instant case are cognizable by a court of equity. Relief by declaratory judgment is sui generis, and while not either strictly legal or equitable, yet its historical affinity is equitable. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Jones, 344 Mo. 932, 955, 130 S. W. (2d) 945, Mutual Drug Company v. Sewall, 353 Mo. 375, 182 S. W. (2d) 575. The declaratory judgment statutes, R. S. Mo. 1939, Sec. 1126, et seq., and specifically R. S. A. sec. 1127 states that “any person interested under any deed, will, written contract or other writings constituting a contract . . . may have determined any question of . . . validity arising under the instrument . . . and obtain a declaration of rights, status or other legal relations thereunder” (emphasis ours). By the instant pleadings a justiciable controversy *264 was presented by a person entitled to invoke the declaratory judgment-act and the issues brought into the court nisi were ripe for judicial determination. City of Joplin v. Jasper County, 349 Mo. 441, 160 S. W. (2d) 411. If the. joint will be determined to have been irrevocable upon and after the death, of J. T.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W.2d 395, 356 Mo. 258, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-shelton-mo-1947.