Van Raalte v. Graff

253 S.W. 220, 299 Mo. 513, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 223
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 2, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 220 (Van Raalte v. Graff) 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
Van Raalte v. Graff, 253 S.W. 220, 299 Mo. 513, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 223 (Mo. 1923).

Opinions

Statutory will contest. The question below was whether one Jacob Lampert, the testator, was *Page 520 fraudulently misled or wrongfully influenced in the execution of his alleged will.

The contestants were nieces and nephews of the testator. The proponents of the alleged will, all named as defendants, were a sister and her husband, other relatives, friends and sundry charitable institutions. Rosa Graff, the sister, was the chief beneficiary.

The court withdrew the issue of fraud from the jury and submitted the question of undue influence. The jury sustained the will and, after an unavailing motion for a new trial, contestants, as plaintiffs, have appealed to this court. The value of the estate affected is in excess of one million dollars.

Jacob Lampert was a cigar manufacturer residing in the city of St. Louis, was never married, and died February 19, 1921. The alleged will, executed January 24, 1921, was admitted to probate in the city of St. Louis on the 23rd day of February, 1921, and this suit was filed March 18, 1921.

The gravamen of the petition is that "the defendant, Rosa Graff, and her husband and daughter lived with him, testator, and he provided a home for them, and the defendant, Rosa Graff, as a member of his family, occupied a confidential relation towards him, and had and exercised great influence over him, and advised and consulted with him as to his affairs and his other relatives, and he placed great trust, reliance and confidence in her and in what she told him; that for some time prior to the death of the said Jacob Lampert, the defendant Rosa Graff, fraudulently and wrongfully contriving and intending to cheat and defraud all the other heirs and next of kin of the said Jacob Lampert out of their share and interest in his estate, did, by fraud, art, deception and undue influence, by words and act, and by habitually reporting to him words or acts of any of plaintiffs which were capable of being misconstrued as uncomplimentary to said Jacob Lampert or as indicative of want or respect or affection for him, and by detailing to said Jacob *Page 521 Lampert statements concerning him alleged by said Rosa Graff as having been told her by other persons as having been made by some of plaintiffs and as tending to create in the mind of said Jacob Lampert suspicion or dislike as to plaintiffs or some of them, and by false and untrue statements to said Jacob Lampert as to the feelings of plaintiffs towards him and of things which said Rosa Graff alleged plaintiffs or some of them said of or concerning him, fraudulently and wrongfully poisoned the mind of said Jacob Lampert against plaintiffs and fraudulently and wrongfully caused, procured and induced the said Jacob Lampert to become imbued with the false idea and impression that plaintiffs were inimical to him and had no affection for him, and were not entitled to share in his bounty or property, and that consequently the whole bulk of his property and fortune should be left to her, the said Rosa Graff, to the exclusion of plaintiffs and each of them, and relying upon and deceived by the aforesaid fraudulent and wrongful conduct, acts and statements of the defendant Rosa Graff, and misled, induced and unduly influenced thereby, the said Jacob Lampert executed as his last will and testament the said paper writing hereinbefore set forth, and plaintiffs state that by reason of the facts above stated the said paper writing is not the valid will or testament of the said Jacob Lampert, deceased, and is not entitled to be probated or enforced as such."

The several answers of the defendants alleged the due execution of the will; its admission to probate, and that by the terms thereof Dorsey A. Jamison was named as executor of the estate involved and that he had duly qualified as such and entered upon his duties. Said answers denied generally and specifically the allegations of the petition with respect to all questions of fraud and undue influence.

The proponents of the will made due proof of its execution and the testamentary capacity of the testator. It appeared from the testimony of witnesses offered by *Page 522 plaintiffs that the said Jacob Lampert had executed four wills previous to the one in controversy, the first of which was dated about August 19, 1906, the second January 22, 1910, the third October 2, 1912, the fourth September 2, 1914, and the final one, now under review, January 24, 1921. The plaintiffs were never mentioned in any of these wills, but two sisters of the deceased, the mothers of plaintiffs, had been mentioned with bequests while living, but the defendant Rosa Graff was named in all of them and the bequests for her were larger than those of her sisters. Said two sisters died before the execution of the will in controversy. At the execution of the alleged will, the testator expressly stated that he did not desire to remember his nieces and nephews, the plaintiffs in this action, for the reason, as he said, that he had not done so in any previous wills and "that he did not believe it was a good thing for young people to have a lot of money thrust upon them, and that he had worked for his money and that they can work for theirs." Moreover, he had assigned the further reason that such nieces and nephews "had not shown him the proper respect and consideration." It was conclusively shown by plaintiffs that at the time of the execution of the will in controversy, and at all times prior thereto, the testator "was of very decisive character and made up his mind on his own investigation, and when he made up his mind he was determined."

One witness for plaintiffs said: "I don't believe that any living person could influence him against his convictions or could sway him in his ideas after he had made them up for himself."

The testator for several years before his death made his home with his sister, Rosa Graff, the chief beneficiary, her husband, Bernard M. Graff, and her daughter, Esther Graff. He was very fond of Rosa, his sister, and Esther, his niece. In fact he was lavish in his expenditures for them.

Numerous witnesses, testifying on behalf of appellants, said that Rosa Graff, by various enumerated acts *Page 523 and statements, had attempted to create discord and ill-feeling between testator and the appellants. These several acts and statements transpired over a period of several years before the death of the testator, and were characterized by appellants' counsel as "tale bearing" and might be more properly described as mischievous gossip. For instance, one witness said that he talked with testator in October, 1915, in the city of Washington, D.C., at which time testator told witness that he was "worried over my family troubles," and then explained by saying that "I have a sister and a little niece I take care of" and that "his sister brings in things and that is why he felt blue and the things were about his nieces and nephews and the nieces, some of them are very good and that it wasn't true," and I said, "Why does your sister do this?" and he says, "She just wants to bring in a fuss amongst relations," and I said, "Why?" and he said, "All on account of my money. She don't know I have as much as I have and believes in case I die there will not be anything to support her or the child."

Appellants' own witnesses differed as to the feelings of testator for appellants. Some said that he had an affection for them and others testified to the contrary. It was shown that he had unpleasant controversies with some of appellants, and it appeared that in each and every instance where Rosa had engaged in "tale bearing" or mischievous gossip, appellants had been able to inform the testator of what they conceived to be the true facts.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 220, 299 Mo. 513, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-raalte-v-graff-mo-1923.