Wentura v. Kinnerk

5 S.W.2d 66, 319 Mo. 1068, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 665
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 11, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 5 S.W.2d 66 (Wentura v. Kinnerk) 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
Wentura v. Kinnerk, 5 S.W.2d 66, 319 Mo. 1068, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 665 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

RAGLAND^ J.

— This case comes to the writer for an opinion on reassignment. It is a statutory will contest. Two paper writings *1072 are involved; both were executed by Arrena R. Pierron, one on August 11, 1923, and the other on the day following, August 12th. In the first plaintiff was made sole beneficiary, named as executor, and authorized to qualify as such without bond. In the- second there were: provisions for the cremation of the testatrix’s remains and for the erection of a three-thousand-dollar monument on her lot in Beliefontaine Cemetery, in St. Louis; a bequest of $2500 “to the Cowden Cemetery of Cowden, Illinois, on condition, that said cemetery . . . perpetually care for and maintain a. lot in which my [her] mother’s remains are interred; ’ ’ and a gift of .the residue of the estate “to such charitable uses and purposes as he [the executor] may determine.” In this document William A. Kinnerk of St. Louis, Missouri, was named as executor. Both paper writings were presented to the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis; the one executed on August 12th was admitted to probate; the other was rejected. •

As stated, plaintiff was the sole beneficiary under the first will. The defendants are the heirs at law of. the deceased, the executor named in the second- will, and the trustees in charge .of the cemetery at Cowden, Illinois.

The petition filed in the circuit court set forth both documents at length. It alleged, that the one dated August 11th was duly executed as and for, and was, the last .will of the deceased; but that the one dated August 12th was not her last will — that “the defendant, William A. Kinnerk, and the witness, Flora Flannery, by fraud, undue influence and coercion obtained said deceased’s signature to the paper writing dated August 12, 1923, purporting to be the last will of Arrena R. Pierron,- deceased.” It then prayed that an issue of will or no will be -framed with respect to each and a trial thereof had.

The executor and the cemetery trustees answered denying the allegations of fraud and undue influence and averring that the paper writing of August "12th, admitted to probate by the probate court as and for the -last will of deceased, w>as in fact her last. will. The heirs, in addition to their answers, filed cross-petitions in which they, alleged that the deceased at the time she signed the documents was without testamentary capacity and that her signature, to each of them was obtained by fraud and undue influence.

The will of Aiigust 12th wa.s. not set out- in the bill of exceptions. However, it .appears to have been read in evidence; and formal admission wias. made in all the answers that the purported copy appearing in the petition was a correct copy.

When the evidence was all-in-, on the trial below, the court peremptorily instructed the jury to find that the paper writing of August 11, 1923, was not the last will of the deceased, but that the writing of August 12th was such will.. The jury returned a-verdict as directed *1073 and judgment in conformity therewith was duly entered. The plaintiff and the heirs applied for and were allowed separate appeals to this court. The appeal of the plaintiff was docketed as No. 26,327, and that of the heirs as No. 26,761. When the first was called for argument the second was by agreement of the parties advanced and consolidated with it. The heirs have seemingly abandoned their appeal. They have filed neither abstract nor brief on that appeal. They have briefed the ease as respondents in plaintiff’s’ appeal, and in so doing have contented themselves with merely controverting the positions taken by plaintiff-appellant.

The foregoing sufficiently indicates the issues tried in the circuit court, the parties thereto, and the record situation here. The feature of the’ case to which we next address ourselves is the évidence. A brief review will suffice. '

• At the time of the signing of the documents in controversy, Mrs. Pierron was a widow); her husband had been dead several years; she had-no children or other descendants; she had become estranged from her kindred; she lived alone. While a bit eccentric, she was, nevertheless, able to manage her property and affairs with skill and shrewdness, and in doing so she was active and bustling up to the time of her last illness. Her property consisted of cash and securities to the amount bf about $7000, and a residence on Delmar Avenue, which was appraised after her death at $5000, but for which her executor was subsequently - offered $17,000.-

■ About two years before the making of the wills Mrs. Pierron moved out of her residence'omDelmar and leased it for $70 per month. She thereupon rented tw:o rooms, the upper story of a building which had been used as a garage, in the rear of 3203 North Newstead, for which she páid five dollars a month. She stored the most of her furniture in one of the rooms, the other she fitted up for living quarters. It appears that when she vacated her home on Delmar she rented the rooms in the garage building merely for storage purposes, intending to make her home with some of her relatives, but that subsequently she abandoned that intention. ’

Janette Wentura, plaintiff’s wife, came from Cowden, Illinois, to St. Louis, when a young girl, to make her home with an aunt. Mrs.. Pierron’s relatives lived- at Cowden and she had spent hér early life there. Upon meeting Janette, she at once manifested a friendly interest in her and soon there existed quite an attachment between the two. Subsequently Janette married, but the friendship between the tw'o women continued, and in later years, after Mr. Pierron’s death, the relations between Mrs. Pierron and Mr. and Mrs. Wentura and their family were extremely close and friendly, the former often expressing an intention of leaving the latter hér property upon her death.’

*1074 In the early part of August, 1923, Mrs. -Pierron, while liying alone in the “garage,” was taken ill with an acute, attack of dysentery. After having suffered for several days- from the illness, she yielded to the solicitations of the Venturas and permitted them .to take her to their, home. What then happened we gather from the testimony of the plaintiff and his wife: They lived in a small apartment or flat. They had three children, a boy twelve years of age, a girl two or three years younger, and a baby of eleven months. The boy was sick, suffering from the. same malady as -Mrs. Pierron. He occupied the one bed-room of the apartment; Mrs. Pierron was put in a Murphy in'a door-bed in the sun room. Mrs. Wentura had no one to assist her in keeping house and earing for the sick, and presently began to. exhibit symptoms of crossness and fatigue. Mrs. Pierron observing this suggested that she be taken to a hospital. Thereupon Wentura called a number of hospitals by phone, but each of them upon learning the nature of Mrs. Pierron’s illness, refused to receive her as a patient. She then suggested that she be taken to the City Hospital, and this was done on the night of August 8th. Wentura accompanied her in the ambulance; she was put in a ward where there were a number of other patients. He visited her the next day shortly after noon and ;on that visit she directed him do. go to the Mercantile Trust Company and tell Mr. King Kauffman, an officer of that institution who had long been her business adviser, that she desired to see him.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.W.2d 66, 319 Mo. 1068, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wentura-v-kinnerk-mo-1928.