Wigginton v. Rule

205 S.W. 168, 275 Mo. 412, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 16, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 205 S.W. 168 (Wigginton v. Rule) 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
Wigginton v. Rule, 205 S.W. 168, 275 Mo. 412, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 79 (Mo. 1918).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, J.

This is a suit to set aside, on the ground of testamentary incapacity, the will of Calvin Wigginton, deceased. Trial was had before a jury in the circuit court of Pike County, which resulted in a verdict and judgment setting aside the will. Thereupon the executor and the nieces of testator, who are made defendants in this case, duly perfected an appeal to this court.

The main contention of appellants is that there was not sufficient evidence to submit to the jury the question of testamentary incapacity. For that reason it will be necessary to set forth the facts with considerable detail.

It will be unnecessary to detail the evidence offered by the proponents of the will, since no issue on this appeal is based thereon. In that behalf it is sufficient to say that proponents introduced substantial evidence tending to show that testator was of sound mind at the time the will was made, and that the will was duly executed and witnessed as required by law.

Calvin Wigginton (who for the sake of brevity will be hereinafter referred to as testator) was seventy-eight years of age when he executed his will on August 8, 1914. Eighteen days later he committed suicide by shooting himself in the head with a pistol at a lumberyard in Clarksville, Missouri.

At the time of his death it is stated that he was possessed of real and personal property of the value of about thirty thousand dollars. He left surviving him only two children, a son, Ed. B. Wigginton, and an insane daughter, Ada V. Goodman, wife of Edwin Good[418]*418man. These two children are the plaintiffs in this suit; the insane daughter appearing by her guardian, Edwin Goodman.

The will, after providing for the payment of debts and funeral expenses and after stating that testator had already provided for his son, Ed. B. Wigginton, during his lifetime, disposed of testator’s property as follows:

“All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, whatsoever, and wherever situate, I direct shall be held in trust by my executor, hereinafter named and to be loaned as, in his judgment, may be to the best, advantage, the income of which shall be paid by him anñually, or oftener, if necessary, toward the maintenance of my daughter, Addie V. Goodman, in such sums as may be necessary to properly care for her. .And all of such income, over and above what may be necessary to properly provide for my said daughter, shall be paid, annually, to my granddaughter, Mary O. Goodman. And at the death of my said daughter, Addie Y. Goodman, the whole of said income shall be paid annually to my said granddaughter, Mary O. Goodman, and in case she shall die leaving no bodily heirs, then I direct that said trust fund shall be distributed as follows: One-sixth thereof to each of the following named persons, to-wit: My son, Ed. B. Wigginton, and my nieces, Oallie Elizabeth Thomas, Olea N. Wigginton, Lucy Wells, Juda Wigginton and Zula Wigginton.”

E. B. Rule, of Louisiana, Missouri, was named executor. Mary O. Goodman, mentioned in the- will, is a granddaughter of the testator and is the only child of the insane daughter. She was named as defendant, together with the executor and the nieces named in the will. Defendant Mary O. Goodman in her separate answer, however, admitted that the testator was not of sound mind at the time the will was made and that he did not have mental capacity to make a will at that time.

Testator had been a widower for many years and for fourteen years had made his home with his son-in-law*, Ed Goodman, who resided on one of the testator’s [419]*419farms. This 'household originally consisted of testator, Mr. Goodman and wife, and daughter Mary. About three years before the will was made a young girl by the name of Bertha Howell was taken into the Goodman home as one of the family, also as a companion for the Goodman girl and to help with the house work. A year or so before the will was executed Mrs. Goodman was taken to the insane asylum at Fulton, where she remained.

Everything appears to have been pleasant at the Goodman home up until about April, 1914. Prior to that time the relations between testator and his son-in-law were pleasant. The girl Bertha was then about fifteen years of age, and she and the daughter Mary slept in the living' room downstairs. The son-in-law slept upstairs. He was in the habit of removing his shoes in the living room before retiring for the night and would leave his shoes by the stove downstairs. Early in the morning before the other members of the household were up it was his usual practice to come down to the living room, open up the draft on the stove, put on his shoes, start the fire in the kitchen and go about his work.

One morning in April, 1914, the daughter Mary was away from home. The son-in-law came down as usual to build the fire, knocked on the living room door, and Bertha got up and unlocked the door and returned to bed before the son-in-law entered the room. He then entered the room and fixed the fire as usual and left the room. Testator saw him leave the room and sometime later told him that he did not think it was proper for him to go into the room while the girl was there in the bed. There was nothing in the evidence to show that anything improper occurred other than the above.

A few weeks later, the granddaughter Mary was entertaining a young man in the parlor one Sunday evening about nine p. m. Bertha was in bed in the living room. The folding-doors between the parlor and [420]*420living room were closed. The son-in-law was upstairs. The testator was supposed to be in his room in another portion of the house. All at once a “terrible crash” was heard. Bertha raised up in bed, Mary opened the folding-doors and rushed into the room, and the son-in-law upstairs called out, “What is the matter down there?” When Mary rushed into the room she found the testator standing at the foot of Bertha’s bed with a large post maul in his hand, which he had used in breaking open the outside door of the room. When he rushed up to the bed he asked Bertha where Ed Goodman was. He stared at Mary a few seconds and then left the room without saying anything further. In a few seconds the son-in-law went downstairs and to the testator’s room and asked him what was the trouble. Testator replied, “Nothing, nothing, nothing.” Prom that time on testator continued to tell his neighbors and persons with whom he would meet that he thought his son-in-law was intimate with the girl Bertha. He also told them that one Sunday afternoon no one was at the house except his son-in-law. and Bertha and a little neighbor girl about eight years old, and that Bertha sent the neighbor girl to a near-by house with a note. Testator saw the little girl on the road with the note, and said that the-little girl told him that Ed. Goodman was lying across the foot of Bertha’s bed. The granddaughter Mary and the girl Bertha and the son-in-law Mr. Goodman' each had many talks with the testator and tried to explain to him and reason with him that there was nothing wrong between the soa-inlaw and the girl, but they were unable to reason with the testator on the subject. Many of the witnesses to whom the testator told his troubles testified that testator was “off” on this subject, and that he became very much excited and agitated and nervous and did not talk intelligently when he was talking about the matter. Many of the neighbors tried to reason with him about the matter and to persuade him that there was nothing wrong, but they were unable to do anything with him in this regard.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
205 S.W. 168, 275 Mo. 412, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wigginton-v-rule-mo-1918.