Wood v. Carpenter

66 S.W. 172, 166 Mo. 465, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 13, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 172 (Wood v. Carpenter) 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
Wood v. Carpenter, 66 S.W. 172, 166 Mo. 465, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 11 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

This is a suit to contest the will of James O. Carpenter. The plaintiff is the daughter of the [475]*475testator, and the defendants’are her mother (the widow of the deceased), and her brothers Oscar A. and James A. Carpenter, and the children of said James A., and the children of her deceased brother, Luther A. Carpenter.

The testator was born in 1812. The will was made on March 3, 1893, when the testator was eighty-one years of age. He died on May 15, 1898.

The will is as follows:

“I, J ames C. Carpenter of Cass county, State of Missouri, being of sound mind and memory, do make and publish this my last will and testament in manner and form following, that is to say:

“1st. It is my will that my funeral shall be conducted without ostentation, and that the expense thereof, together with all my just debts, be fully paid.

“2nd. I give, devise and bequeath to my beloved wife, Lamira A. Carpenter, all my real and personal effects, also all the household furniture and other items not particularly named and otherwise disposed of in my will, to dispose of any of the real or personal effects when in her judgment it is best, and that at the death of my said wife, all the property hereby devised or bequeathed to her as aforesaid, or so much thereof as may then remain unexpended, I give unto my son, O. A. Carpenter, at the death of my wife one thousand dollars less than one-third of all my real and personal effects, the said property to be divided at her death between O. A. Carpenter, Luther A. Carpenter and J ames A. Carpenter and his children (namely) Grover Cleveland Carpenter, Eanny Hill Carpenter and James C. Carpenter, also I give to my daughter, Georgia A. "Wood, in addition to what I have already given her, the sum of one hundred dollars, this amount making her equal with the balance of my children.

“And last: I hereby constitute and appoint my said wife, Lamira A. Carpenter, and my son, O. A. Carpenter, to [476]*476be the executrix and executor of this my last will without requiring bond, revoking and annulling all former wills by me made, and ratifying and confirming this, and no other to be my last will and testament.

“In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand this third day of March, 1893.

“Witnesses:

“J. O. Carpenter. (Seal.)

“A. G. Endicott. (Seal.)

“J. L. Harrison. (Seal.)

“J. G. Lyon. (Seal.)”

The grounds set out in the petition for contesting the will are:

“Plaintiffs say that said paper writing is not in fact and in truth the last will and testament of the said James G. Carpenter; that the said James C. Carpenter was not, at the date of the alleged execution of the said paper, of sound and disposing mind and memory, but that he was feeble in mind and memory and was incapable of executing a last will and testament.

“That at the date of the alleged execution of the said paper he was old and infirm in both mind and body and was easily controlled and influenced, in his then said condition by others, and that the said paper was in fact procured by the importunities, persuasions and undue influence exercised over his mind by the defendant, Lamira A. Carpenter, and his son, Oscar A. Carpenter, and that he was induced to execute the said paper contrary to his true desire and wishes, and that the same does not in fact and in truth, express his true desires and wishes at the time, with reference to the disposition of his property by will.”

The case was tried in Jackson county, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff setting aside the will. The defendants appealed.

[477]*477Two grounds are alleged in the petition for setting aside the will, to-wit, first, undue influence of the widow, Lamira A. Carpenter and of the son Oscar A. Carpenter; and, second, the incompetency of the testator. These will be considered in the order stated and the evidence bearing upon each issue will be referred to separately in the decision of each ground of contest.

I.

Undue Influence.

There is not a word of evidence that Oscar had the slightest undue influence over the testator, much less that he exercised any influence of any kind over the testator in the making of the will. In fact this charge in the petition was abandoned in the lower court by the plaintiff and is not insisted upon here.

Upon the evidence contained in the record of six hundred and sixty-five printed pages, there is nothing to support the charge of any undue influence of Mrs. Carpenter. There is nothing in the record that rises to the dignity of evidence that can be said to give even color to the charge, much less that can afford a basis to support a verdict upon. The essence of the testimony bearing upon this charge is that when Mr. Goodman went to see the testator, about 1885, about buying some cattle, and when he again went to see him about 1890, about paying his proportion of the cost of sweeping the street in front of his house, and when Mr. Redman went to see him in the fall of 1892, about renewing the policy of insurance on his house, the testator referred them to his wife, and she transacted the business, and the testimony of the plaintiff to the following effect:

1. Mrs. Carpenter always “treated the testator kindly but whatever she said for him to do, he did it without refusing.

[478]*4782. “Q. Just state wliat you saw when they were there at your place ? A. Well, whenever she thought it was time for him to go to bed she said: ‘J. 0., you had better go up to bed now/ or if it was to eat his supper she would say, ‘J. 0., come and eat your supper/ or ‘You would better not go out in the sun, you had better sit down on the porch/ and he would mind her and do whatever she told him to do.” The testator and his wife stayed at the plaintiff’s house during the summers of 1893, ’94, ’95, ’96, and ’97. The will was made in March, 1893. So that all this relates to matters occurring after the will was executed.

3. Shortly after her brother Luther died, which was in 1897, four years after the will was executed, the testator and his wife went to see Mr. "W". S. Flournoy, an attorney, about some trouble they had with a tenant, and after, talking over the matter, the testator said he wanted Mr. Flournoy to write his will, and asked him how much he would charge for it, and that. Mrs. Carpenter said, “You already have a will.”

4. Mrs. Carpenter and testator had separate bank accounts and sometimes Mrs. Carpenter signed testator’s name, with his consent, to checks, and they were paid. It also appeared that the plaintiff sometimes did the same thing, and that she also signed her mother’s name to checks, or at least to one check for $4,740, in favor of plaintiff’s husband, that were drawn on Mrs. Carpenter’s bank account. On the other hand, it appeared from the testimony of the plaintiff’s husband that in April, 1887, he sold an eighty-acre farm for the testator under a contract with testator that he should have, as commissions, all it sold for in excess of one thousand dollars an acre; that he sold it for $85,000, of which $20,000 was paid in cash, and the remainder evidenced by notes secured by a deed of trust on the land sold; that he (plaintiff’s husband) wanted his $5,000 commissions paid out of the $20,000 cash; that Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 172, 166 Mo. 465, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-carpenter-mo-1902.