Woodson v. Woodson

255 S.W.2d 771, 363 Mo. 978, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 537
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 9, 1953
Docket42935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 255 S.W.2d 771 (Woodson v. Woodson) 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
Woodson v. Woodson, 255 S.W.2d 771, 363 Mo. 978, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 537 (Mo. 1953).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

This is a suit brought by the two plaintiffs-appellants, collateral kinsmen of Margaret J. Rendlen, who died July 7,1948, to contest her will dated December 11,1939. The petition was in two counts. The first charged that the testatrix over five years later on March 31, 1945, changed, obliterated and spoliated the will, without reattestation, in such manner as to have the effect of revoking and nullifying it under Mo, R. S. 1949, §468.240, Y.A.M.S. This first count was in equity praying “orders and decrees” of the court. *980 Tbe second count pleaded in the alternative that if the changes did not nullify the will, it was nevertheless void because the testatrix was mentally incompetent to make and change it and was subjected to undue influence. That count was tried to a jury.

No evidence was -introduced to sustain the charges in the second .count, and there was substantial evidence to the contrary. In response to a peremptory instruction the jury returned a verdict finding the will as it stood before the changes were made was the testatrix’ original will. The plaintiffs-appellants’ petition.alleged the probate court refused to probate the will as to paragraphs 4 and 4a thereof. But the transcript shows that a copy of a certificate of probate marked Exhibit B was received in evidence reciting the original will was admitted to probate.

Other collateral kinsfolk of the testatrix entered their appearance as defendants and filed answer upholding the pleaded contentions of the two plaintiffs assailing the will. The defendant cemeteries and church [and its impleaded clergymen] which benefited under the will, filed answers upholding- it. And the defendant American Trust Company, named as trustee and executor in the will, answered admitting the alterations in it, and praying the court’s construction and interpretation of the will, and for directions. Further, the Trust Company’s answer contained a second count or cross-action again alleging the alterations in the will, and praying the judgment of the court construing it, and for directions as to the proper distribution of the estate and the funds thereof. The estate exceeded $100,-000. The original will has been sent up with the transcript.

The two attesting witnesses to the will stated that when they subscribed it the testatrix held it folded up in such manner that they could not see anything but the attesting clause, or a part thereof; and that they were then ignorant of its contents. One of these witnesses, Mrs. Irma Weber Losson, an employee of the American Trust Company of Hannibal, testified the testatrix had a lock box there, and that as soon as her will was executed she put it in the box. At that time the testatrix was seventy years old.

The will was written on a printed form of ruled foolscap paper consisting of a double sheet folded half length, making four pages. The first three^ contained the will. The last was the outside cover. The [773] introductory and concluding formal parts were printed and the intervening space of nearly three pages was blank and merely lined' for the insertion of the provisions of the particular will. The instrument contained eight paragraphs, numbered 1 to 7, with one intervening paragraph numbered 4a and changed to 5a, or vice versa. The testatrix had a typewriter in her home. It is believed she wrote the will.

In paragraph 1 was the usual provision for the payment of just debts and expenses of last sickness and burial. Paragraph 2 contained *981 bequests severally to the testatrix’ two brothers, Orion A. Woodson [one of the plaintiffs] and defendant Charles R. Woodson “for the sum of.” That far the provision was-typewritten. On the next line the following was written in ink, longhand: “ ($2000.00) each, Two Thousand dollars, if living —”. The figure 2 in this provision was written heavier or in darker ink than the ciphers, brackets and words following. And an inspection -of the figures with a reading glass clearly shows a figure 5. underlying the figure 2. In other words, it appears an effort was made to overwrite and blot out the figure 5 and substitute the figure 2. And the ciphers and words following, “000.-00 each, Two Thousand dollars, if living — •” are in lighter ink than the superimposed figure 2. When the will was probated the probate court held the sums devised in this paragraph of the original will lyere $5,000.00 each to the two brothers, and not $2,000.00

Paragraph 3 of the will contains seventeen lines. The first of these bequeathed to the testatrix’ “neices and nephews the sum of.” That far the provision was typewritten. Following on the same line were the figures and word “$200.00 each,” all written longhand lightly in ink. Below that on the next sixteen lines were severally written the names and addresses of sixteen nephews and nieces in- a column, all typewritten. To the right of these on each line were the figures $200.00, all written longhand in ink. But here again the figure 2 in each instance was darker and heavier than the ciphers. An examination of these under a reading glass discloses that a figure underlying the 2 had been retouched so to speak.

The probate court held the bequest to each of the first five kinsmen in the list of sixteen had originally been $700.00 instead of $200.00-; that in the next eight the original bequest had been $500.00 instead of $200.00; and in the last three the bequest had been $700.00 instead of $200.00. Yery plainly in all of them the initial figure 2 is noticeably heavier! That is apparent to the naked eye. In two instances the figure 7 has been converted into a 2 merely by adding a loop at the bottom, leaving the lighter top part of the 7 visible in its original form and lighter color. In two instances the light bottom part of the figure 7 projects, or is visible, below the heavier loop of the 2. Likewise in every instance except one where the' figure 5 had originally been written, some part of it is still visible under the 2. From all this it is apparent that some systematic change has been made in all of these initial figures in the several bequests, for they are much darker than the other digits.

In paragraph 4 the bequest to a brother and two sisters of the testatrix’ deceased husband is all typewritten, including “for the sum of”. Following that in handwriting in ink are the figures and words:. “ ($25.00) each. If living.” But an effort had been made to. eliminate this part by friction with an eraser or by some chemical. It cannot be determined whether the same or other figures originally were there.

*982 Following this, paragraph 4a or 5a, whichever it is, bequeaths to the testatrix’ sister-in-law “the sum of.” That far the provision is typewritten. Next after that, in the testatrix’ handwriting in ink, are the figures and words “$200.00 If Living.” Under the heavier" figure 2 is a 7.

The remaining four paragraphs of the will are typewritten. They provide for the upkeep of the testatrix’ deceased husband’s grave in Mt. Olivet Cemetery; place her residuary estate in trust for the upkeep of St. Mary’s Cemetery and the “Woodson lots therein; any residuum to be devoted to repairs and upkeep of the Immaculate Conception Church in" Hannibal.” The last paragraph appoints the American Trust [774] Company of Hannibal as executor and trustee of the trust fund created by the will.

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Related

Watson v. Landvatter
517 S.W.2d 117 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1974)
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504 S.W.2d 647 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1974)
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284 S.W.2d 580 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
255 S.W.2d 771, 363 Mo. 978, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodson-v-woodson-mo-1953.