Wooley v. Hays

226 S.W. 842, 285 Mo. 566, 16 A.L.R. 1, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 30, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 842 (Wooley v. Hays) 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
Wooley v. Hays, 226 S.W. 842, 285 Mo. 566, 16 A.L.R. 1, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 189 (Mo. 1920).

Opinions

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Nodaway County.

In this suit for partition, there is but one question for our determination, and that is, whether, by the will of John G. Hays, bachelor, deceased, he devised the lands to his three brothers and the children of three of his deceased sisters, per capita as contended by plaintiff, or per stirpes, as contended by defendants. The deceased *Page 573 had a fourth sister, Clarissa, who was also deceased, and left two children, John W. and William F. Barber, to whom the testator gave the sum of one dollar, "they having been amply provided for." There is no controversy as to this provision of the will.

The will to be construed, omitting the formal introduction and the last clause appointing the executors, is as follows:

"After all my lawful debts are paid and discharged, the residue of my estate, real and personal, I give and bequeath to my lawful heirs, share and share alike. Except John W. Barber and William F. Barber, heirs of my sister, Clarissa, who I give the sum of one dollar each. They having been amply provided for."

The defendants in their answer set up that it was the intention of the testator that the three brothers and the children of the three deceased sisters should take per stirpes; that the will was written during the last illness of the testator, and within a few hours of his death. That W.H. Montgomery, a banker and friend of the deceased, drew the will and was not familiar with the technical meaning of legal phrases. That the testator informed the scrivener that he desired his estate equally divided among his brothers and sisters, except as to his deceased sister, Clarissa, whose heirs were to have one dollar each, because they were already provided for. That said scrivener undertook to follow the testator's instructions and to so word the will as to divide the estate in six equal parts among the testator's three brothers and three deceased sisters, and that said scrivener believing that the three living brothers and three deceased sisters would, in law, constitute the lawful heirs of the testator, and for the purpose of carrying out the instructions of the testator wrote the will in the words hereinbefore set out, and the testator executed said will in the confident belief that the meaning of the words of his will was such as, in law, would carry out his intention to divide his estate into six equal parts, one share to each of his three living brothers and one *Page 574 share to the respective heirs of each of his three deceased sisters. That by the use of the words "lawful heirs" in the will, such intention of the testator was not clearly expressed, and such failure was caused by the mistake of the testator and the scrivener as to the technical meaning of the words "lawful issue." Wherefore, the defendants prayed that the will be construed to devise the property per stirpes, and that it be so divided, etc.

On the trial, W.H. Montgomery, over the plaintiff's objections and subject to the reservation on the part of the court to strike out his testimony if the court concluded it was inadmissible, testified substantially as follows on direct-examination: That the testator told him that "he wanted his property divided among his family, with the exception of John and Will Barber, who were provided for as it was, and that when he (Montgomery) wrote the will and used the words `lawful heirs' he used the words to designate the brothers and sisters of John G. Hays, testator, and was attempting to carry out the instructions of said Hays, as he understood them, and witness put the words `lawful heirs' in said will to mean the brothers and sisters of said Hays, or their representatives."

On cross-examination, the witness said: He did not know whether testator's sisters, except the one (Belle) who died without issue, were dead or not at the time the will was written.

"Q. The point about it all is, that the directions that he gave you, as I understood your testimony, prior to the making of this will, was that he wanted his property to go to his family? A. Yes, sir.

"Q. And you wrote the will and wrote it as it is here in evidence? A. Yes, sir.

"Q. And read it over to him, and he said it was all right without any changes? A. I didn't change it any.

"Q. Didn't I understand you to say that you asked him if it was all right? A. He said it was. There was no change made in the will." *Page 575

James Hays, a brother of the deceased, under same objection and reservation, testified: That immediately after making the will, the testator talked to him about it, and said, "It is all fixed, Jim. I cut out the Barbers. I want my estate to go to my brothers and sisters."

The evidence further showed that besides the two Barber boys, grandchildren of the testator's deceased sister, Clarissa, the testator left the following nieces and nephews: Mrs. A.C. Barber, only child of his deceased sister, Ann Coston; Allie L. Wooley, Ernest Hudson and Lillie Ferrell, only children of testator's deceased sister, Mary Hudson; Richard Coston, Edith Baker and Mabel Bateman, only children of testator's deceased sister, Mattie Coston. Testator's surviving brothers were: William R. Hays, James T. Hays and Joseph Hays. Joseph Hays was of unsound mind and in the insane asylum. The testator was about 72 years old at the time of his death and at the date of his will, February 19, 1916. He died in St. Louis, where he had gone on business and was suddenly taken ill and died of pneumonia. He was a farmer and lived on his farm with the family of the son of his brother James, about one mile and a half north of Skidmore, Nodaway County. He lived there with his nephew about a year before he died; prior to that, his maiden sister, Belle, who died in 1915, kept house for him. None of the children of Mrs. Hudson lived in Nodaway County when testator died. One of them, Mrs. Wooley, lived in Kansas City, and another, Lillie Farrell, lived near Weston, Missouri, and the son lived somewhere north. They had been gone from Nodaway County from three to five years. They were on good terms with the testator. He went to see them several times. Two of the Mattie Coston children lived in Colorado, and one in the State of Washington. The two girls were married and had families; the boy was not married. Mrs. A.C. Barber, the only child of testator's sister, Ann Coston, lived at Skidmore. Testator was on friendly terms with his *Page 576 three brothers, as well as with Mrs. Barber. They visited one another frequently. Testator cared for his twin brother, Joseph, who was of unsound mind, most of the time, after he became insane, and had been his guardian. James T. was Joseph's guardian part of the time, and secured a pension and increase of pension for him, of $18 per month. Joseph's board cost $20 per month. The other two brothers, James and William, were comfortably situated financially. One of them, James, had seven children and four grandchildren. The other, William, had four children. Joseph was a bachelor and had nothing but his pension. The nieces and nephews, except the Barber boys, were in comparatively poor circumstances.

The abstract of the record does not show the value of the property of the deceased, but in their statement of the case, appellants' learned counsel say, that he left a large tract of land in Nodaway County, which respondent's learned counsel say was worth, after paying all debts, about $45,000.

The circuit court in rendering its decree struck out the testimony of Montgomery as to the directions of the testator and his understanding and intention in the use of the words "lawful issue" in the will, and also struck out that part of the testimony of James T.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 842, 285 Mo. 566, 16 A.L.R. 1, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooley-v-hays-mo-1920.