Wright v. McDonald

233 S.W.2d 19, 361 Mo. 1, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 9, 1950
Docket41513
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 233 S.W.2d 19 (Wright v. McDonald) 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
Wright v. McDonald, 233 S.W.2d 19, 361 Mo. 1, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 695 (Mo. 1950).

Opinion

*7 BOHLING, C.

[ 20 ] Mary Belle Wright brought this action to establish a propounded lost and destroyed will of Albirtie J. Wright, her daughter. She named as defendants the beneficiaries, other than herself, of said alleged will .and the heirs at law of said deceased. The proceeding involves the title to real estate and an estate of ap-, proximately $50,000. Probate of the tendered instrument was rejected by the Probate Court of Macon county, Missouri. Thereafter, the paper writing was established as the will of Albirtie J. Wright, deceased, by a verdict signed by nine jurors in Monroe county, a change of venue having been taken from Macon county. Certain heirs at law of Albirtie J. Wright prosecute this appeal claiming-plaintiff did not make a submissible case; that incompetent and prejudicial evidence was admitted, and that specified instructions were erroneous. ;

Mary Belle Wright, plaintiff, and her husband, J. A. Wright, were the parents of five children, to wit: Albirtie J. (also [21] known as Birtie), Willa, Addie (known in the record as Ada), Pringle, and Mary J. (known in the record as May). J. A. Wright died in 1927 or 1928. Willa, who married a Mr. Nicodemus, died in October,' 1945, without descendants. Pringle died in August, 1944, and left the following children: Albirtie Jean Wright (named for deceased), Virginia Wright Wiemann, Willa Juanita Wright, John Leslie Wright, and Jo Ann Wright. Ada is now Ada Wright McDonald of Rockford, Illinois; and May is now May Wright Ownbey.

Albirtie J. Wright died Saturday night, March 17, 1946, being about sixty-five years of age, leaving her mother, Mary Belle. Wright, her sisters Ada and May, and the children of her deceased brother Pringle surviving as her heirs at law.

Miss Wright served as Clerk for Probate Judge Milton A. Romjue and later as his secretary when he was elected to Congress. She attended a law school, was admitted to the Bar, was 'elected Probate Judge of Macon county, serving for eight years, and then engaged in the practice of law in Macon, Missouri, until her death. She was desci’ibed as “intelligent/’ “capable,” “particular,” “precise,” and “frugal.” No issue exists respecting her testamentary capacity.

There was testimony that Albirtie Wright was fond of Mrs. Beulah Hankins and Mrs. Lottie Itschner.

Plaintiff was eighty-seven years old at the time of the trial, March, 1948. She and Albirtie had lived together many years. She testified *8 that about two or three weeks prior to Albirtie’s death Albirtie read her (Albirtie’s) will to plaintiff and she (plaintiff) read it “about three times I think”; and that Albirtie had the will in a pocketbook in a shoebox in plaintiff’s closet on the night Albirtie died.

According to plaintiff, Albirtie came home tired Friday night and plaintiff persuaded her not to return to work that night. Albirtie remained home Saturday.- During the afternoon, at Albirtie’s request, May Ownbey, who lived nearby, prepared some chocolate pudding and Albirtie ate two dishes of the pudding. Albirtie retired before 6:00 p. m. After finishing the evening dishes, plaintiff thought Albirtie looked bad and, although a telephone was in the house, she went next door and personally asked a neighbor to go after someone. After May arrived, Dr. Groneway was called and he gave Albirtie some medicine. Plaintiff retired before 9:00 p. m. Later, May awakened plaintiff and stated she thought Albirtie was dead. Unable to get Dr. Groneway, Dr. Lloyd J. Carroll was called. He had his wife accompany him and upon arrival shortly after 1:45 a. m. found Miss Wright dead, and was of opinion she had been dead for about an hour.

Plaintiff testified that she saw Albirtie’s will that night; that May was reading it to her husband (Charles), and Dr. and Mrs. Carroll (denied by Dr. Carroll and Charles Ownbey); that later that morning she could not find Albirtie’s will or diamonds; and that when she accused May of taking them all May said was “ Oh! Mother. ’ ’

There was also evidence that plaintiff and May, at plaintiff’s suggestion, put Albirtie’s diamonds in a salt jar and hid the jar for safekeeping. Plaintiff forgot the diamonds but admitted that they were delivered to her soon after she left May’s home.

Plaintiff gave testimony to the effect the three sisters were not too friendly; and also to the effect they were on good terms, particularly Albirtie and Ada.

After Albirtie’s death, plaintiff made her home with May and Charles Ownbey until September 9, 1946. She testified that about three weeks prior to leaving ^he went into the kitchen one morning and May asked her what Albirtie’s will provided; that she told her; that May said: “Here is Birtie’s will”; that plaintiff asked where she had found it; that May replied it had been in the locker; and then “Charlie mauled May,” grabbed the will and, getting some matches, went out, and that was the last time she saw the will. This occurrence is denied by Charles Ownbey.

Plaintiff testified that the first person she told about Albirtie having a will was Lottie Itschner and placed the time as being after she went to live with Lottie, which according [22] to disinterested witnesses was about six months after Albirtie’s death, although plaintiff thought it was only two months.

*9 Plaintiff testified respecting the contents of the will that Albirtie wanted her debts paid; that she wanted the Baptist Church to have $500; that she wanted Albirtie Jean to have $100 and the other four children of Pringle Wright to have $5 each; that at the date of the propounded will Ada and May, Albirtie’s sisters, were the only living children of plaintiff and they were to have $1 each; “and the rest of it was all to me,” but, after some questioning, she wanted it to go equally to Lottie Itschner and Beulah Hankins after plaintiff’s death: “ * * * she wanted me to have everything anybody could want if it took it all, and what was left to be Lottie’s and Beulah’s.” Lottie and Beulah were to see that some woman stayed with plaintiff. Lottie Itschner was to be executrix and to serve without giving bond. The propounded will, Exhibit A-l, bears date of “this - day of -, 1946.”

The ease was presented on the theory that being a beneficiary under the will plaintiff was not a competent witness to prove its due execution. Consult Trotters v. Winchester, 1 Mo. 413; Miltenberger v. Miltenberger, 78 Mo. 27, 31; Mann v. Balfour, 187 Mo. 290, 303, 86 S. W. 103, 106(1). Expressly stating counsel was not asking for signatures, just the names to identify the propounded will, and also not for the purpose of proving its due execution, plaintiff was permitted to testify that Albirtie’s name and the names of Dr. and Mrs. Carroll were on it.

Unsuccessful efforts were made to find Albirtie J. Wright’s will at the home and her office.

A beneficiary is competent to establish the contents of a lost will. Mann v. Balfour, 187 Mo. 290, 303(1), 86 S. W. 105, 106(1). Notwithstanding discrepancies in plaintiff’s testimony and that much could be presented to a jury to discredit her, her testimony, if believed, established that her daughter Albirtie had a will and its contents to the extent above set forth. Neal v. Caldwell, 326 Mo. 1146, 34 S. W. 2d 104, 107[2 et seq.]; Harrell v. Harrell, 284 Mo. 218, 223 S. W. 919, 922 [2], Consult Dickey v. Malechi, 6 Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W.2d 19, 361 Mo. 1, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-mcdonald-mo-1950.