DocketNumber: 47782
Citation Numbers: 46 N.W.2d 66, 242 Iowa 353, 1951 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 421
Judges: Mulroney, Bliss, Oliver, Smith, Hats, Garfield, Wennerstrum
Filed Date: 2/12/1951
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
The children of Henry J. Hurlbut, deceased, filed objections to the probate of his will alleging the testator was of unsound mind and incapable of making a will; that he had been subjected to the undue influence of proponent; and that he had been induced to make the will in proponent’s favor by reason of the latter’s fraud and false representations. The will gave testator’s two adult children'$1.00 each and almost all of the rest of his property to proponent whom he had married about three and a half months before he died.
I. Viewing the record in the light most favorable to contestants we hold the evidence sufficient to warrant the submission of the issue of undue influence to the jury. The testator was a widower about seventy years old in the latter part of 1948. lie owned the Scenic Hotel in McGregor, Iowa, and worked as a conductor on the Milwaukee Railroad. He lived in an apartment in this hotel. His son, Robert, was married and lived in Madison, Wisconsin, where he was district passenger agent for the Milwaukee Railroad. His daughter, Mabel Sielehr, was a patient at the Lakeview Tuberculosis Sanatorium which was apparently in or near Madison, Wisconsin. She had seven children ranging in age from seven to twenty-four years. Her husband, Norman, was also an employee of the Milwaukee Railroad, and the deceased held a mortgage on their home in Madison in the sum of $2600.
The record shows a friendly feeling existed between the father and his two children and he saw them frequently as his run necessitated a layover of several hours in Madison. In December of 1948 the father visited the sanatorium, and Mabel, whose room was close to the nurses’ desk, overheard him ask as to her condition. She said she was given two months to live and that her father cried and was very upset. Mabel died before the trial and her testimony was by deposition.
The proponent was a practical nurse about fifty-eight years old, who had worked at the sanatorium for about a year and a half prior to December 1948. She was divorced from Raymond Roth in August of 1948. She took care of the patients in the sanatorium, including Mabel. About December 15,1948 she heard deceased, on’ one of his weekly visits to Mabel, say that he was a conductor on the railroad and that he owned a hotel in Mc-Gregor and she later asked Mabel for her father’s address. There is testimony that she was an aggressive type of woman and after the December visit of deceased she would stay in the room when deceased visited his daughter, or come to the door and call him out, or meet him on the stairs before or after his visits. The
In the latter part of January the deceased underwent surgery ' in the Madison General Hospital for cancer. The proponent took time off from her job and was his special nurse for two nights. The doctor who operated on deceased said he told him after the operation that he would not recover; that he had a very short time to live. The proponent stated she knew deceased “had sarcoma, cancer affecting the blood stream.” Robert visited his father while he was in the hospital with his father’s unemployment insurance papers, and proponent, who was standing near the bed, tried to see the papers. Robert said he ordered her to leave the room and when she did not go a nurse came into the room and took proponent out.
The deceased recovered enough to go back to work and on April 6, 1949 he married the proponent in Elkader, Iowa. Prior to the marriage, deceased consulted Mr. Coon, a lawyer in Mc-Gregor, and also a Wisconsin lawyer with reference to whether they could be married in view of proponent’s divorce in Wisconsin in August 1948. The Wisconsin lawyer testified he told deceased proponent could not marry until one year after the divorce, or August 1949. Mr. Coon was one of the witnesses to the marriage in Elkader, swearing that neither party had been divorced within the year. Mr. Coon- testified that on January 24, 1949 (about the time of proponent’s conversation with the nurse-superintendent) he drew a will for deceased which gave proponent $1000, and the hotel to proponent and his older sister, and the balance to his children. This will was executed in his office. He said that in May he drew a new will for deceased giving his sister a home for life and the balance to proponent.
There was other evidence showing the complete change in the father’s attitude toward his children after he started going with proponent and evidence from which the jury could infer this was caused by proponent’s influence. "We have not related all of the testimony, and some of the testimony we have recited was denied. It is not necessary to state more for the case must be reversed for instruction errors, but we feel the testimony makes out a case for the jury on the issue of undue influence.
The evidence would warrant an inference that proponent conceived a plan to get deceased’s property almost from the time she met him and learned of his property. Six weeks after she met him she is telling the nurse-superintendent that she expected to get the hotel at McGregor and all of deceased’s property and that she intended to marry deceased and “he would make a will in her favor.” This conversation was almost the very day of the execution of the first will, which gave her $1000 and a half inter
Fact precedents are of little value. In some cases the evidence is stronger against the will on some points than here and weaker on others. Among cases where we held somewhat comparable evidence of undue influence sufficient are: Hansen v. Waugh, 237 Iowa 304, 21 N.W.2d 762; Shaw v. Duro, 234 Iowa 778, 14 N.W.2d 241; In re Estate of Eiker, 233 Iowa 315, 6 N.W.2d 318.
II. Tn instruction 3 the court first told the jury that the pleaded “issue of mental unsoundness of Henry J. Hurlbut has not been sufficiently established” and then, in the next two sentences stated: “Although the issue of testamentary capacity has been withdrawn, yet there is left in the case evidence which has been introduced to show the mental condition of Henry J. Hurlbut. You may consider such evidence as bearing upon his susceptibility to undue influence, if any, and upon his powers to resist the same.”
This is a proper instruction to give in a case where there is some evidence of mental weakness, even though the evidence is insufficient to carry the issue of lack of testamentary capacity io the jury. Proponent objected to this instruction on the ground there was no evidence of mental weakness or unsoundness in this case. Contestants seek to sustain it by pointing to evidence of testator’s physical illness and evidence that he had been seen
The suggestion that this instruction could be based on the evidence of one witness to the will who said testator was of sound mind and two other witnesses who said generally that he was a man of strong mind would mean that the instruction was favorable to proponent. We feel the ordinary meaning of the instruction is that the jury can consider evidence of mental weakness or unsoundness. Its setting in instruction 3 where the court withdraws the pleaded issues of mental incapacity and fraud but tells the jury they can consider evidence of “mental condition” and “false' representations” precludes any thought that the court meant evidence of a strong sound mind by the term “mental condition.”
In no case has this court approved such an instruction where there was no evidence of mental weakness. Practically the same instruction was given in Hansen v. Waugh, 237 Iowa 304, 21 N.W.2d 762, and in In re Estate of Eiker, 233 Iowa 315, 6 N.W.2d 318, but in both cases there was evidence of the mental weakness of the persons who executed the wills.
III. A like error is asserted in that in this same instruction 3 the court, after instructing that the pleaded issue of fraud was not sufficiently established, stated that there was left in the case evidence which had been introduced to show alleged false representations on the part of the proponent and that this evidence could be considered as “bearing upon the question of undue influence, if any * * * .” As proponent points out, there was no evidence of false representations of proponent. The contestants seek to justify the instruction by the evidence of Coon’s false statement as a witness to the marriage that neither party had been divorced within a year. But this was not proponent’s false statement. At that time Coon was deceased’s lawyer. But in any event deceased knew the statement was false. Deceased knew the proponent had been divorced in Wisconsin within the year. He had consulted two attorneys — one -of them the attorney who had secured the divorce — about his right to marry pro
The foregoing portions of instruction 3 constitute reversible error. They permitted the jury to speculate on such material facts as the weakened condition of testator’s mind and whether proponent made false representations. With no basis in the evidence any finding on these matters would be based on surmise. It was prejudicial error to give these instructions under the record in this case. Plantz v. Kreutzer & Wasem, 175 Iowa 562, 154 N.W. 785; Jaeger v. Hackert, 241 Iowa 379, 41 N.W.2d 42.
IY. The contestants claimed a misjoinder of parties when Mabel died and the special administrator of her estate, appointed in Wisconsin, was allowed to be joined as party contestant. We have held the personal representative of a contestant’s estate is the proper person to be substituted when the will relates only to personal property. In re Will of Wiltsey, 122 Iowa 423, 98 N.W. 294. The case does not specifically hold that a personal representative appointed in another state should be substituted but we feel such a substitution would be proper.
We need not consider other errors asserted. For the instruction errors set out above the cause is reversed and remanded for a new trial. — Reversed and remanded.