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Son’s Suit in Missouri Depends on Date on Mom’s Tombstone

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

George Priddy of Medford, Ore. tries to prove the tombstone’s worth a million dollars to him.
In 1902, George Priddy of Medford, Ore., tried to prove his mother’s tombstone in the Central Point Cemetery was worth a million dollars.
Priddy and his siblings had been told by their parents that they owned a part of their maternal grandfather’s farm in Jackson County, Mo. Supposedly, his mother was still a minor in 1853 when she sold her one-ninth interest in the property to get money to go to the gold fields of California.
By 1902 that hardscrabble farm was now the most expensive residential area in Kansas City. So Priddy sued to reclaim his mother’s share of her father’s 50-acres based on the argument she had been too young to legally sell it.
Lawyers questioned dozens of witnesses in the 16-day Missouri trial. The central evidence was whether the tombstone showed she was 21 before or after she sold the land. Did it say she was 60 when she died in 1892, as claimed by her son, or 66 as claimed by the defendants?
The Tombstone Trial judgment went against Priddy. The judge accused the family of desecrating their mother’s gravestone to get money.
Sources: "Priddy Heirs and Their Law Suits." Medford Mail 18 July 1902: 3. Print; Reports of Cases Determined in the supreme Court of the State of Missouri. Vol. 201: State of Missouri, 323-43. Web. 6 Dec. 2014.

Episode
2585
Date
Author
Alice Mullaly