150 Mo. App. 671 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
(after stating the facts).- — ¥e dispose of the contention that due and legal execution of the will was not proven by uncontradicted and clear evidence and that there was a conflict of evidence as to its execution, and that this was for the jury, by saying* that the evidence by qualified witnesses, clearly and without contradiction, showed that the pgper produced was signed by Mr. Beyer himself as and for his will, and was attested by two competent witnesses subscribing their names to it in the presence of the testator, as required by section 4604, Revised Statutes 1899, now section 537, Revised Statutes 1909. The attesting witnesses furthermore, at the trial of this ease in the circuit court, testified that Mr. Beyer was of sound mind a.t the time he signed and when the witnesses signed as subscribers, and that they had signed in the presence of each other and at his request. The fact of execution was practically uncontradicted. While it is true that the jury may not believe uncontradioted witnesses, and that it is for the jury to pass on their credibility, it is also true that our courts have held in many cases, especially concerning wills, that when the evidence is clear as to due execution, the trial court may direct the jury to find accordingly. The Supreme Court has in many cases itself entered up judgment approving a will, even over conflicting testimony. See, inter alia, Teckenbrock v. McLaughlin, 209 Mo. 533, 108 S. W. 46; Story v. Story, 188 Mo. 110, l. c. 129, 86 S. W. 225; Gordon v. Burris, 141 Mo. 602, l. c. 614, 43 S. W. 642; Hamon v. Hamon, 180 Mo. 685, 79 S. W. 422; Southworth v. Southworth, 173 Mo. 59, 73 S. W. 129; McFadin v. Catron, 138 Mo. 197. l. c. 227. 38 S. W. 932, 39 S. W. 771. It
Reading all the testimony in the case, we also agree with the learned trial judge in holding that there was no substantial evidence introduced tending to sustain the other allegations in the petition, and that his action was correct, with that testimony in the ease, in instructing a verdict sustaining the paper as the last will of the decedent. There is, however, a phase of the case presented for our consideration, arising upon the action of the learned trial judge in the exclusion of certain testimony offered by the contestants, which we feel compelled to notice. While one of the appellants, Mrs. Margaret Sweiger, was under examination by counsel for the plaintiffs below, as set out on page 41. of the printed abstract, she testified that Mrs. Sichlenker said she had a conversation with her father as to his making his will. “She said she told father Monday morning — that her husband told him to make a will, and told her to tell him, and then after he told her he went to the doctor and telephoned, and she said that her father didn’t want to make a will.” On page 42 this appears; (Mr. Buder, examining the witness, Mrs. Margaret Sweiger.) “Q. You said you called on Mrs. Schlenker when, the day after the funeral or when was it that you called on her? A. We were there at the funeral and the day after. Q. At any of those times did she have any conversation with you as to your interests in the will?” Judge Zachritz (counsel for defendants, respondents here): “I object to that.. That is wholly immaterial. It is after the funeral and after the will was probated, and it don’t malee any difference what Mrs. Schlenker said with reference to that.” The court: “I think the objection is well taken. ’ ’ Plaintiffs excepted to this ruling and their counsel stated that he wanted “to show ad
It will he observed that the abstract sets out that the statements which were to be given in evidence, were admissions by Mrs. Schlenker alleged to have been made after the probate of the will, as tending to show ill-feeling between the testator and herself. Eeferring to that evidence, counsel for respondents claim that it does not show what the witness would have testified what statements were made.
It has been frequently held in our courts, both by the Supreme and by this court, that it is essential to the review of the action of the trial court in the ex-conclusion of evidence, that the evidence proposed must appear in the record; that the record must set out what the witness would have testified had she been permitted to repeat the conversations, in order that this court can see whether the excluded evidence was material and relevant to the issue of the case, and so be able to determine whether the complaining party was prejudiced by its exclusion. [Ruschenberg v. Southern Electric Railroad Co., 161 Mo. 70, l. c. 81, 61 S. W. 626.] Speaking of an offer to prove a narrative of a past occurrence and not a circumstance so connected with the main fact as to characterize the act itself, the court in that ease says: “But there is another and cogent reason why this court should not reverse the case for the exclusion of the answer, and it is this: The case might be reversed on the naked refusal to permit an answer to the question, and on retrial it might appear the -matter elicited was wholly immaterial and incompetent. The plaintiff should have gone further and stated to the court what he proposed to prove by the witness, and in this way advised this court of its materiality. ’ ’ Several cases are cited in support of this.
However, the ground of the exclusion of the line of proposed testimony is before us in the record and is argued by counsel at length, and that is so important to 'the determination of other cases in which it may arise, that we cannot allow the rule and proposition of law, contended for by counsel for respondents, advanced by the learned trial judge and evidently governing him in his ruling in the exclusion of the testimony, to stand, as if approved even sub silentio. In support of the ruling of the court, wa are referred by the learned counsel for the respondents .to the cases of Schierbaum v. Schemme, 157 Mo. 1, 57 S. W. 526;
Counsel cite and quote from Gordon v. Burris, supra, at great length. Referring to that case our Supreme Court has said, in Teckenbrock v. McLaughlin, supra, l. c. 541 and 542, “Certainty in a rule of law is of prime importance in administering justice, and it is not apparent to us why we should unsettle the doctrine of the Schierbaum case. That doctrine, discriminatingly applied, does not cover a case charging in the petition and showing in the proofs that there was a privity of design among the contestees. In such case, or in a case where there is only one devisee or legatee to be affected by avoiding the will, the general rule relating to admissions of parties to the suit may be allowed to obtain in its vigor. [Citing cases.] In deciding the Schierbaum case, certain cases announcing a contrary doctrine were overruled by name. • It seems, however, the heresy exploded had been imbedded in other cases escaping the eye of this court, for example: Gordon v. Burris, 141 Mo. 602, and Jackson v. Hardin, 83 Mo. 175. So far as the Gordon case'and the Jackson case announce a conclusion contrary to the Schierbaum case, they are now overruled; and we leave ' the subject with these observations : A will that is shown by. competent proof to be in fact the product of undue influence of one devisee or legatee, out of several, is as much void as if it was the product of the undue influence of all of them — it is a bad will.” Hence the holding that it is not to be overturned by the admissions of one of several devisees — no conspiracy being charged between all the devisees. So that the heresy 'pointed out and condemned in the Jackson and Gordon cases by the decision in the Teckenbrock case consists in holding in those cases that in a contest concerning a will, the admissions or declarations of one devisee among several can be admitted to overturn the will itself and hence
The rule announced in the Sehierbaum case is reiterated in Wood v. Carpenter, 166 Mo. 465, 66 S. W. 172, an exception to the rule being noted, that where there is a conspiracy alleged and evidence given tending to establish that conspiracy, the rule as to admissions against interest, as applied in other eases, is applicable in eases of wills; that in 'conspiracy eases, the admission of one conspirator can be given in evidence against the others.
In King v. Gilson, 191 Mo. 307, 90 S. W. 367, undoubtedly the case referred to by the learned trial judge, citing and quoting from Wood v. Carpenter and Schierbaum v. Schemme, supra, it is said: “A will eon-
In Meier v. Buchter, 197 Mo. 68, the Schierbaum case is approvingly cited and it is there said that it will be seen that devisees having a ‘ ‘ joint interest ’ ’ (the words “joint interest” being put in quotations by the Supreme Court), “stand on a different footing as to admissions, than do those devisees who have no such interest. In this case it is not necessary to judicially interpret the phrase ‘joint interest.’ Because, under certain conditions the rule in the Schierbaum case would not be applicable and should not be mechanically applied to the facts in this ease. ’ ’
We have already cited and quoted from the Teckenbrock case, supra, l. c. 541 and 542.
1’t is clear from all these cases that where there is but one devisee, one party in interest seeking to sustain the will, the declarations of that party against that party’s own interest, whether made before or after the probate of the will, or before or after its execution by the testator, are admissible in evidence. We know of no authority to the contrary; none has been cited.
Counsel and the learned trial court, in holding that the statements of the sole legatee are not admissible-, because made subsequent to the prohate of the will, have misapplied a well-recognized rule. The rule evidently in mind applies to the testator, not to the legatee or devisee. In the Schierbaum case it is said (l. c. 16): “ Testimony which purports to relate what a testator said, after making a will, in relation to the causes
We make these observations in order, as before stated, that we may not be held to determine, by an affirmance of the judgment, that the grounds of objection to the testimony and upon which it was excluded are tenable.
1't will serve no useful purpose to set out the evidence in the case. We gather from the abstract that it has been tried twice in the circuit court. The estate is not large. The parties are in moderate circumstances. On a review of all the testimony in the case, as before remarked, we are satisfied that the action of the trial judge, in directing a verdict for the proponents of the will, was éorrect. The testator was •an old man who had been a janitor in one of the pub-
While there was error in the exclusion of testimony on the grounds stated, s as the testimony sought. to be elicited is not fully before us, and, as far as it is set out, does not appear to be relevant, we cannot say that its exclusion is reversible error. It is for the appellants, claiming error, to point it out clearly, so that a reviewing court can see that on a correction of it a different result might follow. The appellants here have not done that. Hence we will not disturb the verdict or judgment. For the reasons above stated the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.