133 Ark. 448 | Ark. | 1918
Appellant is the son of Emma B. Bocquin, the probate of .whose will was resisted by him upon the ground that his mother did not have testamentary capacity to make a will, and that its execution was prompted and secured by undue and improper influences. The will was upheld both by the probate court land in the circuit court on appeal. Appellant discusses the testimony at some length;.but it abundantly -supports' the verdict of the jury, and we will set out only such portions of it as are necessary to an understanding of the instructions given and refused to which exceptions were saved. The bulk of the estate was given by the testatrix to her son, the appellant, but the devise was in trust, .and it is to the limitation on the use of the property thus devised against which appellant compl-ains, rather than against the portion of the estate given him.
The testatrix was old at the time of her death, and had been blind for many years before she made the will; but disinterested witnesses who had known her for many years testified that her mentality was unimpaired and that ©he was a woman of s.trong character and vigorous intellect. The estate disposed of was a valuable one, and the will dealt with it with much attention to details and covered nine typewritten pages. It was prepared by an attorney of recognized ability, who testified that he had several conferences with the testatrix in ascertaining her exact wishes, and that several drafts of the will were made before one was written which fully met her approval.
A large number of instructions were asked, and given, both by the contestant and the proponent, and a large number of others were refused. A number of these instructions were marked by the court ‘ ‘ refused as covered by other instructions.” Such appears to be the case. Several of these instructions contained correct declarations of the law, and might very well have been given had not others covering the same ground been given. Under these circumstances no error was committed in refusing to give the correct declarations of the law which were refused. The issues in this case were simple and well defined, and to have increased the number of instructions which were given would have tended only to confuse these simple issues. A study of these instructions makes it apparent that counsel for both the contestant and proponent had before them, in the preparation of their instructions, the opinions of this court in the cases of McCulloch v. Campbell, 49 Ark. 367, and Taylor v. McClintock, 87 Ark. 243, as a number of these instructions employed the very language used in those opinions. These opinions are landmarks on the subject of testamentary capacity to make a will, and it would be a work of supererogation to review the law of this subject as it is announced in those opinions. We conclude, therefore, that no error was committed in the instructions which were given; and that error was not committed in refusing to multiply the instructions after others had been given which had declared the law applicable to the issues raised by the testimony.
The testimony does show that for a number of years prior to her death the testatrix had lived in the home of the man whom :she named as her executor; and it is true that contestant contended that, this executor and his wife exercised undue and improper influence over the testatrix in the preparation of her will, and caused the testatrix to believe that her son, upon whom she proposed to bestow her benefaction, was profligate and prodigal, and that it would, therefore, be wise to give him his property in trust. Complaint is not made about the quantity of property given by the .testatrix to her executor, although, of course, he would take nothing if the will was broken. But it is said that the trust created for the control of the property given contestant indicates both a lack of testamentary capacity, because there was no necessity for the creation of this trust, and that it likewise indicates the exertion of undue and improper influence on the testatrix. No attempt was made to show any personal hostility between the executor iand appellant. But all these questions were submitted to the jury, under appropriate instructions, and have been settled by the verdict in favor of the will.
Other questions are raised; but we think they are disposed of by what we have already said, or that they are not of sufficient importance to require further discussion. The jury has found, under correct instructions, that the testatrix has made a valid will, and we cannot, therefore, pass upon either the wisdom or necessity-of the trust which it created. Judgment affirmed.