42 Ind. App. 106 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1908
This was an action by appellant, o'nly child of decedent, Robert P. Wilfley, to have declared void a will alleged to have been executed by decedent.
The allegations of the complaint were, in substance: (1) The will was unduly executed; (2) it was obtained by the undue influence of Mary E. Aldridge, then Mary E. Oler; (3) it was procured by the undue influence of Amos L. Cray; (4) it was obtained by the undue influence of Mary E. Aldridge and Amos L. Cray; (5) at the time of executing said pretended will, and for ten years theretofore, decedent was a person of unsound mind; (6) though said will devised and bequeathed all real and personal property to decedent’s “beloved wife, Mary E. Wilfley,” who is appel
On motion of appellee Mary E. Aldridge the court struck out the seventh specification of the complaint, to which action an exception was duly taken. Appellee Cray separately demurred to the complaint for want of facts, but the demurrer was overruled. Appellee Mary E. Aldridge then answered in two paragraphs: (1) General denial; (2) admitting the will, and that it purported to have been executed June 15, 1902, but averring that in fact it was executed after the marriage of said appellee with decedent; that the date aforesaid was an error by the scrivener, and was not the correct date of the will; and denying all other averments in the complaint. Appellant filed a reply in general denial to the answer,' and the cause being at issue, it was submitted to a jury, which returned a verdict for appellees. Judgment was rendered on the verdict.
The errors assigned for consideration in this court are:
(1) Striking out the seventh specification of the complaint;
(2) overruling the motion for a new trial.
In the case of Swygart v. Willard (1906), 166 Ind. 25, the court held that an heir was competent to testify as to the pleasant relations existing between him and his father, as tending to show the latter’s sanity.
Appellant having been called as a witness, was questioned as follows: “You may state what the relations were between you and your father, as to being friendly or otherwise.” Appellees objected on the ground that the witness was incompetent, whereupon appellant offered to testify “that the relations between her and her father were friendly in character as between parent and child, and that she never knew of any occasion that he would have to feel unkindly towards her.” The court sustained the objection and appellant duly excepted.
There being objections made to the competency of the witness under the statute, and none made to the form of the question, under the authorities heretofore cited this witness was competent to testify to such facts and the testimony should have been admitted as tending to show the sanity of the testator. We are not at liberty to speculate as to the probable effect of the evidence upon the jury. The only question for our consideration is as to its admissibility.
Since the other alleged errors may not arise upon another trial of this cause, it is not necessary to consider them here.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with instructions to the trial court to sustain the motion for a new trial.
Roby, J., absent.