9 Fla. 481 | Fla. | 1861
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an issue of clevisawt vel non, tried in the Circuit Court of St. Johns county, and arose upon an attempt to set up a certain paper writing, purporting to have been executed by Susan Murphy, deceased, and to establish the same as her last will and testament. The caveator rested his defence upon two grounds, viz: Want of mental capacity, and undue influence. To establish and retiut these grounds, a large .amount of evidence was adduced on either side. The jury by their verdict sustained both grounds, and thereupon the Court pronounced as its judgment, “ that the said will of June 4th, A. D. 1856, be held and declared invalid and of no effect.” The counsel for the propounder of the will, then moved the Court to grant a new trial, upon grounds which will hereafter be stated. The motion for the new trial was denied, and thereupon an appeal was taken, which brings flie proceedings before this Court for review.
The errors assigned in this Court are as follows, viz:
“ 1st. In allowing the testimony of Miss Striska to go to the jury, she having an interest under a former will and codicil, purporting to have been executed by the testatrix, Susan Murphy alias Susan Linde.
“ 2d. The testimony was irrelevant, and in other respects legally inadmissible.
“3d. In allowing the former will, codicil and deeds of trust to be read as evidence to the jury, inasmuch as the only question raised in the cause by the pleadings is clevisavit vel non, to wit: want of capacity to make a will, and undue influence brought to bear upon the mind of the testatrix, at the time of its execution or prior thereto.
“ 4th. The Court erred in refusing to grant a new trial upon the grounds stated in the motion.
“ 5th. The Court erred in sustaining one part of the verdict of the jury and overruling the other.”
Before proceeding to consider the point involved in the fourth assignment, which is the only one that is properly presented for our consideration, it may not be improper to note the mistake of fact that occurs in the statement of the ihwd assignment. It is made a ground of error in that assignment, that the Court allowed the “former will and codicil ” to be read in evidence. The report of the trial, as it appears in the bill of exceptions, shows the reverse to have been the fact; for it is there stated that “ the reading of the former will of Mrs. Murphy was objected to, and objection sustained by the Oouvt.” "With respect to the fifth assignment, we have been unable to find in the record anything to sustain the allegation, that the Court “ sustained one part of the verdict, and overruled the other.”
~We have intimated that the point raised by the fourth assignment, to-wit: the propriety of the refusal to grant
The grounds for the motion for the new trial are as follows, viz:
“ 1st. Because' the verdict of the jury is contrary to the evidence, and the weight of the evidence.
“ 2d. Because the verdict of the jury is contrary to the charge of the Court.”
Prior to the passage of the act of 1852-3, (Pamph. Laws, 100,) this Court, entertaining the English doctrine, invariably refused to interfere with the discretion of the inferior Courts in granting or refusing to grant a new trial. In the celebrated case of Carter vs. Bennett, (4 Fla. Repts. 284,) which was decided at the January Term, 1852, the refusal to grant a new trial was made one of the main grounds upon which the reversal of the judgment was claimed; and it was argued with great skill and ability. The Court, however, refused to sustain the point, saying: “ The whole framework of our judicial structure is derived from our English forefathers, and the practice of reviewing the decisions of a Court, upon motions for a new trial, is wholly unknown to
Thus it will be seen that the Supreme Court is not only invested with authority, but it is made its duty to consider and pass upon matters occurring in the progress of a trial below, which theretofore had been esteemed to be a matter of pure discretion, and consequently not subject to be reviewed by the appellate tribunal. In matters of this kind, involving the sifting of evidence, the Appellate Court is required to assume the position of the Judge who presided at the trial of the cause; but it is very manifest that its facilities for arriving at a correct conclusion are greatly deminished by having to rely only upon the report of the evidence as it is set forth in the record. In the opinion delivered in the case just cited, the late Chief Justice Anderson, adopting the language of an eminent jurist, thus forcibly alludes this to disparity: “ Every one at all familiar with the incidents of
'Mr. Graham, in his elaborate and masterly treatise, -lays
“ 1st. The Verdict must be presumed to be right, until the contrary appears.
“ 2d. The verdict should be sustained by the Court, if the evidence, by any fair construction, will warrant such a finding.
“ 3d. A Court is not authorized to set asido a verdict, simply because if they had been on the jury they would have found a different verdict.
“ 4th. It is not sufficient that the verdict may possibly be wrong, but that after giving a proper weight to all the evidence, it cannot be right.” 3 Graham on N T., 1239.
If these are the rules prescribed for the government of the Judge before whom the trial is conducted, and who usually has the witness in his presence and under his eye, with how much more stringency do they address themselves to the observance of the Ajipellate Court. In the case of Sanderson & Co. vs. Hagan & Harrison, this Court did exercise the prerogative of setting aside a verdict and granting a new trial; but it will be seen by reference to the case, that it was done upon the ground that there was a total absence of evidence to support the finding. Justice Pearson, then on the bench, in delivering the opinion of the Court, remarked: “ However disinclined we are to invade the proper province of the jury in estimating the force and effect of testimony, this is a case of too glaring a departure from all legal principle for the verdict to be permitted to stand. There was no testimony whatever to support the idea that the ‘ cubic rule ’ was the prevailing and customary mode of measurement,” &c. 7 Fla. Repts., 318.
In the case of the Tallahassee Railroad Co. vs. Macon, the Court refused to disturb the verdict, and the same Justice, delivering the opinion of the Court, remarks: “ It was not for the Judge, after the verdict, to measure precisely
Controlled by the principles thus clearly enunciated, and applying them to the evidence contained in the record, we are constrained to sustain the propriety of the ruling in the Court below, upon the motion for a new trial.
We are not prepared to say that all of the evidence adduced by the Caveator was admissible. Indee d we are rather inclined to the opinion that Miss Striska was incapacitated by interest to be a good witness; but her testimony was so abundantly corroborated and sustained' by the other witnesses, that we do not think it had' the effect to mislead the minds of the jurors, so as to cause’ them to make a finding which they would not otherwise have made.
In enunciating the conclusion at which we have arrived', it has been deemed unnecessary to array the evidence contained in the record, or to bring it under review in this opinion. It is enough to say, that upon the whole evidence, we think the Judge below might' very properly have refused to grant the motion for the new trial.
The second ground assigned in the motion for the new trial, to-wit:' that “ the verdict of the jury was against the charge of the Court,” was not pressed at the hearing; nor do we attach any importance to it', coming to the conclusion that we have.
It is ordered and adjudged that the judgment of the Court below, rendered in this cause, be and the same is affirmed, with costs.