The appeal is taken from a decree denying the probate of an alleged will of John A. Chandler, deceased.
The issues were tried by a jury. On the verdict for contestants, a decree was entered to the effect that the instrument propounded for probate was not the last will of John A. Chandler, deceased, and was not entitled to be probated.
The recited grounds of contest on which the issues were made were the due execution of the instrument, whether its execution was procured by undue influence, whether John A. Chandler, at the time of the execution of said instrument, was of unsound mind and incapable of making a valid will, and whether said instrument was fabricated.
Several of the objections duly made and exceptions reserved to rulings on the introduction of evidence are assigned as error. To an understanding of the áame, it should be stated that before the production of the instrument sought to be probated as the last will of said Chandler certain proceedings were had in the probate court, viz. letters of administration on the estate of said Chandler were issued to Mary J. Chandler, the wife, on her application, a petition filed by the administratrix to sell lands of the estate for payment of debts, and an order dismissing that petition. In the chancery court there *166 was a decree of removal of said administration from the probate court, a decree removing Mary J. Chandler (proponent) as administratrix of said estate, and a consent decree. Among other things, the consent decree adjudged that Mrs. Chandler should' have control of the property of the estate, was entitled to all the rents, income, and profits therefrom during her natural life, without accounting except for designated injury to the remainder interest therein; and, further, that she was required to make certain specific annual payments to designated creditor. The sale of certain lands of the estate for the payment of debts was provided, and the contingency of nonpayment of the debts before the death of Mrs. Chandler was likewise provided for. The foregoing instruments were introduced in evidence by contestants over the due objections and exceptions of proponent, and respectively insisted upon as error.
In the proceedings in the probate court by proponent (the widow of decedent), her acts as administratrix of said estate to the time of her removal from representative capacity by the chancery court and thereafter to the time of the consent decree declaring the extent of her interest in the estate as the widow of said decedent to be that of a life estate subject to annual fixed payments to certain creditors of that estate, it must be admitted, are not related to the question of the bona tides of the consideration for the witness Reed’s interest in the lands acquired by contract from the next of kin of John A. Chandler, deceased. If not otherwise relevant evidence, the admission of such proceedings in evidence was calculated to confuse the issues being tried and to prejudice the jury against the proponent of the will and only beneficiary thereunder.
Contestants were permitted to ask witness Watters, “What was your judgment as to his mental condition on that day, November 15, 1911?” meaning the alleged testator on the date on which the will purported to have been executed, and the reply was: “I think his mind was not right.” The witness had testified on direct examination that he had known Mr. Chandler all his life; “saw him in September, 1911, after the death of his son; * * * jig never seemed right after his son’s death;” was at his home one day and he “seemed to be lost; his wife took him out of the house and walked him some and he seemed better.” On returning, “asked me how I came to be there,” though witness had seen him before he went to walk. That this was about two months after the death of h'i's son. On cross-examination the witness had stated that — ■
He “did not observe anything especially peculiar about Mr. J. A. Chandler after his son’s death except he seemed to be sad always, and the time I mentioned, about a month or more before his death, when he didn’t know where he was and wanted to go home, and when he started anywhere he would go in the opposite direction to that in which he seemed to intend to go. In my judgment, his mind was not sound at that time which was a month. or more before his death. About all I observed of him on November 15, 1911, when we were at Mrs. Net Chandler’s, at the time the testimony was being taken, was that he simply walked around or sat around, looking sad, and did not seem to observe anything much that was going on. I couldn’t state anything more as to Mr. Chandler’s mental condition on that day, November 15, 1911, than as to any other time after his son’s death.”
Thereupon contestants propounded the foregoing question, and he was permitted by the court, in the exercise of a sound judicial discretion, to answer against proponent’s due objection and exception.
One of the issues of the contest was the testamentary capacity of Mr. Chandler on November 15, 1911. The rule governing a nonexpert witness in expressing an opinion as to the sanity or insanity of one whose sanity is an issue of the trial has often been discussed by this court. In Miller v. Whittington,
“Where there has been a long and intimate acquaintance with another, furnishing opportunity for the formation of correct judgment as to the mental condition of such person, a witness may give his opinion that the person ‘is of sound mind,’ since sanity' is the normal condition of mankind, The general rule would not permit this witness, though an attesting witness to the purported will, to testify that the party executing the will had testamentary capacity at the time of its execution. The reason on which the rule is rested is that such issue of fact must be submitted to the judge or the jury trying the same, that they may draw the inference.”
In Councill v. Mayhew,
“It is well settled that, on the issue as to testamentary capacity, a witness, whether expert or not, cannot testify that the testator was or was not capable of making a will, because, as it is said, this is the very issue to be submitted to the jury. Walker v. Walker,34 Ala. 469 , 473; Hall v. Perry,87 Me. 569 ,33 Atl. 160 ,47 Am. St. Rep. 352 ; 28 A. & E, Ency. Law, 102. * * * The -only exception to the rule stated is on the cross-examination of a witness who has testified as to the sanity or insanity of the testator, and then only to test the witness, and not to thus establish the fact. Dominick v. Randolph,124 Ala. 557 , 564,27 South. 481 .” Torrey v. Burney,113 Ala. 496 ,21 South. 348 ; 2 Jones on Ev. § 365 (367).
The last four assignments of error challenged the ruling of the court in permitting the witnesses Ault and Harden to reply to the respective questions: “Did Mr. A. T. Thomas have a conversation with you about Mr. Chandler making a will?” “State what, if anything, A. T. Thomas ever said to you about John A. Chandler making a will.” Mr. Ault replied that he did have a conversation with such person in 1913, after the will was alleged to have been made, and Thomas stated that Chandler had talked to him about willing his property to the orphans’ home, *168 but bad died without maliing a will. The witness Harden testified that Thomas told him Mr. Chandler had never made a will, and it was the duty “of the Chandler heirs to look after this estate, as it was their business. * * * ” This evidence was in rebuttal of the testimony of Atticus Thomas, the son of A. T. Thomas, deceased, one of the purported witnesses to the will, introduced by proponent to the effect that “after Mr. Chandler and Mr. Raynes had left our house that day and at the dinner table, I heard my father say to my mother that he didn’t believe old man Chandler would live long and that he had made his will.”
In some jurisdictions extrajudicial declarations by a subscribing witness to a will that the testator was lacking in mental capacity have been held admissible to rebut the prima facie case made by the declarant’s attestation of such will. This, in effect, is held to be the best evidence in contradiction of the testimony the law presumes him to give on the proof of his signature. Townshend v. Townshend, 9 Gill (Md.) 506; Colvin v. Warford,
Many courts have held that where a person’s name appears as an attesting witness, when in fact he was not an attesting witness, the execution of the instrument can be proved without his testimony, or where the evidence was as to an alteration made after the attestation. Engles v. Bruington, 4 Yeates (Pa.) 345,
Pretermitting a decision of the question of the competency of the subsequent declarations of A. T. Thomas, proponents having given in evidence such a subsequent declaration of the witness supporting the will, contestants make reply with like subsequent declarations of the same witness at other times, places, and to other persons to a contrary purport. Bank of Phœnix City v. Taylor,
We find no reversible error in the record, and the decree of the probate court is affirmed.
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