73 Neb. 492 | Neb. | 1905
In May, 1903, Edward Clapham departed this life testate, at Cedar Bluffs, Saunders county, in this state, leaving surviving him his widow and seven children. A written will properly attested by two subscribing witnesses, and executed in July, 1900, by the deceased, was duly offered for probate in the county court of Saunders county. The estate disposed of by the will was of the value of about $10,000. One-half of the estate was devised absolutely to the widow, and the other half equally divided between six of his surviving children, to the exclusion of John H. Clap-ham, the eldest son. With reference to this son, one paragraph of the wiíl reads as follows: “I do not desire that any portion of my property shall under any condition go to my son John H. Clapham, or to his issue, as I have al
The first objection urged is that the court erred in directing a verdict for the proponent. The evidence touching on the mental condition of the testator is not seriously conflicting in the record. It máy be said to be clearly established that the testator had been in poor physical health for several years prior to his death, and had suffered from a complication of catarrh of the stomach, bronchitis and consumption. But the evidence is equally certain that he retained his mental faculties up to the very close of his life. The testimony sIioavs that deceased was very exacting in his business matters with anyone with whom he had dealings, and Avas very industrious and a man of strong prejudices; that prior to 1896 he had been on good terms with the contestant, but that about that time he made a contract with the son for the sale of 225 acres of land, and also claimed a contract for the feeding of stock on the place; that a difference arose between father and son concerning this contract, and tlv. ligation followed and continued in the courts for some time, when it was finally settled and compromised; that after this litigation the father
On the issue of the undue influence of Mrs. Callaway in the making of the will, the evidence admitted wholly fails. This is practically conceded in the brief of contestant, and error is predicated on the action of the trial court in excluding testimony offered in support of this issue. Contestant testified to a conversation with his father about the first will which he made, in which he says his father admitted Dorothy (Mrs. Callaway) importuned him to leave John (contestant) out. This evidence was stricken out by the trial court, and. error is alleged against this ruling. It will be noted that this alleged conversation was not with reference to the will in controversy, but to a former one,
The next question urged is that the courts erred in taxing the entire costs, including the fee of the guardian ad litem of one of the minor beneficiaries, to the contestant. In Wallace v. Sheldon, 56 Neb. 55, the question of the taxation of costs in cases in which wills are contested was examined, and it ivas there held that the power to tax costs in cases of this character is contained in section 623 of the code, and that “the discretion conferred on the courts by section 623 of the code is not an arbitrary, but a legal, one, to be exercised within the limits of legal and equitable principles.” While the contest in this case may, as observed by plaintiff in error, have been instituted in the utmost good faith, yet an examination of the record shows that it is based on very meager and indefinite suspicions, rather than competent testimony tending to establish the averments. We are therefore impressed with the idea that the learned district judge was fully justified in taxing the costs generally against the contestant, but, as the guardian ad litem of the minor appears to have been appointed by the county judge for the special and proper purpose of pro
We therefore recommend that the judgment of the district court be modified by taxing the fee of the guardian ad litem to the proponents, and that, as so modified, the judgment be'affirmed.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is modified by taxing the fee of the guardian ad litem to the proponents, and, as so modified, the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment accordingly.