17 Ala. 84 | Ala. | 1849
This was a proceeding in the Orphans’ Court of St. Clair to try the validity of the will of John Robertson, deceased. The executors propounded his will for probate, and citations were issued to several persons as the next of kin of the deceased. William A. Coleman alone contested the will, and submitted issues, which a jury were empannelled to try, involving the inquiry of the sanity of the testator’s mind at the time the will was executed, and also whether the will was procured by the exercise of improper influence over the testator. On the trial of these issues, a bill of exceptions was signed by the presiding judge, from which it appears that the testator was about eighty years old at the time the will was executed,
1. We do not apprehend that any one will doubt that a person is capable of making a valid will who possesses sufficient capacity to transact the ordinary business of life. Indeed if we were to deny to individuals the capacity to make wills, who are capable of attending to the ordinary duties and transactions of life, it would be difficult to fix the standard by which the capacity necessary to execute a valid will should be ascertained, if it would not even deny the right of making a will to all who did not possess more than ordinary capacity.
2. The second charge given to the jury is incontrovertibly true as a legal proposition. Every one capable of disposing of his property may make such disposition of it by will as be may see proper, and to hold that an unequal distribution within itself was an irrational act, or an act evincing the want of capacity to make a will, would deny the right to make a will disposing of the property of the testator as he may see fit. We do not understand this to bo controverted by the plaintiff in error, but it is contended that this charge under the evidence was necessarily calculated to mislead and did mislead the jury. It is true that if a will is unnatural in its character — if it cuts off the children of the testator, or any of them, from a participation in his estate,
3. The third instruction is also in strict conformity with the law. Every person has the right to dispose of his property by will as he pleases, and whether his will be prompted by-partiality, pride or caprice, is immaterial, provided the testator is of sound mind and the will is not obtained by fraud or undue influence. — Tompkins v. Tompkins, 1 Bailey, 93.
4. The fourth charge we understand to mean this, that no greater or less degree of capacity is required to make a valid will, than to make a valid contract. Why the contestant should object to this charge, we cannot percieve. We know of no decisions that hold that a testator may have sufficient capacity to enter into a contract, but yet deny that such capacity is sufficient to enable him to make a will. But the precise point has heretofore been decided by this court, in the case of McElroy v. McElroy, 5 Ala. 81. In that case, it was said that the same degree of capacity was required to make a will that was requisite to enter into a valid contract; that there was no middle ground between capacity to enter into a contract and the capacity required to make a will — both must stand, as to the question of capacity, precisely on the same footing.
The last charge excepted to is, that if the jury believed that from the weakness of the mind of the deceased, undue influence had been practised on him in obtaining the will, then the will