34 Kan. 532 | Kan. | 1886
This was an action brought under § 20 of the act of the legislature relating to wills. (Comp. Laws of 1879, ch. 117.) The action was brought for the purpose of contesting the will of John Boyd, deceased. Margaret Delaney, the plaintiff in error, was the plaintiff below, and the city of Salina and Frank C. Miller, executor of the last will and testament of John Boyd, deceased, the defendants in error, were the defendants below. That portion of the will which devises and bequeaths the estate of John Boyd, deceased, reads as follows:
“1st Item: I desire that all the just and necessary expenses of my sickness be paid out of my estate.
“Éd Item: I give and bequeath to my sister, Margaret Delaney, now a resident of the city of Ottumwa, state of Iowa, the sum of one hundred dollars.
“Sd Item: I desire that my one-story brick building situated on the south one-half of lot number ninety-nine, Santa Fé avenue, in the city of Salina, county of Saline, state of Kansas, be sold within two years after my death; and the proceeds of said sale, together with all other moneys or credits that I may be possessed of at the time of my death, I give, devise and bequeath to the city of Salina, for the exclusive purpose of prospecting for and developing a coal mine at or near the city of Salina, Saline county, Kansas, said mine to be known and designated as the John Boyd coal mine; and that the city of Salina shall be joint owner in such coal mine in proportion as this fund bears to the whole amount invested in such mine; that the interest of the city of Salina in such mine shall be forever free from any and all assessments of any nature whatsoever by any company or corporation interested in such mine.
“4-th Item: I appoint Frank C. Miller my sole executor of this my last will and testament.”
The case was tried before the court and a jury. Only special questions were presented to the jury, and not the entire case. Such special questions, with the answers of the jury, are as follows:
“Q,. 1. Were the mind and memory of the testator, John Boyd, sufficiently sound to enable him to know and under*534 stand the business in which he was engaged at the time when he executed his will? A. Yes.
“Q,. 2. "Were the mind and memory of the testator, John Boyd, sufficiently sound to enable him to know and understand, and have a recollection of the property he meant to dispose of, the ties of relationship, the persons who were the objects of his bounty, and the manner in which his property was to be distributed among them? A. Yes.”
The court also made the following finding, to wit:
“The court found the issue in favor of defendants, and that no undue influence was used to induce the testator, John Boyd, to make the will in question, and that the same was not induced by the fraud of anyone, and was in all respects a true and valid last will and testament of the deceased, John Boyd.”
The plaintiff moved for a new trial upon various grounds, but the court overruled the motion, and then rendered judgment upon the foregoing findings, in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff, for costs; and of this judgment the plaintiff now complains.
Numerous questions are presented to this court, and all that for any reason might merit any consideration will be considered and answered as we proceed with this opinion.
The first question presented is sufficiently answered by the following cases : A. T.& S. F. Rld. Co. v. Franklin, 23 Kas. 74; The State v. Miller, 29 id. 43.
We shall pass over the fourth question presented by the plaintiff, for it needs no answer; and such is also true with respect to the greater part of the fifth; and the rest of the fifth is sufficiently answered by the decision in the case of Baughman v. Baughman, 32 Kas. 538.
The sixth and seventh questions presented by the plaintiff are entitled to more consideration. They have reference to the instructions of the court to the jury, given and refused. ■ The instructions asked for by the plaintiff and refused by the court would have been misleading under the facts of this case if they had been given in the form in which they were asked. Also, the exception taken to their refusal was a general exception as to all, and not a particular exception as to any one of them. Besides, we think that all that was proper in the instructions refused, or that should have been given to the jury, was given by the court in its general charge. The gen
“ . . . You will notice the points of time to which your attention is directed, and you are called upon to answer as to unsoundness of mind at the time of the execution of the will, and by ‘execution of the will’ is meant the time of his (the testator’s) forming his judgments and intents as to what to do with his property; the times of directing and having them put upon paper, and the final settling of or determining what they should be; the signing of his name thereto; and the delivery of the instrument as and for his will and testament. The language of the questions you will notice, also, is not as to perfect strength, vigor, or soundness of mind, but soundness and strength as to a certain degree or extent. ... In determining of his actions and conduct during that period, (his last sickness,) it might be proper to say, you should compare these and him there, with himself and his conduct when well. He should here, at the time of making his will, though sick, have sufficient memory to recollect in his mind, without prompting, the elements of the business to be transacted, and to hold them a sufficient length of time to perceive their relations to each other, and to form a judgment thereon.”
The eighth and ninth points presented by the plaintiff do not require any consideration further than to refer to the following cases, to wit: Rich v. Bowker, 25 Kas. 7; Woodman v. Davis, 32 id. 344.
The tenth point made by the plaintiff is that the will is void upon its face. It is claimed that it is not within the power of a city to accept or receive property as a devise, bequest, or legacy, or for any such purpose as that which is designated in the present will. We do not think that this point is sound or well taken. Mr. Dillon, in his work on Municipal Corporations, uses the following language:
“Sec. 436. Municipal and public corporations may be the objects of public and private bounty. This is reasonable and just. They are in law clothed with the power of individuality. They are placed by law under various obligations and duties. Legacies of personal property, devises of real property, and gifts of either species of property, directly to the corporation and for its own use and benefit, intended to and which have the effect to ease them of their obligations or lighten the burdens of their citizens, are valid in law, in the absence of disabling or restraining statutes. Thus, a conveyance of land to a town or other public corporation for benevolent or public purposes, as for a site for a school house, city or town house, and the like, is based upon a sufficient consideration, and such conveyances are liberally construed in support of the object contemplated.
“Sec. 437. Not only may municipal corporations take and hold property in their own right by direct gift, conveyance, or devise, but the cases firmly establish the principle, also,*539 that such corporations, at least in this country, are capable, unless specially restrained, of taking property, real and personal, in trust for purposes germain to the objects of the corporation, or which will promote, aid or assist in carrying out or perfecting those objects. So such corporations may become cestuis que trust within the scope of the purposes for which they are created. And where the trust reposed in the corporation is for the benefit of the corporation, or for a charity within the scope of its duties, it may be compelled, in equity, to administer and execute it. But the legislature may divest a municipal corporation of the power to administer the charitable trusts conferred upon it, and appoint or provide for the appointment of new trustees independent of the corporation, and vest in them the management of such trusts.”
See also Dillon on Municipal Corporations, §§ 438 to 443. Also, in this state, cities of the second class, such as the city of Salina is, have the following among other powers, to wit:
“Second. To purchase and hold real and personal property for the use of the city. Third. To sell and convey any real or personal property owned by the city, and make such order respecting the same as may be conducive to the interests of the city. Fourth. To make all contracts aud do all other acts in relation to the property and affairs of the city necessary to the exercise of its corporate or administrative powers.” (Second-class City Act, § 4.)
Title by purchase includes every mode of acquiring an estate except that of inheritance. It includes the mode of acquiring an estate by means of a devise or will, as well as by other modes of purchase. (2 Bl. Com., ch. 15.) And upon general principles a city may use any lawful means of acquiring what it needs; and the city of Salina, as a city or as a corporation and in its corporate capacity, unquestionably needs coal, as well as the inhabitants, and it may use any lawful means to procure coal. It is also provided by § 1 of the act relating to wills, as follows:
“Section 1. Any person of full age and sound mind and memory, having an interest in real or personal property of any description whatever, may give and devise the same to any person by last will and testament lawfully executed,- sub*540 ject, nevertheless, to the rights of creditors, and to the provisions of this act.”
The plaintiff also claims that the findings of the jury are against the weight of the evidence. We think there is ample evidence to sustain such findings, and also to sustain the finding of the court. The plaintiff also claims that the court erred in ruling out certain testimony offered on the motion for a new trial. Testimony was so ruled out, but we have failed to perceive any error in such ruling. Much of the testimony thus excluded was mere hearsay; some of it was merely cumulative; and some of it was by some of the jurors themselves, who stated in substance that they misunderstood the charge of the court. Of course, all this evidence was incompetent. Besides, the jurors should not have misunderstood the charge of the court, nor have been misled by it, for it was plain enough; and that portion of the charge which it is claimed misled the jurors is sound law, which we suppose has never been questioned. It was: That the question of soundness or unsoundness of mind in the present case, related to the time of the execution of the will.
As a part of the fifteenth point, the plaintiff' claims that the court made its findings without being requested so to do. There is certainly no error in this. The other portions of the fifteenth point have already been considered.
As a sixteenth point, the plaintiff claims that the court erred in rendering any judgment against the plaintiff upon the findings without any general verdict. We perceive no error in this. (Rich v. Bowker, 25 Kas. 7.) The findings of the court and jury, taken together, embraced findings upon all the issues in the case.
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.