29 Ala. 92 | Ala. | 1856
In Gilbert v. Gilbert, 22 Ala. 529, this court held the proponent of a will an incompetent witness to sustain its validity, because of his liability for costs. That was a proceeding before the Code went into operation, and lienee not governed by its provisions.
Should a different rule prevail under the Code? Section 1634 declares, that where a will is contested, before the probate thereof, “an issue must be made up, under the direction of the court, between the person making the application, as plaintiff, and the person contesting the validity of the will, as defendant.” Section 1643 is in the following language : “In all matters in relation to the evidence, inode of proceeding, investigation and determination of such contest, not specially provided for by this article, the court must proceed and be governed by the same rules and regulations as courts of law.” Section 1649 is in these words: “In all cases contesting the validity of a will, under any of the preceding sections of this article, the costs must be paid by the party contesting, if he fails; otherwise, it must be paid by the plaintiff, or out of the estate, or in such proportions by the plaintiff or the estate as the court may direct.” Sections 1636, 1640, and 1644, designate the proponent and contestant as “ the parties.”
But the Code, section 2302, declares that interest in the event of the suit, or liability for costs, does not render a witness incompetent, “unless the verdict and judgment would be evidence for him in another suit.” This, perhaps, would dispose of the objection to the competency of the witness, if the codifiers had stopped here. The same section, however, enacts, that its provisions shall not bo “ so construed as to authorize persons or parties to be witnesses, further than is authorized by the other provisions of the Code.”
1. The probate of a will, under any circumstances, is a proceeding in rem. -It operates upon the thing itself. It
2. “ All the orders and entries made, in the regular progress of a cause, during term time, must be received as emanating from the court.” — Swift v. Stebbins & Hunter, 4 Stew. & Por. 447; Weir v. Hoss, 6 Ala. 881. Records import absolute verity, and all parties to them are estopped from disputing their correctness. See a collection of the authorities on this question, in a note to the Duchess of Kingston’s case, supra, side page 437-8. The record in this case recites, that Robert D. James and Edmund Deslonde, the executors named, propounded the will for probate on 15th of October, 1855. On the 12th of November, 1855, the contestants filed their objections, five in number, to the probate of the will; and on the same day, Edmund A. Deslonde took issue on the allegations. On the same day, 12th of November, the record recites, “And now, on this dajr, came Edmund Deslonde and Robert D. James, who are named as executors in said instrument, in person, and by attorney,” &o. An order was that day made, setting a day for the trial, and directing the sheriff to summon a jury. The final judgment describes the parties as “Edmund A. Deslonde and Robert D. James, proponents of the will of John Darrington, deceased, plaintiffs, v. John S. Carter, Eliza C. Carter, Robert Darrington, contestants, defendants;” and the judgment is rendered against Deslonde and James for costs. These recitals, under the rules above laid down, are conclusive to show that Robert D. James was a joint proponent
The only portions of the record which, in the least, conflict with this view, are the following: 1st, the joining issue by Deslonde alone, on the 12th November, as above stated; 2d, a paper copied into the record, and which was filed December 3d, 1855, propounding the will in the name of Edmund A. Deslonde alone; 3d, a renunciation by Robert D. James of the office of executor, dated December 17th, 1855 ; and, lastly, a recital in the bill of exceptions, that “Deslonde then offered to prove that the said Robert D. James had never authorized any one to use his name as one of the proponents of the will, and the issue had been made up as appears from the papers in the cause, although the entry on the minutes, which was made when the will was propounded and filed, showed that the same was propounded by both said James and said Deslonde. The said Deslonde also offered to deposit with the court a sum of money to pay the costs of this suit or con-testation, more than sufficient to pay and cover all costs that can accrue.” We will dispose of them in the order in which they are stated above.
3. The joining issue on the objections filed against the probate of the will, was, under our practice, unnecessary. It did not, and could not, work a change of the parties to the record, nor release James from his duties and liabilities as joint proponent of the will with Deslonde.
4. Our statutes do not require papers of this kind to be propounded in writing. Still it would be regular to do so, and many good reasons might be offered in favor of such practice. But in this case, the will had been propounded orally, and a day set for the trial, &c. The subsequent attempt, made December 3d, by Deslonde alone, to propound the will in writing, did not annul or vary the previous proceedings. No action appears to have been taken on the paper of December 3d; and, so far as we can discover, it is no part of the record.
5. The renunciation of Mr. James came too late. He was a party to the proceedings, and had no authority to withdraw from them at that stage. — See Gilbert v. Gilbert, supra; Code, §§ 1634,1649; Sears v. Dillingham, 12 Mass. 358. We
6. The orders and entries in this case must be received as emanating from the court. The judge who made the orders and entries, must be presumed to have known the facts, and to have spread them correctly on the record. To permit them to be inquired into, or assailed by testimony, in the court in which they have transpired, would lead to inextricable confusion. — Price v. Br. Bank, 11 Ala. 318. The testimony offered with this object, was correctly rejected. Nor is it by any means certain that the fact proposed to be proved would vary the rights of the parties. Mr. James may never have “authorized any one to use his name as one of the proponents of the will,” and yet by his silent acquiescence, or in various other ways, he may have fully ratified such use. Neither could a deposit of money, to cover costs, render Mr. James a competent witness — Code, §§ 2302, 1643-, Stone v. Bibb, 2 Ala. 100.
1. We have examined the cases in the English ecclesiastical reports, referred to on brief of appellants. They certainly hold that, in that court, a proponent of a will may, by an order of court, be discharged, and used as a witness to establish the will. They do not say it would be error in the primary court to refuse such order. But, be this as it may, we feel compelled to decide that, under the provisions of the Code copied in this opinion, an executor, who is shown by the record to be a proponent of a will, can not, after issue joined contesting the same, demand, as a matter of right, that he shall be discharged, that he may testify as a witness. We prefer, in this case, to extend the principle no fui'ther.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment of the probate court is affirmed.