88 Cal. 253 | Cal. | 1891
This action was brought by the plaintiff against the defendants as the administrators of the estate of Emma J. Eegli, deceased. The plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment against the defendants in their representative capacity as prayed for, and from that judgment this appeal is taken, on the judgment roll and a bill of exceptions.
The facts set up in the complaint were, in brief, that Elle Ellen, an incompetent person, who sues by his guardian, had been induced by his daughter, Mrs. Eegli,
The grounds which the plaintiff claims that he- relied on to sustain his contention are, that the gift was made by an incompetent person while being unduly influenced.
Upon the trial, when evidence was sought to be- introcuced as to the .fraud and undue influence claimed to have been exercised by Mrs. Begli in her- life-time,, and to have induced the gift, the defendants- objected that such evidence was inadmissible under the pleadings, that no such issue was tendered by the complaint,, and that the only issue tendered was “ that of mental competency to make the alleged gift.” The court agreed with the defendants, and allowed the plaintiff at once to amend the complaint, which was done in a few lines.
Counsel for defendants insisted on being allowed ten days in which to answer, but did not ask for any less number of days. The court ruled them to an immediate answer, which was made at once, and briefly, though sufficiently; and as appears to us, this was easily done, and without any inconvenience. Whereupon they moved for a continuance on an affidavit alleging surprise, and that they must now adopt a different line of defense by reason of the amendment, and stated that they expected to be able to obtain proof upon “ all of said new issues now tendered which is not now at their command,” and that they needed further time, etc. The court refused to grant the continuance, and the trial proceeded, against the objection of the defendants. It is claimed that the court below was guilty of an abuse of discretion in not allowing time to file the answer to the amendment, and in refusing to grant a continuance.
As to the first matter, it is plain that the amendment was easily made and filed as requested, and there certainly was no abuse of discretion in requiring this to be done.
It is further assigned for error that the court erred in refusing to allow the witness Schaffer to testify that Ellen, since the year 1868, and before his stroke of paralysis, was in the habit of keeping large sums of money in his house, and that the witness helped Ellen to carry fifteen thousand dollars there. The purpose of this, we suppose, was to show that when Mrs. Regli, as testified to by Graham, had, in the fall of 1886, upbraided her father with having willed his property to her sister, and that her sister’s husband had come up to the father’s place, after his attack of paralysis in the spring of that year, opened his safe, and carried “down his papers and money, and they had stolen twenty-one thousand dollars,” she -was speaking the truth, and that Joseph Sanders, the husband of her sister, had in his account of the matter sworn falsely.
The evidence on this head sought to be elicited, just alluded to, as well as that the witness had helped “Mr. Ellen to carry fifteen thousand dollars over to his house, in gold coin,” was not admissible, for the reason, if no other, that it does not appear at what definite time it would be shown that such money was kept or carried to Ellen’s house. It might have been, for all that the evidence would have shown to the contrary, many years before the time when Sanders had gone to Ellen’s house
It is further objected that the witness was not allowed to state in contradiction of Sanders’s statement (that he had taken away only about $5,080.50 in coin from Ellen’s safe in 1886, and that he had the money in a hand-satchel and the books and papers in a large satchel), “that Sanders was weighed down by two large satchels, which appeared to weigh seventy-five pounds each.” The witness had just stated, without objection, that “when Sanders went to San Francisco, he had two big valises about eighteen inches in length and a foot in diameter, and they appeared to be very heavy.” This was substantially what it was proposed he should again testify to, with a guess as to the weight of the satchels added. We do not think the action of the court resulted in prejudicial error.
It was proposed, with a view to lay a foundation for Sanders’s impeachment, to ask him whether,in the month of July, 1887, in the presence of various parties, Mr. Ellen had not used language to him indicating that Ellen believed Sanders and his wife had taken the money of the former. We suppose that if the witness had declared, as was evidently expected, that such had not been the case, the defendants would have introduced evidence to show that Ellen was angry with Sanders and wife, and that the cause of this anger was his belief that they had stolen his money.
Admitting that the question had been answered by Sanders in the affirmative, or that if he had not so answered the defendants could have shown, as they proposed, that Ellen was angry at Sanders and wife, and because he believed they had stolen from him, still, the evidence could not have aided the defepdants. There was nothing in it, or the record, which tended to show that Ellen had any belief as against the honesty of Sanders and wife, or anger at them on that account, except
It was already proved that he was angry with them on that account, and further proof of the existence of such anger or bias would not have helped the defendants, unless there was something to show that it had proceeded from some cause independent of Mrs. Eegli’s statements to him. So that if the evidence was admissible, it was immaterial.
Admitting that the question put to Kruger at folio 88 was objectionable, yet the answers of the witness in reference to that and other questions on that line did not tend to support, but rather to negative, the counsel’s theory of the plaintiff’s mental in competency, and no harm was done, nor do we think there was any misleading of the jury by the court allowing the question to be put.
McGlashan, a witness for defendants, who had testified to the check given by Ellen to Mrs. Eegli, was asked this question, “Did he deliver that as his own voluntary act?” and an objection by plaintiff was sustained. Defendants then offered to prove by the-witness that the check was signed and delivered voluntarily, and an objection to the offer was sustained. These rulings are assigned as reversible error. The objections were, that the witness was an attorney for Ellen at that time, and for that reason should not be allowed to testify; and that the testimony sought was mere expression of opinion about a matter which was for the determination of the jury, and was irrelevant, immaterial, etc. We doubt whether the question was admissible as a strict question of law. Certainly neither People v. Sanford, 43 Cal. 29, nor People v. Monteith, 73 Cal. 7, relied on by appellants, is closely in point. In the former case, it was merely held proper for a witness to testify to the condition of the mind of a person at the time he made a dying declaration; that is, “whether it was clear or confused’;
The judgment is affirmed.