187 Ga. 268 | Ga. | 1938
This case arose out of a contest of the last will and testament of Mrs. Mary Frances Smith, late of Butts County, Georgia. The caveators attacked the instrument offered for probate, contending that at the time of the execution of the will the testatrix was afflicted with monomania, and was also subjected to the "undue influence of her daughter, a principal legatee under the will. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the propounder. The caveators’ motion for new trial was overruled, and they excepted.
While no reference is made in the brief of plaintiffs in error to the' general grounds of the original motion for a new trial, upon ■consideration there is no merit in these grounds. The verdict is amply supported by the evidence. Therefore we shall deal with the assignments of error in the amendment to the motion.
2. Likewise there is no merit in the position taken by the plain
3. Error is assigned on the following charge of the court:' “I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, that the rule as to the burden' of proof is what is known as preponderance of evidence. That is) if the execution of the will has been proven to your satisfaction) then, the burden being shifted to the caveators, they must sustain) as I have already stated, the grounds of their caveat or'objections to your satisfaction by a preponderance of evidence.” ' The plaintiffs in error contend that this charge limited the burden which'the law places upon the propoundér of the will; for that the court "failed to tell the jury in the same sentence that the burden wás on-the
4. Complaint is made of the following language contained in the charge of the court: “That is the right which the law gives to her citizens.” The charge was given in the following connection: '“I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, that a will is the legal declaration of a person’s intention as to the disposition of his property after his death. That is the right which the law gives to her citizens.” It is contended that this charge was error, for the reason that it in effect told the jury that the law gave to every citizen the right to make a will, irrespective of whether they possessed sufficient capacity or not, or whether the will is or not executed under undue influence or other circumstances frowned on by the law. We can not concur in this viewpoint. The statement by the judge'that every citizen has the right to make a will is a correct statement of the law. While it is true that the law provides that absence of testamentary capacity will invalidate a will, and the law also provides that where the'will of one wielding undue influence or practicing fraud or other act upon the testator is substituted for the will of the testator himself, the testament will likewise be invalidated, yet neither of these rules is directed to the abridgment of the right of the citizen to make a will. 'The testamentary-capacity rule does not abridge this right, but simply recognizes the inability of one who comes within the operation of the rule to exercise the right which he unquestionably has. The undue-
5. Complaint is made of the following charge of the court: “I charge you that the presumption is always in favor of a mental capacity to make a will.” Elsewhere in the charge the jury was instructed that the burden was on the propounder to establish the factum of the will, that it was freely and voluntarily made, and that the testatrix apparently had sufficient mental capacity to make a will, as a prerequisite to the making out by the propounder of a prima facie case. We see no less reason to presume sane action in the execution of a will than in other instances of human relations and conduct. Indeed, it would seem inconsistent with the sanctity with which our law has always treated the last testament of a deceased person, and inconsistent with the zeal with which the law strives to carry out these sacred mandates to the letter, to say that the maker of the will is not even clothed with a presumption of testamentary capacity in his favor. The policy of the law is to enforce the terms of a will, not to thwart the testator’s intention or to make difficult the expression by him of that intention. Of course, a presumption favoring testamentary capacity is necessarily a rebuttable presumption, and the capacity of the testator is always a proper subject of inquiry. The law, in an abundance of caution, provides that the propounder, upon offering .the will for probate, shall produce to the court the witnesses to its execution, to prove the factum of the will, that it was freely and voluntarily made, and also apparent testamentary capacity. This provision of the law is in no wise repugnant to a presumption in favor of testamentary capacity. The law, in its zealousness always to safeguard the rights of a deceased testator, although presuming testamentary capacity, deems it wise not to rely solely upon that presumption, but to make inquiry into the immediate circumstances of the execution of the will from those who were present at the time. While the presumption in favor of testamentary capacity exists, the presumption alone is not sufficient to make out for the propounder a prima facie case. As the learned judge charged the jury, the burden is on the 'propounder to show the factum of the will, free and volun
6. The next ground complains of the following charge: “Monomania is a diseased condition of the mind and is to be distinguished from error or bad judgment. It can be caused from previous illness and from the effects of injury or other conditions of the mind.” The plaintiffs in error complain that'this language does not constitute a correct definition of monomania, and that the trial court should have given the definition of monomania contained in the caveat. We see no wrong in the language of the trial court. Il a more comprehensive definition were desired, there should have been a written request therefor. In fact this ground of the motion is incomplete, in that it does not set forth the definition which the court should have given in charge. Even if error had been committed, under the state of the record it would have been harmless, the allegation that the testatrix was afflicted with monomania being unsupported by the evidence.
7. Complaint is made because the court charged as follows: “If
8. The eighth and ninth grounds will be treated together. A subscribing witness to the will was permitted to testify that the testatrix was of sound and disposing mind and memory at the time, over the objection that such testimony was a conclusion of the witness. If it be true that no facts were given by the witness upon which to base a conclusion, objection was not made on this ground. Testimony as to mental status is necessarily opinionative, and the law requires that before a will can be probated the subscribing witnesses shall be inquired of as to apparent capacity or non-capacity. The fact that a witness witnesses a will qualifies him to give his opinion on that subject. Complaint is also made that the judge expressed an opinion when he ruled upon this objection by stating, “The law presumes that she was of sound mind.” While we doubt the propriety of this statement, where the capacity of the testatrix was being challenged by the caveat, yet the statement was made during a colloquy between the court and counsel, and the record does not reveal that any motion to declare a mistrial was urged at the time of the statement. Under our view previously stated, that the evidence does not make an issue on the question of testamentary capacity, any error involved in the statement would be harmless.
While we have dealt with the special exceptions taken to the charge of the court, a careful examination of the evidence in this case convinces us that the verdict was demanded; and consequently, even if there had been any inaccuracies in the charge, a reversal of the verdict and judgment rendered would not be authorized. The judge did not err in overruling the motion for new trial. :
Judgment affirmed.