44 So. 605 | Ala. | 1906
Lead Opinion
This appeal is prosecuted from a decree of the probate court in a proceeding for the probate of a will. There are numerous assignments of-error on the record, all of which relate to rulings of the court on the admission and rejection of evidence, except the last five, which relate to given and refused charges. It would prolong this opinion to an undue length, and serve no good purpose, to treat numerous assignments in detail, since the questions raised, relatively speaking, are few, and may be disposed of in a general wav by a statement of the rules of evidence and principles of law which we consider applicable.
On the question .of the comparison of handwriting, where the genuineness of a writing is in issue, the decisions of the courts are by no means in harmony. In some jurisdictions the question has been the subject
The witness Blakey on his direct examination was permitted to state his opinion as to the genuineness of the signature to the proposed will. This witness testified, not as an expert, but from a knowledge of the handwriting from having seen the testator write. He testified on cross-examination he had seen the testator sign his name to the prior will, and had seen him sign checks on a bank, one check given to witness. The witness stated as Ids opinion that the signature to the will proposed for probate was different from the signature to the prior will that was admitted to be genuine, and i'hat it was not the signature of the testator. The witness stated that there was a difference between the signature to the two wills in the making of the “R”; that in the will offered for probate the “tail” of the “R” came down like a “y,” while in the prior genuine will such was not the case. On the cross-examination
The. question of fraud being involved in the execution of the will, it was competent to show that all of the property that the deceased owned, and devised and bequeathed by him, was received by him from his wife, who was the mother of the proponent of the disputed will, and also the friendly relations that existed between the deceased and the proponent, who was his stepdaughter. These were circumstances proper for consideration by the jury in determining the question of the genuineness of the disputed will. — Glover v. Hayden, 4 Cush. (Mass.) 580; Patterson v. Patterson, 6 Serg. & R. (Pa.) 55.
A trial court will not be reversed on its ruling in sustaining an objection to evidence offered in rebuttal, which might have been introduced originally by the
On the rules above stated, we fail to see that the. trial court has committed any reversible error in its rulings on the evidence, except in the one instance pointed out above. Under the evidence in this case, the written charges requested by the proponent were properly refused, and there was no error in the giving of the written charge requested by the contestant.
For the error pointed out, the decree appealed from will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Rehearing
(On Rehearing.) — The other members of the court are of the opinion that the ruling of trial court in refusing to permit the cross-examination of the witness Blakey by the proponent, appellant here, as pointed out in the. former opinion, was free from error, and that the application for rehearing should be granted, and the former judgment of reversal set aside, and a judgment now be entered affirming the judgment of the probate court. The writer dissents from this con
It was not permissible to introduce the checks in evidence for the reason stated in my former opinion; but, as there stated, the cross-examination testing the value of the witness’ opinion did not violate the rule laid down against introducing in evidence extraneous papers for the purpose of instituting a comparison of handwriting. The trial court ruled correctly in not allowing the checks to be introduced in evidence, but the cross-examination was none the less permissible for the reasons above stated.
Rehearing granted, judgment of reversal set aside, and judgment of affirmance entered.