132 Iowa 714 | Iowa | 1906
Many errors are assigned as to the action of the trial court, and it will only be possible to discuss those which seem to this court to be of controlling importance.
But there is nothing in the instruction complained of negativing the right of the jury to consider the testimony .of subscribing witnesses or any other nonexpert witnesses that testator was of sound mind. The jury could not have been mislead into supposing that no weight whatever should be given to the testimony of such witnesses- that testator was of sound mind by the instruction that their opinions should be given weight only in so far as the facts and circumstances detailed by them in evidence gave support to and sustained such opinions.
*721 Q. In your cross-examination, in answer to a question propounded by Mr. Harrah, you said that in 1895 your father talked to you all right; what did you mean by that ? A. lie talked about like any one would when you went to visit them. Q. Was this before or after his injury? A. Which ? Q. That you were talking to him ? A. Why, after his injury he would appear all right when he first got well, when he first got up and around, but he never appeared to have a memory like he had, and it always got worse. Q. What I want to know is, when you say he talked all right, was that after he was hurt or before? A. Before he was hurt. Q. I think he was hurt in 1894? A. Tes, sir. Q. when you said in 1895 your father talked with you all right, what did you mean? A. Well, when I would visit him he complained of his arm hurting him and his head hurting him. Q. But you did say on cross-examination that when your father talked with you he talked all right at that time; what did you mean by that? A. I don’t know as I understand. Q. Did you mean by that that he was all right in his mind? A. No, sir. Q. In the talks you testified to in 1895, on cross-examination you may state what, if anything, was said at that time in regard to his mental or physical condition. (Objected to as incompetent, immaterial, and irrelevant, to relate to a conversation with the decedent, both the witness, the evidence, and the question being incompetent under section 4604 of the Code as to personal conversations with witness and decedent.) Court: He may answer, confining it to those conversations in 1895, inquired about in cross-examination. (Proponent excepts.) A. Poorly, very poorly. Q. What was said as to his condition; what did he say as to whether his mind was strong or weak, whether its condition was good or bad? (Same objection. Overruled, and proponent excepts.) A. Bad. Q. Pie said what was bad? (Same objection. Overruled, and proponent excepts.) A. His health. Q. What did he say about his mind, if anything? (Same objection. Overruled, and pro-, ponent excepts.) A. Well, he said his mind was not very good; that he could not recognize people when he would meet them. Q. Now, did he say this about his mind in these talks to which I have called your attention? (Same objection. Overruled, and proponent excepts.) A. Tes, sir; pretty near every time I would see him. Q. I*722 confining yourself to these talks that you had with him in that year 1895 ? (Same objection. Overruled, and proponent excepts.) A. Yes, sir; always. Q. You may state whether or not he complained of any pain in his head, and, if so, what he said, in any of these talks. (Same objection.) Court: In any of these talks in 1895, while walking around Kellogg. (Proponent excepts.) A. He always complained of the back of his head hurting him, and his shoulder and his arm. (Proponent moves to strike out the answer for the same reasons stated in the objection. Overruled, and proponent excepts.) Q. In these talks in 1895, what else, if anything, did he say in regard to his property, and the disposition he was going to make of it, if anything ? (Same objection, and leading.) Court: He may answer what was said in any of these talks, walking around Kellogg, in 1895, and to which he testified in cross-examination. (Proponent excepts.) A. Well; he always said Hr. Harr ah was doing his business for him and handling his property and money.
It is plain that the redirect examination related to the conversations of witness with his father, and declarations of his father to him, to which reference was made in the cross-examination, and it was therefore proper. Fox v. Barrett’s Estate, 117 Mich. 162, (75 N. W. 440); Lange v. Klatt, 135 Mich., 262, (97 N. W. 708). It is to be noticed that the effect of the cross-examination was to secure from the witness a statement that he had conversations with his father, and that in those conversations his father “ talked all right.” ' Now, it was certainly competent for the purpose of overcoming the effect of this evidence, if possible, to have the witness relate just what his father said which led him to testify on cross-examination that the conversation of his father was such as to indicate a sound mind; and the court strictly limited the redirect examination to the very matters testified about in cross-examination. There was no error in the ruling.
There was sufficient evidence of unsoundness of mind at the time of the execution of the will to sustain the verdict of the jury, and, finding no errors in the rulings as to introduction of evidence, or in the submission of the case to the jury, or in the instructions given on the subject of testator’s soundness of mind, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.