32 Fla. 18 | Fla. | 1893
On the 9th clay of October, A. D. 1885, ITays, the appellant, presented to the county judge of Duval county a writing purporting to be the last will and testament of Johann Christian Lehmann, accompanied with a petition setting up the fact that said writing was executed by Lehmann as his last will and testament, and praying that the same be probated as such. The writing claimed to be Lehmann’s will and presented to the county judge, purports to devise to the proponent, Hays, real estate situated in Duval county, Florida, and in Franklin county, Ohio, and also all the bank account of Lehmann with the Florida Savings Bank and Real Estate Exchange, in the city of Jacksonville. This writing is signed by Johann Christian Lehmann, and attested by John H. Brown and Oeorge W. Wetmore, and the attestation is that said ‘‘instrument was at the date thereof signed, sealed and published, and declared by the said Johann Christian Lehmann as and for his last will and testament in presence of us, who, at his request, and m his presence, and in the presence of each other, have subscribed our names as witnesses.” Brown and Wetmore made oath before the county judge that Lehmann on the 18th day of September, 1885, in their presence, subscribed said instrument as his last will and testament, and that affiants at the request of Lehman, and in his presence, and in the presence of each other, subscribed their names as witnesses. Also that at the time of subscribing his name to said instrument Lehmann was over twenty-one years old, and was of sound mind. Lehmann died on
After the presentation of the alleged will to the county judge for probate, and without any action thereon by him, A. W. Owens presented a petition in the county court of Duval county addressed to the judge thereof, and therein alleged that Lehman died in Duval county, Florida, on the 19th day of September, A. D. 1885, and, as petitioner was informed and believes, without leaving any heirs at law. The proceedings on the part of Hays in presenting to the county judge the instrument of writing as the will of Lehmann, with the request that it be probated, are set out in the petition; and further, that to the best of petitioner’s knowledge, information and belief, said Lehmann at the time of the making of said instrument was non compos mentis, and also that said instrument purporting to be his last will and testament was not signed by him, but by some one else without his request or consent. It is also alleged that if said instrument for any reason be invalid, the property of Lehmann, both real and personal, will escheat to the State of Florida, and that petitioner is the attorney and representative of the State in the county of Duval.
The prayer of the petition is, that the court will inquire into the premises, as provided by law, and will declare said instrument null and void, and appoint an administrator to take charge of and administer the goods and chattels of said Lehmann, deceased.
This petition was presented on the 16th day of October, A. D. 1885, and on the 18th of March, 1886, an order was made by the county judge, as it is recited, by agreement of counsel, that the contest in the mat
The record discloses the testimony of several witnesses taken before the county judge in reference to the execution of the alleged will by Lehmann, and also the decision of said judge that the said instrment was not the last will and testament of said decedent and should not be allowed to probate in said court. An appeal was taken from this decision to the Circuit Court for Duval county, and upon argument there the circuit judge decided that there was no error in the record of the county court, and • its judgment was affirmed. The record is now before us on appeal from the decision of the Circuit Court.
It is testified that four persons, Hays, the sole beneficiary in the will, Brown and Wetmore, the subscribing witnesses, and Clem Johnson, were present when it Mas executed, and that Lehmann asked Johnson to sign also as a witness, but he was told that two would do. The judge refers in his opinion to the fact that the will was signed by only two witnesses. At the time of the execution of the instrument in question wills devising real estate were required by statute to be attested and subscribed by three or more witnesses, or else they were void and of no effect. McClellan’s Digest, page 895, sec. 1. This means they were void and of no effect as devises of* real estate. The statute did not undertake to prescribe the mode of executing wills in reference to the disposition of personal property, further than to regulate the revocation of such wills when written, and the establishment of nuncupative wills. In other respects the common law rule controlled the execution of wills concerning personal property, and according to this, such wills when written required no witness
Hays, Brown, Wetmore, and Johnson testified for proponent that they were present when the instrument was executed, and saw Lehmann sign the same as his will in their presence, and that Brown and Wetmore, at his request, iu his presence and in the presence of each other, signed it as witnesses. Hays is named as executor of the will, and is sole beneficiary therein.' At the time of Lehmann’s death, he was occupying a
So far we have considered the case as it seems by the record to have been presented in the county court as a contest of the proposed will on the caveat filed by the State attorney, alleging a failure of heirs on the part of Lehmann, the alleged testator. In the opinion rendered by the county judge rejecting the will for probate it is stated: “It is a well-established principle of law that no one but an heir of the realty or entitled to distribution, has a right to contest the probate of a will or a devise of the realty, and it is contended by counsel for petition that A. W. Owens, Esq., representing the State of Florida, has no right to appear in opposition to the application for probate of the alleged will; but there is evidence before this court that said Lehmann left heirs surviving him, and A. W. Owens is now recognized by the court as counsel and proctor for and in behalf of the heirs and legal representatives of said Lehmann.” In the bond filed by the appellant in the appeal from the county court to the Circuit Court, Frederick Ernst and several others are named as obligees, and it is therein recited that they contested the probate of said will. And in the bond filed on appeal to this court the same parties are mentioned as obligees, and it is also recited that they were contestants of said will. There is nothing in the record except what is recited in the opinion of the county judge above, and . the recitals in the appeal bonds, to show that Lehmann left any heirs, or that any contest of the will was made in their behalf in the county court' Upon the filing of the cayeat on the part of the State attorney, the record recites that upon agreement of counsel, the contest of the will of Lehmann was fixed for hearing on a certain day. Testimony was taken,
It is said in Meyer vs. Fogg, 7 Fla., 292, that the only persons competent to contest the will then under consideration were the heirs of the realty or distributees entitled to the personalty, and there should be allegation and proof of such fact. The contestants of the will in that case failing to show such a status, were not entitled to a standing in court. The testator left heirs in that case. The county judge had jurisdiction of the contests oyer the probate of wills, and the only statutory regulation as to the practice before him in such matters at the time of the decision in the case before us is that in Chapter 1627, acts of 1868. Lavey vs. Doig, 25 Fla., 611; 6 South. Rep., 259. Chapter 3886, acts of 1889, makes special provision for the contests of the probate of wills and this act is declared to be applicable to wills of persons who had died prior to its passage, and which had not been admitted to probate, as well as to wills of persons who' should die after its passage, but the decision in this, case was made before this act went into effect. •
The act of 1868, supra, provides that the pleadings in the county court, sitting as a court of probate, shall be in writing, and shall be: 1st. The complaint by petition; and 2nd., the answer or demurrer; and that upon filing the answer the cause shall be at issue. Considering an issue by agreement of parties to have been made upon the petition of Hays to have the will probated, and the caveat of the State Attorney, the case presented in the county court was between them, and confined strictly' to the record there is nothing to show that the heirs of Lehmann, if he left any, were
Inasmuch as the case must be reversed, it is deemed proper to direct that upon the return of the mandate of this court, an issue be properly made on the petition of the heirs of Lehmann, if he left any, and they desire to contest the said will, and that due proceedings he had thereon as provided by law.