292 S.W. 1005 | Ark. | 1927
This was a proceeding to contest a will Georgia A. Mitchell, a colored woman, died in Miller County, Arkansas, in 1925, at the age of fifty-two years. Her will was offered for probate by her executor, and was contested by her sister, Mollie Miller. It was executed on the 27th day of August, 1923, and W. C. Howell was appointed executor. After giving several small legacies to various persons, she left the residue of her estate to W. C. Howell the probate court found the issues in favor of the execution, and ordered the will admitted to probate. Mollie Miller gave notice of her intention to *529 appeal from the order of the probate court admitting the will to probate, and duly filed her affidavit for appeal.
The record shows that, upon a trial anew in the circuit court, a verdict was returned in favor of the contestant, Mollie Miller. The judgment of the circuit court, after reciting this fact, continues as follows: "It is therefore ordered and adjudged by the court that the will of Georgia A. Miller, deceased, be and the same is hereby annulled, set aside, canceled, and forever held for naught, and the decree of the probate court of Miller County, Arkansas, is hereby reversed and set aside, and the letters testamentary issued to the said W. C. Howell are set aside and held for naught, and the order and judgment of the county court appealed from is vacated and set aside and held for naught." The executor was duly prosecuted an appeal to this court.
Counsel for appellant invoke the general rule laid down in Walker v. Noll,
It is well settled in this State that, where a judgment or decree contains a recital of the facts, this court can review the judgment for errors manifest upon the face of the record. Strode v. Holland,
This brings us to a consideration of the case on the merits. At the outset it may be stated that it is well settled in this State that, if a testator has sufficient mental capacity to understand the conditions and extent of his property, his relations to the persons who are entitled to be considered as objects of his bounty, and the scope and bearing of the provisions of his wife, without prompting, then he has sufficient mental capacity to make a will, notwithstanding great bodily weakness from sickness, or extreme distress of mind. Tobin v. Jenkins,
It is also inferable from these cases, and expressly decided in Tobin v. Jenkins,
This brings us to a consideration of the evidence in the case as applied to these well-settled principles of law. It will be impossible, within reasonable limits, to set forth and discuss in detail the evidence introduced at the trial. We shall therefore state our conclusions upon the evidence and confine our discussion to the more salient features of the evidence which we think sustain our holding. We recognize that the right of a person to dispose of his property by will is a property right which is guaranteed by law, yet, as pointed out in the cases above cited, in a will contest the finding of the jury cannot be disturbed on appeal if there is any substantial evidence to support it.
Substantial evidence tending to show lack of testamentary capacity is sufficient to carry the case to the jury, however strongly it may be controversy. In this view of the matter, it will not be necessary to abstract the evidence for the proponent of the will. It will suffice to state that the evidence for the appellant shows that the testator, although weak in body, had a mind which was unimpaired and was stronger than most women in her condition in life. We must test the verdict, however, upon the evidence for the contestant viewed in the light most favorable to her. It is extremely difficult to adopt an absolute or fixed rule as to what will constitute mental capacity to make a will in all cases. Each case must depend a large degree upon its own peculiar facts. Circumstances, nervous force and physical organization of different persons affect their mental powers in varying degrees. Hence great latitude is allowed in the introduction of testimony. *532
The testator, at the time of her death, was fifty-two years of age. Her family history in regard to insanity is bad. Her mother and younger sister committed suicide; one cousin had died in an insane asylum, and another had left home, and was found drowned. The testator had been in ill health since her girlhood. She had had several operations, and had passed several stones from her kidneys. She had had a tumor in her womb, tuberculosis of the lungs, and leakage of the heart. She had had "spells" all her life, and during them she would be out of her head; and the older she got the more forgetful she became, and, in the opinion of witnesses who had known her all her life, or for many years, she was mentally unbalanced and incapable mentally of making a will Mollie Miller had inherited a part of her mother's estate and had deeded it to her sister when her husband was in trouble, for the purpose of helping them. She never got anything for doing this. Great affection existed between the sister's at the time the testatrix's husband died. Some time after the death of her husband Georgia Mitchell became infatuated with W. C. Howell, a negro preacher, and became associated with him in business. The will in question was executed on the 27th day of August, 1923. Mollie Miller visited the testatrix in a sanitarium during that month. The testatrix told her sister there was a little bird coming to her window, and that it came from the cemetery and was coming after her. She begged Mollie Miller to take care of her when she was dismissed from the sanitarium. After her husband's death the testatrix had been in the habit of passing much time at his grave. At one time, when she was ill, she asked them to shoo the chickens from the foot of her bed. She had various hallucinations of that sort. According to the testimony of Mollie Miller and other persons who were associated with the testatrix closely, she had no reason to disinherit Mollie Miller, and never intended to do so. Her mind had become so clouded, from bodily illness during her whole life and from distress at her husband's death, in her weakened condition, that she was not capable *533 mentally of making a will. It was the opinion of several persons who had known her all her life that, when she had the spells which she had been accustomed to having since her girlhood, she was mentally unbalanced. They told various things which she said and did while in this condition which tended to show that she did not know what she was doing. The jury might have inferred from the testimony of Mollie Miller that the will was executed during one of these spells and that she did not appreciate what she was doing, and that her mental condition was such that she was not capable of making a will in the application of the principles of law to the facts as presented in the record. When the evidence is viewed in its entirety and in the light most favorable to appellee, it cannot be said that it is not legally sufficient to support the verdict.
The evidence introduced and the instructions given by the court to the jury herein conformity to the rules of law announced above. The case was fairly submitted to the jury upon competent evidence, and, under our settled rules of practice, we are not at liberty to disturb the verdict of the jury, even though we might think it contrary to the weight of the evidence.
It follows that the judgment will be affirmed.