165 Mass. 385 | Mass. | 1896
1. It was necessary, according to our practice, for the executors to call all the attesting witnesses, they being accessible. Chase v. Lincoln, 3 Mass. 236. Sears v. Dillingham, 12 Mass. 358, 362. But there is no rule of law which requires them all to be examined at the outset. The order in which witnesses shall be called is a matter of discretion with the court. Cushing v. Billings, 2 Cush. 158. Commonwealth v. Moulton, 4 Gray, 39. Liverpool Wharf v. Prescott, 4 Allen, 22. Commonwealth v. Dam, 107 Mass. 210. All of the attesting witnesses were called by the executors before closing their case in chief.
The contestants say in their brief that the executors were allowed to read the will to the jury after the testimony of only one attesting witness. No such fact appears in the bill of exceptions. If it were true, no objection to this course was then pressed. The other two witnesses were then engaged in court elsewhere, and it was understood that they would be called afterwards. If under these circumstances the will was read to the jury without objection, and the trial proceeded, the subsequent introduction of the other two attesting witnesses gave to the contestants all that they were entitled to have. The bill of exceptions states that, two days after the first.attesting witness had been called, and while the executors were engaged in putting in their case in chief, the contestants objected to their
The bill of exceptions states that the executors agreed that the contestants should have the same benefit of this objection, which was taken on the third day of the trial, that they would have had if they had made it at the conclusion of the testimony of the first attesting witness. The counsel for the contestants argues from this that he now has an exception to the reading of the will to the jury at the time it was read, although it was actually read without exception or objection. We can give no such effect to such an agreement of counsel.
2. The court limited the introduction of evidence tending to show specific acts of unsoundness of mind on the part of the testator to a period from about eight years before the date of the will to about two and a half years after its date. This was within the power of the court to do, and its power in this respect was not taken away by the fact that expert witnesses for the contestants thought a better judgment as to the testator’s soundness of mind could be formed if these limits were extended. It has been declared heretofore that such testimony must be sufficiently near in point of time to aid in determining the testator’s condition at the time of making the will, and that this is a matter for the court to decide. White v. Graves, 107 Mass. 325. Shailer v. Bumstead, 99 Mass. 112, 130. Commonwealth v. Pomeroy, 117 Mass. 143, 148. Lane v. Moore, 151 Mass. 87, 90. Dumangue v. Daniels, 154 Mass. 483, 486. In the present case, the trial was a long one, the period fixed appears to have been sufficiently liberal, and but for the limitation put upon the introduction of evidence the trial might have consumed an unreasonable length of time. No exception can be sustained to the exclusion of the testimony relating to times outside of the limits so fixed.
3. It was within the discretion of the court to allow the questions put in cross-examination of the expert witness called by the contestants. A long hypothetical question had been pub to him, in direct examination, and he had answered it. Such an answer relates to the question which had been put, and assumes the correctness of all the facts therein enumerated. If
4. The only remaining question arises on the exclusion of the testimony of the witness Greenhood, offered for the purpose of affecting the credibility or impairing the weight of the testimony of the executor’s witness, Colburn. If this offered testimony was admissible at all, which we do not decide, the proper time to put it in was when the contestants were putting in their case in chief. It was not necessary to ask Colburn first whether he had ever made such a statement to Greenhood. The question put in cross-examination to Colburn, when he was called in rebuttal, was properly excluded at the outset. It came too late. But rather than have an exception saved to its exclusion, the executors, having some reason also to think his answer would not be unfavorable, withdrew their objection. The contestants accordingly put the question, and got an answer. This did not make it necessary for the court to prolong the case by admitting evidence to meet and contradict his answer. The exclusion of any further testimony on that subject at that stage of the trial was w'ithin the discretion of the judge.
Colburn testified that he had seen the testator frequently, and talked with him about some of the legatees in the will; and that down through 1889 he never saw anything in him that showed a lack of sense, or coherence, or memory, and that he never saw any exhibition of high temper on his part. He also testified to other things tending to show soundness of mind on the part of the testator. After the appellees had put in their
“ Q- Whether or not you have ever said to Mr. Greenhood that Joseph Colburn had been crazy for ten years or thereabouts ? A. I never remember of making any such statement.
“ Q. Nothing of the kind ? A. Nothing of the kind.” The appellees then recalled Greenhood and asked him the following question:
“ Q- At some time about the year 1890 or 1891, when you had some conference with Mr. Howard Colburn in relation to Joseph Colburn, did he say to you substantially this,—that for ten years, or many years, Joseph Colburn had been off or crazy?”
On objection by the appellants, the judge excluded the question ; and the appellees excepted.