205 N.W. 770 | Iowa | 1925
I. The hearing on the probate of the will of Charles P. Mott was set for the 18th of September, 1922. The contestants, being the sole heirs at law of the said Charles P. Mott, filed objection and contest in the probate of the will, and state two grounds therefor: the first of which is that Charles P. Mott was not of sound and disposing mind; and second, that said will was procured by fraud, duress, and undue influence of Laura E. Campbell and others.
On the trial of the case, the court withdrew from the consideration of the jury the question of undue influence, and submitted to it the question of mental incompetency. The jury's verdict sustained the will.
One of the principal contentions is that it was error for the court to withdraw from the consideration of the jury the issue of undue influence.
Influence, to be undue, within the meaning of the law, must be such as to substitute the will of the person exercising the influence for that of the testator, thereby making the writing express, not the purpose and intent of the 1. WILLS: testator, but that of the person exercising the undue undue influence. It must be equivalent to moral influence: coercion, must operate at the very time the will free is made, and must dominate and control the agency making of it. Henderson v. Jackson, 138 Iowa destroyed. 326; Parker v. Lambertz,
Undue influence is not established by proof of opportunity to exercise it. Importunity, request, and persuasion that do not go to the point of controlling the will of the testator are not enough, nor is it established by proof of opportunity and disposition so to do. Zinkula v. Zinkula,
As heretofore stated, the contestants bottomed their contest on two grounds: namely, mental incapacity and undue influence. They did not, in their pleadings, deny the publication and due execution of the will. The burden was on the 2. WILLS: proponents to produce sufficient testimony to execution: satisfy the court thereof, which was done in the waiver of instant case; but appellants seek to raise right to numerous questions as to the admissibility and dispute. sufficiency of the testimony offered for that purpose. This they were not in a position to do, as that was a question wholly for the court in the first instance, and, as they did not make the execution of the will a matter of contest in their pleadings, it does not lie with them to question now the admissibility or sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the admission of the will to probate.
II. It is sought to bring to the attention of the court alleged errors on three propositions: first, as to the 3. APPEAL AND evidence excluded; second, as to evidence ERROR: admitted over objection; and third, as to assignments rulings on objections to evidence. Under these of error: three different heads, some twenty errors are fatally assigned, of which the following is typical: indefinite assignment.
"The court erred in excluding the evidence of fraud and undue influence on the testator, as shown by the court's rulings hereinafter designated. (Abstract p. 26, lines 25 and 32; p. 27, lines 3 and 29; p. 28, lines 11 and 26; p. 30, lines 8, 17 and 18 and 27; p. 31, lines 6, 13 and 22; p. 36, lines 8 and 10; 24 to 26; p. 37, lines 9 and 10; 20, 24, 26 and 32; p. 38, lines 4, 10, and 29; p. 109, line 34; p. 140, lines 20 and 21; p. 141, line 5; p. 143, lines 8 to 12, that portion thereof as bears on the restriction; p. 143, line 29)." *951
"The court erred in giving Instructions (1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13, pp. 232, 233 and 234; pp. 235 to 240.)"
Under some of these errors, no less than forty different places are cited in the abstract. To this method of pointing out errors we cannot submit. Our rules require the appellant to state, in separate numbered propositions, each error relied upon, with a brief and concise statement of the record presenting the alleged errors and exceptions. We have repeatedly called the attention of counsel to this rule, and the persistent infractions thereof have become so numerous that we feel that we must enforce the rule. In this case, for instance, with some twenty assignments of error of this character, and anywhere from ten to forty different references made under each assignment, it is a hopeless task to attempt to follow these matters when thus assigned. We refuse so to do, and for that reason no further attention is given to these assignments of error. See Reynolds v. Henry,
We gather from the argument of counsel that most of the complaint that he makes as to testimony arises from testimony of nonexperts tendered on each side of the case. The rule in relation to nonexpert testimony is too well 4. WILLS: settled to be the subject of debate. A nonexpert testamentary witness cannot give an opinion that the decedent capacity: was insane without first reciting a set of facts nonexpert which would tend to raise a fair inference of opinion. insanity. If the witness does not lay such a foundation, he should not be permitted to give his opinion that the decedent was insane. On the other hand, a non-expert witness testifying to the sanity of the decedent qualifies himself by showing his acquaintance with and opportunity to observe the decedent, and may be permitted to then give an opinion that the decedent was sane, without reciting the facts on which he bases that opinion. Furlong v. Carraher,
The foregoing disposes of all errors noticeable in this court, and, after having reviewed the evidence in the case, we do not find that the lower court committed error. — Affirmed.
FAVILLE, C.J., and EVANS and MORLING, JJ., concur.