191 Ind. 209 | Ind. | 1921
The appellees brought this suit against the appellants to contest and set aside the will of Jacob Pouless, which had been admitted to probate. The complaint alleged that the appellees and two of the appellants were daughters of Jacob Pouless and his sole heirs, and that the third appellant was the executor of his alleged will and the husband of one of said daughters; that Jacob Pouless died the owner of certain real and personal property; that after his death a writing purporting to be his will was admitted to probate, and thereupon said third appellant was áppointed and qualified as executor; that the other appellants are the sole legatees and devisees under said pretended will and that it purports to dispose of all his real and personal property to them; that said pretended will is invalid because: (1) Jacob Pouless was of unsound mind at the time it was attempted to be executed; (2) its alleged execution was procured by undue influence; <3) it was unduly executed; and (4) its execution was procured by fraud in that Jacob Pouless was then eighty years old and physically and mentally infirm and susceptible to undue influence, importunities and persuasion, and not capable of resisting the influence of others, and that the appellants and others, while he was in this condition, unduly persuaded, importuned and influenced him to execute said pretended will. An answer of denial formed the issue which was submitted to a jury for trial.
Ignoring the failure of these answers to state any facts at all, and accepting them as showing that the jury found that the will was procured by undue influence, they do not disclose upon what evidence that finding was based; nor is there anything in the answers to any of the interrogatories to show upon what evidence the conclusion reached by the jury that the alleged will did not dispose of decedent’s property as he desired and was the product of undue influence, was based, or that it was based on evidence other than his declarations of a purpose to dispose of such property in a different way.
So far as the record discloses, the evidence referred to in this instruction may have been the chief, or even the sole, basis for the conclusion reached by the jury that Jacob Pouless did not intend nor desire to dispose of his property in the manner provided by the alleged will, but was induced to execute such will by undue influence. Evidence of that kind is not competent to prove undue influence.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial.