63 Ga. 146 | Ga. | 1879
This is the second time the present case has been brought to this court. (See 59 Ga., 11.) On the former trial, the jury in the court below found against the will, and on the motion of the propounders, the court below granted a new trial. The caveators brought a writ of error, and thiseonrt affirmed the judgment. The scope of the litigation originally existing between the parties was greatly narrowed by the former adjudication, and to that extent it is unnecessary to be recounted here.
The second trial was had in Chatham superior court at the May term, 1878. It appears in the record that Mary
“Item 16. I hereby give and bequeath to such persons as I may name and indicate in a list to be signed by mo and folded up with this, my will, and in the proportions, and of the classes therein set forth, all my silver ware and plate of every description, said list to be taken as a part of this, my will and testament, and said persons therein named to be legatees under this clause or item of my will.” ■
The will proper had three subscribing witnesses, to wit: Gen. A. R. Lawton, Jas. B. Reid, and Win. J. Marshall. The collateral writing in question also had three witnesses, namely: A. R. Lawton, W. J. Marshall, and John S. Coburn, and in other respects answered the description called for by said 16th item, except that it bore a previous date.
On the seventh of June, in said year, A. R. Lawton made affidavit, for probate in common form, to said collateral writing along with the will; and Jas. B. Reid made affidavit for the probate of the will, in common form, describing it as “the annexed instrument of writing, purporting to be the last will and testament of Mary Telfair, late of Chatham county, deceased.” There is nothing in the record to show that there was any judgment made in the court of ordinary admitting the will to probate in common form; but on the seventeenth day of June, 1875, Win. Neyle Habersham and Wm. Hunter, the executors named in the will, filed their petition in the court of ordinary, praying “that tlm said last will and testament may be admitted to probate in solemn form,' and that citation issue accordingly to the heirs at law,” naming them. Pursuant to said petition, a citation issued, was duly published and
The three subscribing witnesses to the will proper, viz : Gen. Lawton, Dr. Reid, and Mr. Marshall, were examined as witnesses, and from 'their testimony it appeared that the will was executed, attested and published under all the forms of law requisite to make a good will.
From their testimony and that of other witnesses, the soundness of mind and memory of the testatrix, her knowledge of the contents of the document, and all other matters at issue, were sufficiently established to justify a verdict in favor of the propounders, and it is unnecessary to set out the testimony at large for the present purpose.
It appeared that at the time the will wTas signed by the testatrix and the subscribing witnesses, it was written on several separate sheets of legal cap, four pages to each sheet, and the attestation clause on the last sheet recites that the will was written on fifteen pages of writing, the seventh page being blank.
The testimony is silent as to whether the above mentioned collateral writing was at that time present with the fifteen pages of writing before mentioned, or whether, in point of fact, it was then and there, simultaneously with the other steps taken in executing the will, “folded up with” said will by the testatrix, as recited in the sixteenth item above quoted, in her presence, or by her direction-; but General Lawton testified that, after the signing of the different sheets, they were taken by him to his office, folded up, and fastened together, and locked up in the vault of a bank, and after the death of the testatrix he produced the same to Mr. Goo. Noble. Jones, as one of the heirs at law, and to Messrs. Habersham and Hunter, the executors, and read the will to them.
The will contains certain bequests for the benefit of the poor of Chatham county, and other bequests to charitable uses, bequests to the Presbyterian church, the Union Society, and the Historical Society, of Savannah. It appeared in the cross-examination of the subscribing witnesses, that Mr. Marshall was neither a member of any of said societies, nor owned any property in Chatham county, nor was rated for taxes there ; tint Dr. Reid was a member of the Historical Society; that Gen. Lawton was a pew-holder in the said Presbyterian church, and also a member of the Historical Society, and that both he and Dr. Reid were property-holders in Chatham county, and were rated, as such, for taxes. The constitution and nature of the organization of none of these societies, or of the church, is set out in the record; and the nature of the interest which a pew-liolder
At the trial, objection was made to the competency of these gentlemen to testify as subscribing witnesses, on the ground of alleged interest in said societies and church, and of interest as tax-payers, in the support of the poor of said county, for which support the will in part provides. The court admitted their testimony, holding them competent. The caveators, in writing, asked the court to charge various legal propositions, stating the law, as contemplated by them in their grounds of caveat above set forth, and as touching the alleged incompetency of said subscribing witnesses, but making no distinct request as to the effect of such alleged interest upon the credit of the witnesses, though competent. The jury returned a verdict in the following form :
“ We, the jury, find the paper propounded to be the last will and testament of Mary Telfair. June 26, 1878. John P. Robinson, foreman.” And thereupon a judgment was entered “that the said will was the last will and testament of the said Mary Telfair, and the same being now proved in solemn form, that it be admitted to record,” etc.
There was a motion for a new trial on various grounds; first, that the verdict was contrary to the evidence ; secondly, that the verdict was contrary to law ; thirdly, that the court erred in refusing the written requests to charge made by the caveators; fourthly, in charging as follows: “If the jury should find that the cmeators were the real heirs at law of Miss Telfair, the fact that she did not so consider them, or that she was ignorant of the law concerning who were her real heirs, that these facts did not, under section 2403 of the Code, constitute such a mistake of fact as to the existence or conduct of her heirs at law as makes the will at all inoperative and again, in charging as follows : “ I also charge you that if you should find that one or more of the witnesses to the will are members of the Presbyterian church, or pew-holders therein, or are members of the Georgia Historical Society, or either of the societies which
And again, in charging as follows: “ In the opinion of the court, the will is perfectly valid and legal in all its terms and provisions, and is a will that in law can and ought to be proved and carried into effect, provided the testatrix was of sound and disposing mind and memory, 'and was not acting under any mistake of fact as to the existence or conduct of her heirs at law, and if you find it legally executed.”
And again in charging as follows :
“ If, when the will was signed, the sheets of paper were not attached together, but were fastened by one of the witnesses after he had taken them to his office, it does not invalidate the will, if you find all the other facts necessary to make a will, and that the will for probate is composed of the very sheets of paper signed by the testatrix, and in just the condition they were when it was signed.”
The motion for new trial was accompanied by brief of evidence as required by law, and after argument had, the motion was overruled. The present writ of error was presented seeking to reverse that decision.
The bill of exceptions contains three assignments of error, — first, that the court erred in refusing a new trial on the first and second grounds set out in said motion for new trial; second, that the court erred in refusing to give the charges requested by the caveators as set forth in the third ground for new trial, and.again in refusing a new trial for such error ; third, that the court erred in giving the charges complained of in the fourth ground for new trial, a.nd again, in refusing to grant a new trial for such error.
On the trial, the caveators sought to show that at the time she made the will, and on to her death, the testatrix did not know that Jones and others were her heirs at law, or that she was under a mistake touching the same.
The evidence, however, plainly shows that she was well acquainted with both sets of contestants, to-wit: the present caveators, who, after much controversy in the courts on the legal question, were finally held and decided to be the next of kin ; and that she was also well acquainted with her great-nieces, the other contestants, viz: the children of Mrs. Alberta Wetter, 'who, in said final adjudication, were held not to be the next of kin ; and that she also knew the relationship which these several contestants bore to her, and how their kinship respectively was derived.
It is not strange that the testatrix should have had the prevailing doubts on the law question involved; for it was a question about which the ablest lawyers and the most diligent courts have differed, and which it took a vast amount
It would indeed be strange, if the testatrix had not had the same doubts by which lawyers and courts were so long troubled, and for her to have been able, by herself to solve this intricate and difficult problem, would have argued a degree of capacity and mental power far beyond that which the law requires as sufficient to make a will.
Section 2403 of the Code is in these words, to-wit: “A will executed under a mistake of fact, as to the existence or conduct of the heirs at law of the testator, is inoperative so far as sucli heir at law is concerned, but the testator shall be deemed to have died intestate as to him.”
This rests on the principle of mistake of fact as to the existence of the heir at law, and not on a mistake of law as to any doubtful question of the rules of descent. The evil it seeks to remedy is, that where a testator has a kinsman, so related to him by blood as wonld naturally be an objeet of his bounty, and the testator is under a mistake, and believes that such heir is dead, or does not exist, and for that reason gives the inheritance to other persons, when, if the existence of such heir had been known, he would probable have been an object of his kinsman’s bounty.
By the section above quoted an heir who should become the victim of such a mistake would be relieved.
But where the testatrix knows such kinsman, and knows his relationship to her, and is in a situation herself to have weighed and decided the claims of blood relative to the particular individual in question, and with a full knowledge of all these facts, bequeaths the property toother persons, neither the letter nor the spirit of the law under consideration applies to the ease. The judge in the court below so-ruled, and we hold there was no error therein.
No such question was made, or in any manner, directly or remotely, mooted in the court below, and no such question was decided by that court.
This is a court of errors and cannot take original cognizance of new questions.
These were raised for the first time on the final argument by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error here. We hold that said questions are nowhere properly made in this record, and this court declines either to entertain or to decide them.
Whether it was necessary or proper, that said collateral writing be propounded with the will, or whether the judgment admitting the will of Mary Telfair to record in solemn form, includes the said collateral writing or not, as part of the will, and constitutes an adjudication, operating as an estoppel as against these caveators in respect thereto, we express no opinion and make no decision. The judgment is of course final as to all that it embraces, but whether it embraces the said collateral writing, or need embrace it, is a question not made in this record.
The will with which the law deals is to be sought for and to be found in the mind and intention of the testatrix. The writing is but the evidence of that intention. It is to the oneness, sufficiency and completeness of the testamentary intent and scheme as expressed and evidenced by the writing, that the law looks. It is not the writing that makes the will legal and binding, but the testamentary intent
It is best for convenience, of course, and controversy is less liable to arise, if the document is neatly, properly and securely fastened together before the testator and the witnesses sign it. But it is by no means essential, and to require it would be to upset a very large percentage of wills •now held to be of force in this state.
The true question is, was the identical writing — the document — in all its parts, finished and completed as the testatrix wanted it, and as an entire grammatical or rhetorical composition, propounded at the trial, the identical writing as was attested and signed by the testatrix and the witnesses, under the forms necessary to constitute a good will. In the present case the question of the identity of the several sheets was fully and fairly submitted to the jury under the proof, and they found on this question in favor of the propounders.
The testamentary scheme contained in the will, displays, on the part of the testatrix, a broad philanthropy, great knowledge of the society and times in which she lived, deep foresight in choosing the- objects of her bounty, and the measures for its faithful and enduring application, in fact, unmistakably the product of a well-ordered and strong mind. It would be hard to find a will in which so large an estate (over $600,000) is bestowed to varied objects of culture, charity and religion, personal regard and kinship, though remote and collateral, and in which will, and every clause of it, judgment is more apparent.
Judgment affirmed.