109 Ala. 457 | Ala. | 1895
On the 11th day of December, 1890, William J. Loggins, the respondent, probated an instrument bearing date of February, 1876, as the last will and testament of Malinda Loggins, his deceased wife. The complainants did not contest the probate of the will, and under section 2000 of the Code of 1886, filed the present- bill in chancery to contest the validity of the same. Complainants took nothing under the probated will, and would have taken nothing had deceased died intestate, they being the children of a living brother of testatrix. Complainants’ rights, as shown in the bill, depend upon the establishing of a subsequent will of testatrix, bearing date of February, 1888, in which they are devisees, and which, if valid as a last will and testament, revokes the will probated by Loggins. Upon the application of the respondent Loggins, the chancery court directed that an issue he made up and tried by a jury, which was done.
So far as complainants sought to contest the probated will on the grounds that the same was procured by fraud or undue influence, or that the same was not legally executed and published, they not being beneficiaries under the will, nor heirs in case testatrix had died intestate, the bill is without equity ; and evidence to impeach the validity of the probated will could not aid the contestants, unless offered in connection with evidence sufficient to establish the will under which they claim. We are of opinion, however, that the evidence is without serious conflict that the will probated, when executed and attested, was, and was intended at that time to operate as, a last will and testament.
The issue tendered by the respondents, in effect, set up the will which had been probated, as the last will and testament of Malinda Loggins, duly executed and published as such, with the probate thereof. The answer of com.plaip.ants to the issue tendered set up the instrument of February, 1888, made exhibit “A” to the bill, and averred to be the last will and tostament of Malinda Loggins, revoking all previous wills. To this answer the respondents replied, denying that Malinda Loggins ever executed any such instrument as that set up in the answer, and, by way of further replication, averred that in June, 1888, subsequent to the date of the will shown by exhibit “A” to complainants’ bill, Malinda Loggins
Numerous rulings of the court are assigned as 'error. Complainants contend that they should have been permitted to open and close the argument. In the case of Watson v. Turner, 89 Ala. 220, this court used the following language : • “To establish a later will is necessarily to disestablish a former one already proved. The same is obviously true of a codicil, any of the provisions of which are inconsistent with those of the will itself. To prove a codicil is, pro tanto, to disprove so much of the probated will as it may revoke or modify. The distinction is one of extent, not of kind or quality. The attempt to set aside a probated will, therefore, by proving a later one or by attaching to it a codicil, with inconsistent provisions, is a contest of the validity of the former will.” To the same effect is the decision in the case of Hardy v. Hardy, 26 Ala. 524. Other authorities might be cited. The uniform ruling of this court has been that when the probate of a will is contested in the chancery court, under section 2000 of the Code, those who claim under the probated wilk must show affirmatively its validity, and become the actors. In this State the chancery court has no jurisdiction to probate a will. The jurisdiction is conferred exclusively on the prebate court. When the jurisdiction of the probate court has attached, its decree, declaring the validity of the will and admitting it to probate, is conclusive on all the world, until reversed, or unless the probate is contested in the manner and within the time prescribed by statute. The complainants had the right under the statute to contest the validity of the will, and when they showed by their bill the revocation of the will probated, and their interest as devisees and distributees by a subsequent will, the burden was placed upon the respondents to affirm and maintain the validity of the probated will.
Either party had the right to demand a jury, and the issue having been determined by the jury, its' verdict, if permitted to stand, must dominate the decree or judgment to follow. — Hill v. Barge, supra; Matthews v. Forniss, supra.
The court overruled a motion for a new trial, and in this conclusion we concur. There can be no doubt that the will probated was properly executed, and, at the time it was signed by testatrix, expressed her real desire as to the disposition of her property. The circumstances detailed of the discovery and preservation of the instrument denominated the second will, though not impossible in their nature, partake much more of the purely fortuitous or the romantic tban the probable, and we do not think a court would be justified in setting aside the verdict of a jury which rejected it as wanting in credibility; nor are we prepared to hold that the evidence of the making of the last instrument, denominated the third will, is calculated to impress the mind with satisfactory conviction of its truth. This, however, was a. question of fact for the jury, and they by their verdict determined that it was the genuine last will and testament of the testatrix. This will contains the following clause : “hereby revoking all other wills or any instrument of writing that may be brought forth after .my death, except the one I made to my said husband, W. J. Loggins, which John Guyer and Geo. M. D. McClutchen are witnesses to.” The instrument here referred to was the one probated, in which the property is disposed of in the same manner as in the last instrument. Looking at all the evidence, we would not be justified in disturbing a verdict which determined the issue in favor of the respondent Loggins.
The objection that the judge entered the jury room while the jury were deliberating, in view of the facts, is frivolous. The further argument that, as the chancery court has no jurisdiction to probate the third will, the
There was no evidence of undue influence or fraud to procure the execution of either of the three instruments by Malinda Loggins, nor was her testamentary capacity questioned. The evidence establishing the legal execution of the first will was unimpeached. The issue as to the second instrument was, first, that it was a forgery, and, second, that, if genuine, it was revoked by a third will. As to the third will, complainants’ contention was that it was purely and simply a forgery and fraud. The witnesses to the second will were both dead, and its due execution and validity were sought to be maintained by proof of handwriting. Both witnesses to the third will were living, and were examined on the trial.
Upon a statement of the issues properly before the jury it, is apparent that a great many of the assignments óf error, as well as principles of law invoked by appellant, have no application or relevancy. [The assignments of error are more than a hundred. The record itself contains over four hundred pages. It was filed before the adoption of the rule which requires that an abstract be furnished to the court. Many assignments of error do not refer to the pages of the voluminous record, and in no instance does the otherwise carefully prepared and elaborate brief of appellant aid the court by a reference to the page of the record, where the point discussed might be found. We have tried to consider principles óf law applicable to the case, and if any are overlooked,
A court does not err in sustaining an objection to a question to a witness, proposed to be examined as an expert, to state in the first instance whether lie has had sufficient skill and experience to give an opinion. The witness should be required to state the facts, and it is then for the court to determine whether he is competent as an expert.
In impeaching a witness, it is not competent to ask the impeaching witness if ho knows the general character of the witness “for truth and veracity, and honesty and integrity,” or was he not a “common thief,” In many"of our earlier decisions the enquiry was confined to “general character for truth and veracity.” The later decisions, and the sounder rule, has extended the inquiry to “general character” generally. “Integrity and honesty” enter largely as elements of good character, but the rule has not been relaxed or extended to inquiries into specific constituents of character, other than for truth and veracity, when the character of the witness- for credibility is assailed. It would not be safe to enlarge the scope of inquiry further, lest we have the moral habits of the witness inquired into, ’ and also his regard for and observance of religious orthodoxy. No doubt, on cross-examination, the impeaching witness could be questioned as to the source and extent of his knowledge of general character. The court did not err in sustaining an objection to these questions. — Davenport v. State, 85 Ala. 336; McInerny v. Irwin, 90 Ala. 275; Birmingham R’y Co v. Hall, 90 Ala. 8; Rhea v. State, 100 Ala. 119. There is no error in sustaining an objection to a question so framed as to elicit both competent and .incompetent evidence.
The testimony of the witness that Mrs. Loggins “seemed hurt at the conduct of her husband,” and “seemed to wish .her property to go to her brother and his children,”,was incompetent and irrelevant to the issue.
We are not sure that we understand what the witness meant by stating that the instrument “was written as copied, for the purpose of imitation of another.” We are not able to say the court erred in excluding this statement.
A motion to suppress the deposition of .James Wilson
It is insisted that'some of the charges given are erroneous and objectionable, in that they are abstract, or single out, and give undue prominence to, certain parts of the evidence. This court does not always reverse a case
Affirmed.