32 S.E. 798 | N.C. | 1899
His Honor thus stated the issue to the jury:
"The issue submitted to the jury is: `Is the writing offered, the will of Lucinda L. Tuttle, deceased?' If the jury find from the evidence that the writing offered was written in the lifetime of Lucinda L. Tuttle; that the said writing was signed by her; that it was subscribed in her presence by M. H. Tuttle and J. M. Crump as witnesses (473) thereto, then the jury will answer the issue, `Yes' — unless the caveators have shown by a great weight of the evidence, either a want of testamentary capacity in the testatrix, or that undue influence was exerted upon the testatrix at the time of the execution of the alleged will."
The jury answered the issue, "No."
The errors assigned by the propounders upon their motion for a new trial are sufficiently adverted to in the opinion. There was judgment in accordance with the verdict, and appeal by the propounders. The appellants were not represented here by counsel, nor was there a brief filed in their behalf; in fact, the case on their part seems to have been abandoned, and upon our reviewing it we feel safe in saying that, in that respect at least, their course was a wise one. The first exception was to what the appellants call the conduct of one of the counsel of the caveators on the trial. The offending lawyer, during the trial, in open court, went to the water pitcher near the jury box and quenched his own thirst with a glass of water. Several jurors, taking the contagion, gave him a sign that they, too, would like to partake of the cooling draught, whereupon he politely waited on them. For which cause it is insisted that the Supreme Court ought to grant a new trial of the case.
This, to us, seems to be trifling with the Court.
The second exception was to the refusal of his Honor to instruct the jury that "Sanity is the natural and usual condition of the human mind, and every person is presumed to be sane. If the deceased was (474) not insane, then the execution of her will was a valid one." The first sentence of the requested instruction was taken, word for word, from the opinion of the Court in the case of Sawyer v. Wood,
The third exception was to the refusal of the court to charge the jury "That the caveators impeaching the validity of the will must affirmatively show the want of capacity, or the exercise of undue influence, which is defined to be influence by fraud or force, and they must show its application to the making of the will. How this exception could be insisted in the face of the instruction on the point which his Honor gave in the general charge is a puzzle to us.
His Honor said: "Did she, the said Lucinda L. Tuttle, at the time of the execution of the script or writing in question, have sufficient mental capacity to understand the nature and character of the property disposed of? To whom she was giving her property, and how she was disposing of the property? If so, then she was of sound mind and memory, within the meaning of the law; if not, then she had not testamentary capacity. The law is, that to be of sound and disposing mind and memory, so *325 as to be capable of making a valid will, the deceased must, at (475) the time of executing the paper-writing, have had sufficient mental capacity to understand the nature and character of the property disposed of, to whom she was willing it, and how she was disposing of her property. If, at the time of the alleged execution of the said writing, the said testatrix had the capacity to know what she was doing, and was capable of understanding the nature and character of the property disposed of, to whom and in what way she was disposing of her property, then her mental capacity would be sufficient. On the question of undue influence, the real inquiry to be determined is: Did the said Lucinda L. Tuttle, deceased, make and execute the alleged will, in all its provisions, of her own free will and volition, so that it now expresses her own wishes and intentions, or was she constrained or coerced, through the undue influence, restraint or coercion of others, in making her will, to act against her own desire and intention as regards the disposition of her property or any part of it? And the jury are instructed that the influence exercised over a testator or testatrix which the law regards as undue or illegal must be such as to destroy her free agency in the matter of making the will; but it matters not how little the influence if her free agency is destroyed, it vitiates the act which is the result of it; and the amount of undue influence which will be sufficient to invalidate a will may vary with the strength or weakness of the mind of the testatrix, and the influence which would subdue and control a mind and will naturally weak, or one which had become impaired by age, disease or other cause, might have no effect to overcome a mind naturally strong and unimpaired. The jury are instructed that any influence exercised upon the testatrix is proved by reason of which her mind was so embarrassed and restrained in its operations that she had no control of her own opinions and wishes in respect to the disposition of her estate, was undue influence, within the meaning of the law. It is not, however, unlawful for one, (476) by honest advice or persuasion, to induce a person to make a will or to influence him in the disposition of his property by will. To vitiate a will on account of undue influence it must appear from the evidence that there was something wrongfully done, amounting to a species of fraud or moral force and coercion or other improper conduct destroying free agency, so that the will does not express the real wishes of the testatrix or testator, but those of some other person."
Several exceptions were made to the charge of his Honor, but upon an examination of them they are found to be no more meritorious than those to the refusal of his Honor to give the special instructions requested. *326
One of the objections made by the propounders to a part of the evidence is of sufficient importance to be considered. The testatrix had been sick some year or more, and in bed for the two or three months preceding her death. The evidence of the caveators tended to prove that the mind and body of the testatrix had gradually declined and weakened from her long and serious sickness till her death; and there was evidence tending to show that when the will was executed she did not have testamentary capacity and her bodily strength was almost exhausted. In connection with that matter a witness was allowed to testify, over the objection of the propounders (appellants), that in a very few days after the execution of the will, he, in company with the pastor of the testatrix, went to see her, and that she was found utterly unable to understand or comprehend anything he said to her. If the testatrix had had a protracted illness, and there had been a gradual weakening of the body and the mind until death, and if at the time of the execution of the will she was not of testamentary capacity, and so weak that she had to be lifted up to sign the paper, (477) then we think that her condition of mind at that time was some evidence of what her mental condition was when the will was made. InNorwood v. Morrow,
NO ERROR.
FURCHES, J., did not sit on the hearing of this case.
Cited: Lloyd v. Bowen,
(478)