68 S.E. 1049 | S.C. | 1910
Lead Opinion
August 2, 1910. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Two papers, each purporting to be the last will of Michael C. O'Neill, were admitted to probate in common form in the probate court of Charleston. By the first, which bears date September 5, 1907, legacies are given to Mary and Elizabeth O'Neill, James and Henry Corbett, St. Francis Xavier Infirmary, the trustees of the College of Charleston, Walford Johnson, and the residue to Edmund Kemble and J.W. O'Connell. By the second, which bears date September 19, 1907, the whole estate is given to T. Moultrie Mordecai, who is named executor, with full power of sale and disposition at his discretion. The executor filed with this will, when it was admitted to probate, a declaration of trust bearing date September 19, 1907, which contained the following recital: "Whereas, Michael C. O'Neill has this day made a will devising his entire estate to me, and appointing me sole executor thereunder. Now, therefore, I declare that subject to the payment of his debts, and the legacies and annuities hereinafter *473 mentioned, I hold the said estate in trust for William Henry Corbett and James Corbett, of New York City, N. Y." Following this recital a number of gifts and annuities are provided for.
Upon the petition of Michael V. Canty, alleging that he is an heir of testator and interested to invalidate both wills, the executor of the will of September 19th was ordered to prove the same in due form of law. He filed his petition, containing the usual allegations, and also an allegation of the probate, in common form, of the will of September 5th. The beneficiaries under the will of September 5th, and the heirs of testator were made parties. Mary and Elizabeth O'Neill and Kemble and O'Connell answered, denying the validity of the will of September 19th; and St. Francis Xavier Infirmary answered, admitting the validity thereof. The other respondents do not appear to have answered.
On motion of attorneys of Mary and Elizabeth O'Neill, the names of all respondents, except those alleged to be heirs of testator, were stricken from the record as improper parties.
The three subscribing witnesses to the will of September 19th were examined. They testified that, at the suggestion of Mr. Mordecai, Mr. O'Neill acknowledged the paper to be his will and requested them to witness it, and they proved the formal execution thereof. The declaration of trust was proved and offered in evidence, but excluded on the ground that it was not a part of the will, not having been referred to therein, and was, therefore, irrelevant at that stage of the case. The Court ruled, however, that it might become admissible in reply to the evidence against the will.
On close of petitioner's testimony, Mary and Elizabeth O'Neill moved to dismiss the proceeding, and to have the will of September 19th adjudged not to be the last will of testator, on the ground that a prima facie case had not been made out in favor of said will. The motion was based on *474 numerous grounds, which raised, however, practically only two points: (1) That the witnesses to the will had not ascertained and were, therefore, ignorant of and could not testify to the testamentary capacity of the testator. (2) Because it appeared in evidence that the relation of client and attorney existed between the testator and executor; that the will was in the handwriting of the executor's partner; that it was signed by testator's mark, without any explanation of why he did not sign his name, though he could write; that it was executed in the private office of the executor, no one being present, except the executor, the testator and the witnesses, who were the executor's private clerks; that its date appeared to have been altered, and the witnesses were unable to fix the date of execution; that another will of only a few days' anterior date was in existence, and that the executor was the sole beneficiary; that these facts and circumstances, one or more in combination, raised such a presumption against the validity of the will as destroyed theprima facie case made by proof of formal execution, and shifted the burden to proponent to prove testamentary capacity and intention.
The probate court overruled all the grounds, except the first. As to the others, the Court said that, having excluded the declaration of trust, which was evidently offered for the purpose of showing that the executor took no beneficial interest under the will, and having held that it might become admissible in reply to evidence against the will, it would stultify itself, if it sustained the motion on these grounds. As to the first, the Court held that, under the authority ofHeyward v. Hazzard, 1 Bay, 335, the failure of the witnesses to ascertain the mental capacity of the testator and give evidence thereof was fatal to the will. Thereupon, a formal decree adjudging the will propounded not to be the last will of testator was entered.
From this decree, the executor and Mary and Elizabeth O'Neill and St. Francis Xavier Infirmary appealed to the *475 Circuit Court. The executor's exceptions were numerous, but they really assigned only three grounds of error: (1) In sustaining the motion on the ground stated; (2) in excluding the declaration of trust; (3) in striking out the parties named as beneficiaries under the will of September 5th. The appeal of the Infirmary also alleged error in striking out said parties. Mary and Elizabeth O'Neill presented numerous exceptions, but, in one form or another, they involved only the point that the probate court erred in not sustaining the second ground of their motion, as it is above stated. They also served notice that they would move the Circuit Court for a trial de novo in that Court, and for the submission to a jury therein of an issue of will or no will.
Upon the call of the case in the Circuit Court, the motion for a trial de novo therein before a jury was pressed, but the Court declined to pass on the motion, until the appeal was heard. Having heard the appeal, the Circuit Court reversed the judgment of the probate court, and remanded the case for a new trial, holding that the probate court erred: (1) In striking from the record, as improper parties, the beneficiaries under the will of September 5th; (2) in holding that the failure of the witnesses to ascertain the testamentary capacity of the testator and give evidence thereof was fatal to the will; and (3) inferentially, as will be seen by the quotation from the Circuit decree below, in excluding the declaration of trust. The Court further held that the probate court did not err in refusing to sustain the motion to dismiss the proceeding and declare the will invalid on the other grounds urged by the appellants. The disposition of these grounds by the Circuit Court was as follows: "I have carefully considered the other grounds of the motion to dismiss, and I am satisfied with the reasoning of the judge of probate, and think that he properly refused to dismiss the proceedings on these grounds. It was contended before the judge of probate, and also in *476 the argument before me, by contestants, that the will should be set aside, because it appeared that the will left the entire estate to Mr. Mordecai, between whom and the testator there had existed the relation of attorney and client; that the will was in the handwriting of one of Mr. Mordecai's law partners, and was witnessed by three of the clerks or stenographers in Mr. Mordecai's office. It is very true that the law looks with jealousy upon the dealings of an attorney with his client, and will require, upon the part of the attorney, the utmost good faith and fair dealing; but I think the judge of probate properly refused to set aside the will upon the above grounds, and especially in the light of the declaration of trust, filed with the probate court when the will was first offered for probate. Certainly the law puts no constraint upon the power of a person to dispose of his property as he sees proper. He may give it to a stranger, or to one having no claims upon him, if he sees proper. Lee v. Lee, 4 McC., 195. The contestants, upon another trial, will have full opportunity to show any want of good faith, unfair dealings, undue influence, or any other ground that they can, why the will should not stand, but certainly they have failed to bring out facts sufficient on the cross-examination of witnesses for petitioner, or from the will itself, to set it aside without other proof."
From this decree, Mary and Elizabeth O'Neill appealed. The grounds of their appeal are too numerous and lengthy to set them out in full. They present the following assignments of error: (1) In not holding that the probate court erred in refusing to sustain their motion on the other grounds urged by them; (2) in holding that the beneficiaries under the will of September 5th are proper parties to this proceeding; (3) in refusing their motion for a trialde novo before a jury in the Circuit Court; (4) in not specifically passing upon the admissibility of the declaration of trust; (5) in not sustaining the ruling of the probate court, on the ground upon which it was based. *477
The grounds, other than the one sustained by the probate court, upon which appellants urged that the will should be declared invalid, involved a consideration of certain facts, which they alleged appeared in evidence, and the weight and sufficiency of those facts, and of the inferences and presumptions properly arising therefrom. This being a law case, the findings of the Circuit Court, upon questions of fact, are not reviewable in this Court. In re Solomon's Estate,
Appellants contend that section 2491, Code 1902, provides who shall be made parties to such proceedings. That section does provide that, upon the filing of a petition to prove a will in due form of law, "all such persons as would have been entitled to distribution of the estate, if the deceased had died intestate, shall be summoned to answer the petition." While such persons are, by the language of the statute, made necessary parties, there is nothing in the language to indicate an intention that other persons who may be interested in contesting a will shall not be made parties. The first two lines of the section *478 seem to indicate the contrary: "Probate in common form shall be good, unless some person or persons interested to invalidate the said paper as a will shall give notice to the judge of probate," etc. This language seems to indicate an intention that any person interested to invalidate a will, whether an heir or not, may give the notice to require it proved in due form of law. The beneficiaries of an older will may be more interested to invalidate a later will than the heirs. It is a fundamental and universal principle of law that no man shall be concluded by a judgment, until he has had his day in Court. The beneficiaries under the will of September 5th, were interested to invalidate the will of September 19th, and their rights would not have been concluded by the judgment, unless they had been made parties. The executor had the right to have them made parties to the end that he might not be compelled to litigate with them the same question, which he had litigated with the heirs. It is not necessary to look for any statute conferring power on the probate court to make them parties. When jurisdiction of a subject matter is conferred upon a Court, the power to bring before it all necessary and proper parties for the determination of the matter follows as an incident to the jurisdiction.
There was no error in refusing the motion for a trial denovo before a jury, until after the appeal was heard, for the reason that it might have appeared, on hearing the appeal, that only questions of law were involved, and, in that event, there would have been no issue for a jury. Having discovered from a consideration of the appeal, that issues of fact were involved. the Court might, in its discretion, have ordered a trial de novo
before a jury, instead of reversing the judgment and remanding the case to the probate court for a new trial. That might have been the better course; for, as said inMyers v. O'Hanlon, 12 Rich. Eq., 203-4: "In truth, the validity of contested wills is tried and determined practically *479
in the Court of Common Pleas. The primary decree of the ordinary in such controversies is regarded by the parties as comparatively immaterial. It is upon the appeal to the law courts that the actual contest, the substantial trial, really occurs." Prater v. Whittle,
The Circuit Court held, inferentially, at least, that the declaration of trust was admissible; for, in passing upon appellants' exceptions, the Court said: "I think the judge of probate properly refused to set aside the will upon the above grounds, and especially in the light of the declaration of trust," which shows clearly that the Court held that the declaration of trust should have been admitted. It was competent and relevant, because it tended to rebut the presumption which appellants contend arises from proof of the procuring by a party of a will under which he takes an interest. We are not called upon here to discuss the circumstances under which such a presumption does arise, or the force and effect which it should have. That depends upon the circumstances. Tomkins v.Tomkins, 1 Bail., 92; McKnight v. Wright, 12 Rich., 247;Hobby v. Bobo, Id. In McKnight v. Wright such a declaration, though made long after the execution of the will, was *480 admitted, though it does not appear that its admissibility was questioned.
The fifth assignment of errer cannot be sustained. In the case of Heyward v. Hazzard, 1 Bay, 344, which was relied upon by the probate judge to sustain his ruling, it is said: "The third requisite (in the execution of a will) is the attestation. The true construction of law under this head, has always been, that the act called the attention of the witnesses to the situation of the testator himself; and this particularly relates to his sanity.
The witnesses are not called upon by the act to attest the mere factum of signing, but the capacity of the testator.
The business, then, of the persons required by the statute to be present at executing a will, is not barely to attest the corporeal act of signing, but to try, judge and determine
whether the testator is compos to sign; that is, of a sound mind, as every will, upon the face of it, imports. And upon every controversy, the heir at law, or other person interested, has a right to a proof of sanity from every one of them whom the statute has placed around the testator. There is no other security but the witnesses and their integrity." The language above quoted was used by the judges in their charge to the jury in a case in which the validity of a will was in question. At that time, the judges were allowed to advise the juries as to the weight which should be given the testimony. It appeared that testator was subject to fits of insanity, occasioned by hard drinking, but after these fits were over, he regained his senses. The witnesses to the will all testified that, at the time of its execution, he was "perfectly in his senses." The witnessescontra testified as to his appearances at other times. The judges were evidently trying to impress upon the jury the weight they should give the testimony of the witnesses to the will, who gave evidence of testator's condition at the time of its execution, for they charged the jury further: "The three witnesses to the will all swear positively that *481
he was perfectly in his senses the day it was signed; and there is nothing to impeach, in the least, their credibility." So that, when the circumstances, under which the language above quoted was used, are considered, it loses much of its force in establishing a general principle of law applicable to all cases. But, while the language quoted does indicate the duty of persons called upon to witness a will, and the right of the parties to their opinion, it does not go to the extent of holding that, if they fail in the performance of that duty, and are unable to give any opinion as to the sanity of the testator, the will must, therefore, be rejected. Nor do the later decisions of the Court sanction such a proposition. The mere fact of attesting a will should be and is taken by the law to be tantamount to an expression of opinion on the part of the witnesses that the testator is possessed of testamentary capacity; for certainly no credible person of intelligence would attest such an instrument, if he knew or had reasonable cause to believe that testamentary capacity was wanting. In this sense the witnesses are to "try, judge and determine" whether the testator is capable. But surely where nothing appears to the contrary, the witnesses may rely and act upon the general presumption of sanity and testamentary capacity. Kinloch
v. Palmer, 1 Mills, 225; Lee v. Lee, 4 McC., 183;Verdier v. Verdier, 8 Rich., 155; Black v. Ellis, 3 Hill, 73;Welch v. Welch, 9 Rich., 136; Hobby v. Bobo, 12 Rich., 247. In Black v. Ellis two of the witnesses were dead. The third gave positive evidence of an utter want of testamentary capacity. Yet the will was established upon evidence aliunde of capacity. In Verdier v. Verdier
two of the witnesses were dead and their signatures were proved. The third recognized his signature, but had no recollection of the transaction. Held, the will was sufficiently proved. In Kaufman v. Caughman,
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE GARY concurs in the result.
September 29, 1910.
Addendum
The appellants entirely misconceive the ruling that, after a prima facie case had been made out in favor of the will, by proof of its formal execution, the burden was upon them to prove fraud, undue influence, incapacity, etc., in supposing that the court held that, in sustaining that burden, they could not rely solely upon the testimony of the witnesses examined by the proponent, but must themselves necessarily have introduced testimony. Of course, the contestants of any will, in any case, may, if so advised, rely entirely upon the testimony of the witnesses and other evidence introduced by the proponent.
As none of the exceptions questioned the propriety of the circuit judge's making any findings of fact, this court did not consider that question; but, as he did not undertake to pass a final judgment on the facts, but granted a new trial, his remarks in passing on the exceptions, as to the sufficiency of the testimony, are not res judicata.Stark v. Hopson,
No principle of law or question of fact having been overlooked or disregarded, the petition is dismissed and the stay of remittitur revoked. *483