149 Iowa 617 | Iowa | 1910
The argument on behalf of appellant has extended quite beyond the issues presented in the pleadings and tried' in the court below. Bridget Moylan was ap-. pointed administratrix of the estate of her deceased brother, James Carroll, who died in 1905. So far as known 'to any of his relatives he was unmarried and childless. He left an estate consisting wholly of moneys amounting to $2,317. The administratrix .filed a report showing expenditures which left a balance in her hands of $1,674.24. She averred that out of this sum the collateral inheritance tax was yet to be paid. She also averred that Michael Moylan and Julia Dewan had filed claims against the estate for $195, each of which she had allowed. She asked also that an allowance be made to her • attorney as attorney’s fees. She also called the attention of the court to the claim of
his mind stands in an even position, without any temptation to exceed or fall short of the truth. Whitlock v. Baker, 13 Ves. 514. As a general rule such information or statements concerning which a witness may testify must have antedated the litigation and the controversy, so that they could not have been induced thereby. They must be ante litem motam. Por a full discussion see: 16 Cyc. 1225, 1230; Alston v. Alston, 114 Iowa, 29; 2 Greenleaf
It is urged in argument by appellant that the evidence on behalf of Catherine is insufficient because there was no proof that Patrick and James Carroll were legitimate sons of the same parents, and because it appeared in the evidence that there was a cousin, Patrick Carroll, who also lived in England. We are unable to see merit in either contention. If it was incumbent upon Catherine to show the legal marriage of her grandparents in order to entitle her to inherit from her uncle James, it was quite as necessary that the same facts should be shown by Mrs. Moylan and Mrs. Dewan as a condition to their inheritance. It is also urged that there was testimony tending to show that two deceased sisters left surviving children, and that, therefore, others might be entitled to a share in this estate. No such claim was made-in the trial court. In the pleading of the claimant she averred that there were no other heirs than herself and her two aunts. No issue was taken upon this allegation and the case was tried below on this assumption. The same may be said of the claim of appellant in argument, that there is no proof that James Carroll was, in fact, childless and unmarried at the time of his death.
The order of the trial court must be affirmed at appellant’s cost, and she will not be permitted to impose any part of such cost upon the distributive share of the appellee still remaining in her hands. — Affirmed.