164 Iowa 730 | Iowa | 1914
On February 20, 1912, there was filed in tbe district court of Des Moines county, Iowa, an instrument purporting to be the last will and testament of W. E. Jones. Due notice of probate was given by tbe clerk of the„court by publication, as required by section 3284 of the Code of 1897. No other or further notice was given. On the 15th day of April, 1912, Elsie Philpott and Leila Brownfield, granddaughters of the testator, appeared and filed objections, alleging as a ground therefoy that the said W. E. Jones, at the time of the execution o-f said instrument, was not competent to execute a valid will;
The main contention of appellants in this ease is that the evidence offered and submitted by contestants failed to overcome the presumption created by the due execution of the instrument offered for probate, and failed to establish want of testamentary capacity on the part of the said Jones. Second, that even if contestants’ evidence did tend to show want of testamentary capacity, the rebuttal evidence offered by proponents preponderated, and that a preponderance of all the evidence clearly established testamentary capacity, on the part of the testator, at the time the instrument was executed.
In Re Estate of Allison, supra, this court said, in a case involving testamentary capacity: “The conclusion depends much on the credit to be given to particular witnesses, not só much with reference to their veracity as with reference to their conclusions from observations and particular facts coming to their knowledge. The line between competency, and incompeteney, or that shows a testamentary capacity, is always traced with uncertainty, and the findings in most cases are justified only as the best solution of a doubtful problem. . . . However the facts might be found, there would be the conviction that it was doubtful. It is not to be properly said that the evidence is conclusive either way. With such conditions the finding of the jury should stand, and especially after the district court has declined to interfere.”
The condition of the human mind at any stage of human existence is difficult of proof; perhaps the most difficult of any with which courts and juries are compelled to deal. Mental unsoundness, whether resulting from old age or physical sickness, is so various in its character and so different in its manifestations that it is often difficult for the most experienced experts, after most careful and thorough investigation, to trace it to any sufficient cause, or define its extent or its effect upon the conduct of the individual. Even the most experienced alienists, with all the facts before them, touching the conduct
We have examined this record with care for the purpose only of ascertaining whether or not in the record there is sufficient evidence upon which a jury might reasonably predicate a conclusion that this testator, at the time of the execution of the will, did not have that testamentary capacity which, under the rules generally adopted, was sufficient to enable him to make a binding will. It is difficult to lay down any rule sufficiently broad in its application and sufficiently comprehensive in its scope that it may serve as a certain guide in determining whether or not, in a particular instance, the testator had, or had not testamentary capacity, but, from the facts, as we gather them from a careful reading of this record, studied in the light of the rules laid down for guidance in matters of this kind, we can only reach the conclusion that the record presents a state of facts from which reasonable minds might reach different conclusions. We do, however, find that there is sufficient evidence to justify the jury in its finding as to the ultimate fact.
Proponents, however, contend that the court erred in the submission of the cause to the jury, to proponents’ prejudice; that prejudicial errors were committed by the court in the trial and submission of the cause that entitled proponents to a retrial. We may not dispose of the errors complained of in
An examination of this record shows that the pecuniary condition of these contestants was brought to the knowledge of the testator before the time of the execution of the will. This is shown by the testimony of the mother of contestants, as well as by the testimony of the contestants themselves.
It is not necessary that every fact, concerning which testimony has been offered, be included in a hypothetical question, but only such facts, concerning which evidence is offered, as bear upon the mental condition of the testator at the time of the making of the will. It is not necessary that the testimony of a witness touching any particular fact, as it appears in both direct and cross-examination, be included in a hypothetical question to make it proper, but that the substance of his testimony, that which it tended to show, need only be stated.
The complaint here seems to be that counsel for contestants, in propounding the hypothetical question to Dr. Applegate, omitted some matters, shown, by the testimony of a witness, upon 'which the hypothetical question was predicated, and that this omission destroyed the question as a basis for the final judgment as to the capacity of the testator. If the contention of counsel were to be adopted as the correct rule in propounding hypothetical questions, it would tend to confuse, rather than enlighten the jury as to the facts upon which the question was predicated. But, however this may be, we are satisfied that if anything was omitted from the hypothetical question, the omitted portions were fully brought to the attention of the witness and jury on cross-examination, and the further examination discloses that the omitted portions were all unimportant matters.
We find no prejudicial error in this respect.
Testimony has been introduced, and has not been contradicted, that in discussing the provisions of the will, the making of which was contemplated by W. E. Jones, he stated that it was not worth while for him to give the contestants a considerable share of his estate because they were extravagant and would waste it. Testimony has also been introduced, and has not been contradicted, that he felt aggrieved over the apparent neglect that he had received from the contestants. In determining whether the provisions of the will are so unreasonable as to create a presumption that W. E. Jones was of unsound mind, it is not necessary that the facts were as he supposed at the time of the execution of the will, and if you find from the evidence that W. E. Jones was influenced in the provision that he made for the contestants, by the opinion that any part of his estate he gave to them would be wasted, or if he felt aggrieved because of the apparent neglect, and for that reason made such provision, that would not show mental unsoundness, even if such opinions were unjustified,
This instruction, we think, invaded the province of the' jury, and seeks to limit the probative force of such testimony unreasonably. If the facts set out in the instruction, claimed to have been proven without'contradiction, were as stated, but were not in fact true, and Jones had no reasonable ground for believing them to be true, the jury might well have -considered such opinions entertained by him as substantial evidence of the existence of the very fact contended for by contestants.
In proponents’ complaint of the court’s refusal to give instruction No. 10, they rely upon Mallow v. Walker, 115 Iowa, 242, in which the court said: “Walker seems to have had sufficient mind to determine for himself what he wanted to do, and to carry out his purpose with reference to the disposition of what property remained to him, and it is not for us to pass upon the unreasonableness of such disposition. His antipathy to Mallow, which seems to have been suddenly formed, may have been justified; and, even if unjustified, would not show mental incapacity.”
It is error in counsel to think that every statement made by this court, when passing upon the sufficiency of evidence, to justify a conclusion in a particular case, should be incorporated into instructions given to the jury- as a guide to the jury in determining the probative force of testimony submitted to it. In Mallow’s case, this court was discussing the weight of the evidence, in that particular case, for the purpose of determining whether or not the conclusion of the trial court upon the whole record was justified, and the language quoted was used in that connection. It would be subversive to justice to require the court, in its instructions to the jury, to take up separately each item of evidence offered by contestants to show want of mental capacity, and say to the jury, as to each item so separately considered, that it did not, in and of itself, disconnected from all the other testimony, show want of mental capacity. As said before, the evidence is to be considered by the jury as a whole. Each part depends for its probative force largely upon the other testimony submitted upon the issue. Each fact cannot, and ought not, to be considered by the jury alone' and disconnected from the other, in the final analysis of the whole case.
In support of proponents’ claim that the court erred in refusing to give the twelfth instruction, the proponents rely
Instruction No. 12, asked by proponents, reads as follows: “In this case proponents have introduced testimony, as to the mental condition of W. E. Jones, of practicing physicians who have treated him for a number of years up to the date of his death, and who have given an opinion as to his mental condition, founded on personal knowledge, observation, and treatment. The attending physician is presumed to know the state of the mind of his patient, and these are facts that should be considered by the jury in determining the weight that should be given to their testimony.” This instruction was intended to call particular attention to the testimony of the witnesses called by proponents, and to give them a certificate of character and their testimony probative force, without reference to the thought, without suggestion to the jury to consider the fact, as to whether or not these men were shown by the testimony to be experienced in cases of this character; as to whether or not they have shown themselves qualified, by their observation and treatment, to give
Some complaint is made of the instructions given by the court, especially the second and eighth. We have examined these instructions with care, and find they have support in the law as heretofore announced by this court, and it is unnecessary to restate the reasons upon which their approval rests.
A motion was filed by appellants to dismiss this appeal on the ground that all parties interested in the contest were not served with notice of the appeal. In view of the disposition made of this appeal, we do not find it necessary to pass upon this motion.
We would suggest, however, that in contests of this kind it would be well for the court to see to it that all parties interested in the contest, or whose rights might be affected by a determination of the issues raised in the contest, should be served with notice and made parties of record before the trial is permitted to proceed. This will have the effect of
Under the record made here, we find no ground for dismissing the appeal, and the cause, upon the whole record is— Affirmed.