Rickabus v. Gott

51 Mich. 227 | Mich. | 1883

Graves, C. J.

This proceeding was brought by Mrs. ¡Rickabus, in the court of probate, to prove and establish a missing will which she alleges was made and left by William Buck, who died at Grosse Pointe, November 30th, 1874. ITer demand for probate was contested by John F. Gott, who is described as being Buck’s nephew and heir at law, ■and the court decided adversely to her. She then appealed to the circuit court, where a trial was had before a jury with ;a like result, and she now complains of rulings there made.

*228At tbe time of bis death the decedent Buck was sixty-four or sixty-five years of age. He owned a large farm at Grosse Pointe and some other property. For many years-this farm had constituted the place of residence of himself and his wife Elizabeth, and it remained their home to the time of his decease. If any children were born to them they must have died a long time since. When about eight years of age the proponent was taken into the family as a member, and she continued in that situation until her marriage with one Oordy in February, 1858, and possibly until a later period. She claims that she was received, treated and considered by decedent as his adopted child, and that he left a will by which he gave her forty acres of the farm referred to. Several years since her husband Oordy died,, and she afterwards intermarried with one Bickabus whose name she now bears. During her marriage with Oordy a son was born to her. On the death of Buck no will was-produced, and his widow Elizabeth was appointed admin-istratrix. She subsequently intermarried, with Charle» Turner, and died without being discharged as administratrix. She left all her property by will to Turner, and no one has been appointed in her place to represent the estate of Buck, This sketch is perhaps redundant, but the fault is not very material.

First. When contestant’s counsel proceeded to make his-statement preparatory to the introduction of testimony, he was allowed, against proponent’s objections, to relate transactions between Turner and'Charles Oordy, proponent’s son, on the one hand, and the contestant on the other, in regard to the possession of the Buck farm, and to relate legal proceedings for such possession had between the contestant and the proponent and Turner. These matters were foreign to the issue before the jury, and their introduction, under cover of an opening statement, was a plain impropriety which the court should have corrected.

Second. On cross-examining one of proponent’s witnesses contestant’s counsel was suffered to suggest that proponent’s son Charles was born very soon after her marriage, *229and was allowed to follow the suggestion np by requiring the witness to state what' he had heard Mrs. Buck say on the subject. There was no color of excuse for this practice. It was equally a violation of propriety and the rules of evidence. It was not only hearsay but irrelevant, and could ■have had no other object than to wound and disparage the proponent. But this line of proceeding was not permitted to stop here. Contestant’s counsel subsequently called the physician who attended on proponent at her son’s birth, and was allowed to have him testify that it occurred within two weeks after her marriage. This testimony had no legal connection with the question that was being tried, and the end to which it was obviously directed is utterly indefensible. The duty of the trial judge to repress needless scandal and gratuitous attacks on character is a very plain one, and good care should be taken to discharge it fully and faithfully.

It is useless to pursue this record further. Whatever may be the abstract justice of proponent’s case, — a point we are not dealing with, — the fact is patent that the trial was unfair.

The order of the court must be set aside, with costs to proponent, and a new trial granted.

The other Justices concurred.
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