41 Ky. 324 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1842
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
On a bill filed by some of the heirs of James Rogers, dee’d. for contesting the validity of a document which had been admitted to record in the Fayette County Court, as his last will, the jury, under the statutory issue devesavit vel non, found that it was his valid will, and a decree was rendered accordingly. That decree is now sought to be reversed on three grounds, which will be considered in the order in which they have been urged in this Court.
1. An application for a continuance on account of the absence of a material witness was overruled by the Circuit Judge, who postponed the trial until the deposition of the absentee, who was sick, had been taken, and which was read to the jury. That refusal is complained of as erroneous and prejudicial; but it seems to us that it cannot be so considered—neither the character of the deposition nor any other fact in the record would authorize the presumption that his sickness, in any degreee, affected the testimony of the witness, or that his deposition was not as useful to the party using it as his oral examination in Court could have been. We are of the opinion, therefore, that there was no available error in the refusal to grant a continuance, and especially in such a case, in which the personal attendance of all the witnesses at the same time could not have been reasonably expected, and in which also, a trial without delay was peculiarly important.
2. The jury was instructed that there was no evidence of cither fraud or improper influence on the testator; and this also is assigned for error.
It cannot often be prudent thus to control the jury as to such facts as fraud and sinister influence in the procurement of a will. But whether there was any evidence of
The Circuit Judge seems to have been of the opinion that no declaration made by one of several devisees, could be competent evidence against the will. In this, however, we do not concur with him. We still approve the principle recognized on this subject in the case of Beall's will, (1 Ben. Mon. 399.) 1st. Because all the devisees have a common interest in every question affecting the validity of the will; and, 2ndly, Because no one of them, being a party, could be compelled to testify against it. And we are well satisfied that principle and analogy, as well as authority, sustain the qualified doctrine ruled in the case, supra, in Ben. Mon.—that is, that a declaration of one of several devisees or legatees, as to a fact material to the validity of the will, and against his own interest, is admissible, not as a declaration or admission by all, but as a circumstance entitled to some influence, and to which the tribunal trying the question of will orno will, should give such effect as, under all the circumstances of the case, such a fact should intrinsically merit.
The same principle, and even to a more unqualified extent, has been recognized in England in many cases,
Being satisfied with the doctrine, as ruled in Ben. Mon. roe, we are not disposed to elaborate a discussion of it. We are, therefore, of the opinion that, as the facts offered and rejected in this case might have conduced, in some degree, to evince undue influence in the procurement of the will, the Circuit Judge erred in not admitting the proof of them as tendered.
But, nevertheless, upon mature consideration, we have come to the conclusion that this error should not be deemed injurious, and is, therefore, insufficient for revers-g ' ing the decree.
When all the facts are reviewed, it is evident that, in consequence of the testator’s physical prostration and the emínent danger his speedy dissolution, there had been much difficulty and trouble in the proper and effectual publication of his will, and which might have been reasonably apprehended again in an attempt at a republication. The principal devisee’s equivocal declaration as to that matter, therefore, would have been very remote and questionable evidence of coercion, fraud, or improper influence in procuring the publication. And the other facts proposed to be proved, would have been entitled to scarcely any effect, if any at all, as evidence of even importunity to make the will. But importunity alone would not invalidate.
When, however, we consider the evidence, as to the testator’s capacity and fixed determination, under all circumstances, both sometime before and even after the publication, the facts characterizing that publication, and the destitution of any eircumstarices, (independently of
Wherefore, the decree is affirmed.