84 Ga. 619 | Ga. | 1890
Mrs. Margaret J. Emmons, now Mrs. Scaife, sought to have admitted and established as the will of her husband, Dr. Ii. R. Emmons, what she alleged to be a nuncupative will made by him about the 20th day of February, 1888, during his last illness, and three days before his death. By it he gave to his wife the house and lot on which they lived, and all the ' furniture and other property in it; also his farm in Mitchell county, and the mules and other property on it; also the cabins and lots he had rented out to negroes; also his storehouse and lot in Camilla, and all the goods and other property therein. Indeed, he gave all his property to her except his wild lands. He left a son, Eugene, and a daughter, Minnie, who caveated the probate of the will on various grounds. The jury found for the caveators, and petitioner moved for a new trial, which was overruled by the court, and she excepted.
The main grounds relied on before us for a reversal of the judgment of the court below in refusing to grant a new trial were the 8d, 4th and 5th, which are as follows: (8) Error in charging: “Nuncupative wills, being as a rule no favorites of the court, demand strictness of proof in all essential points; this is requisite in consideration of the facilities with which frauds in setting up nuncupative wills are obviously attended; facilities which absolutely require to be counteracted by courts insisting on the strictest proof as to the facts of such alleged wills/’ (4) Error in charging: “A nuncupative will, to be valid, must be made as a matter of necessity, and not as a matter of choice. That is, a person who desires to make a will, and has time to make a written