258 P. 1082 | Idaho | 1927
The sole question involved in this appeal is whether Otto Henry Schwarz possessed testamentary capacity; his widow, respondent herein, urging that he did not; his brother, Christian F. Schwarz, and other appellants urging that he did. A jury found that he did not.
September 27, 1923, the respondent filed a petition asking that the purported will filed therewith be probated. November 13, 1923, respondent filed her objections to the will on the ground that the deceased did not possess testamentary capacity. September 6, 1924, appellant, Christian F. Schwarz, filed his petition asking that the will be probated. May 20, 1925, respondent filed her answer to appellant's petition and January 21, 1926, appellant sought to file an amendment to his petition charging estoppel against respondent because her petition of September 27, 1923, estopped her from filing her petition November 13, 1923.
The amendment was offered two years and two months after respondent filed her petition contesting the will. The allowance of amendments is largely within the discretion of the trial court and in view of this lapse of time and the further fact that such issue had not been raised in the probate court there was no abuse in not allowing the amendment.
Frank L. Moore drew the will and was one of the attesting witnesses, and testified for appellant to the effect that in his opinion the testator was competent to make a will. He was asked on cross-examination if he had not testified at the hearing in the probate court as follows:
"He (Schwarz) made comments upon his physical condition and told me he never expected to get well, and he didn't know when he would have another stroke; he was suffering then from physical paralysis, and maybe mentally, and he didn't know when he would have another stroke or words in substance and to that effect."
To which question Mr. Moore responded: *630
"The question and the answer were probably, with the exception of 'maybe mentally,' I have no remembrance of making any such statement. If I did make it, it was an error inadvertent and wrong."
Later, over objection, certain witnesses were called by respondent who testified that Mr. Moore had testified in the probate court as above suggested. The question asked, which was based upon the testimony as reported to have been given in the probate court, is slightly ambiguous, as to whether Mr. Moore was reciting what the deceased had said to him or giving Mr. Moore's opinion of the deceased's condition. Whether Mr. Moore had so testified advisedly or inadvertently and whether there was a contradiction between this testimony and the testimony before the district court was peculiarly a question for the jury and was germane to the issues and there was therefore no error in admitting the so-called impeaching testimony.
Numerous witnesses on behalf of the contestant testified that in their opinion the deceased was not at the time of and prior to the making of the will able to transact ordinary business. Appellant, having properly objected thereto, assigns as error the questions and answers as to the testator's ability to transact ordinary business. It is well settled that a man may possess testamentary capacity although unable to transact business. Respondent urges that appellants sought from appellants' witnesses the converse and they therefore cannot complain of this error. This is a false assumption, however, because the converse is permissible. [5] In other words, if a man is able to transact business, under the authorities, he is clearly competent to make a will but he may be competent to make a will and still not be able to transact business.
"Ability to transact important business, or even ordinary business, is not the legal standard of testamentary capacity, though it seems to be quite generally but mistakenly supposed, outside the ranks of the legal profession, that a capacity to transact important business is the criterion of fitness to make a valid will. Says the Iowa Supreme Court: *631
" 'While, as every lawyer knows, a man may be capable of making a good will after he is so far gone into imbecility and mental darkness as to be no longer capable of making a valid deed or of transacting business generally, the very opposite conclusion seems to pervade the lay mind, and the making of a will is, to its apprehension, the one item of business which requires the presence of all one's faculties in their normal strength.' Perkins v. Perkins,
"A person who has mental power to understand and to transact the ordinary business affairs of life doubtless has capacity to make a valid will. But the converse is not necessarily true. Mental perception and power to think and reason of a lesser degree than that which is required in the understanding and transaction of ordinary business may be all that is requisite to the full understanding of everything involved in the execution of a will." (In re Sexton's Estate,
Certain letters offered as written by deceased, some in his own handwriting and some on the typewriter, were, on respondent's objection, excluded. The letters in the handwriting of the deceased were properly identified and should have been admitted as showing his condition of mind. (In reBurnham's Will,
Respondent offered certain income tax statements purported to have been made by deceased, which were, upon appellants' objection, not admitted and respondent urged that this action in relation to the exclusion of the letters constituted, as to appellants, invited error, contending that these statements were on a parity with the letters which were excluded, upon the theory that these income statements showed that the deceased, at the time of making his will, did not fully understand and know what property he owned and particularly what community property he owned. These income statements are not all in the record. From the two which are it is apparent they gave only income and not capital. Without passing upon the admission of these income statements, suffice it to say they were not sufficiently similar, in their probative effect upon the issues in the case, to the letters, to support the conclusion that by offering the letters appellants deprived themselves of the right to object to these income tax statements.
Appellants, proponents of the will, contend that they should have had the opening and closing. Our statutes provide otherwise. Subd. 5 of C. S., sec. 7452, makes the contestant plaintiff and the petitioner defendant. By C. S., sec. 7764, the rules of practice contained in title 55 are applicable to probate practice and C. S., sec. 6874, in title 55 directs that the plaintiff shall open and the defendant close. *633
The court ordered costs against all of appellants to which appellants objected. By reason of the conclusion reached inSchwarz v. Taeger, post, p. 633,
Because of the errors above mentioned the judgment is ordered reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to grant a new trial. Costs awarded as above stated.
Wm. E. Lee, C.J., and Budge and T. Bailey Lee, JJ., concur.
Taylor, J., concurs in the conclusion reached.
Petition for rehearing denied.