82 Miss. 688 | Miss. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the court.
We do not think the court erred in refusing the peremptory instruction asked by the contestants, the appellants here; but it was clearly erroneous to have given the peremptory instruction asked by appellees, the proponents of the will, upon the testimony in this record. This was peculiarly a case for the jury, under proper instructions from the court, as to the law. A verdict for either party, on this testimony, should not have been disturbed by the court, under proper instructions as to the law. And, as the case must go back for a new trial, we refrain from the expression of any opinion on the facts of the case. Tacts are for the jury, the triers of issues of fact. But there are certain errors of law assigned which we will proceed to notice, that the case may, on the new trial, conform to the views herein expressed.
The contestants insist, in the first place, that the alleged will of Cornelius Sheehan was never, in fact, signed by him at all; that there is no signature of his, of any kind, to the will; that that which is called such is an illegible scrawl, no better that a
It is next earnestly insisted by appellants, with great wealth of learning and marked force of reasoning, that the declaration of testamentary intention testified to by Taft, Moran, and O’Elyn should not have been admitted. It is conceded that such declarations by a testator as to the disposition he intends to make of his property, before the making of the will, and his declarations, after he has made the will, of what he had intended to do, or has done, in the disposition by will of his property, are admissible, on the issue of testamentary capacity, to show the state of his mind, whether sound or unsound. Such declarations would seem to be declarations symptomatic of the condition of the mind, as exclamations forced by pain or disease from a suffering body are symptomatic of such pain and illustrative of its nature and cause. • Irrational exclamations may thus well be symptomatic in one case of a diseased mind, and exclamations of physical pain and anguish in the other case of a diseased body, and competent in both cases, for the same reason,' as primary evidence. 1 G-reenl. Ev., page 149, sec. 102, and note c.
But it is conceded that they should be admitted on that issue • — testamentary capacity — alone, and on the ground indicated alone, and that the instruction to the jury trying the issue devisavit vel non should restrict the jury to their consideration in this aspect alone, and that they are never competent to show undue influence in the procurement of the will, whether made before or after the will. To support this contention counsel cites many authorities, relying chiefly on 2 Whart. Ev., sec. 992. But this section only 'holds, properly understood, that the genuineness of the will conceded, and no issue of undue influence or testamentary capacity being involved, the “intent is to be drawn from the will, and not the will from the intent,” and that in such cases parol evidence is not competent to vax-y,
We have thus far said nothing of Tucker v. Whitehead, 59 Miss., 594, because learned counsel attempt to distinguish that case, in principle, from the authorities holding such declarations competent on an issue of undue influence, on the ground that that case was one as to the competency of declarations made by the testator, where the act of revocation — tearing off his name — was not shown to have been done by the testator. It is insisted that, in such case, the statutory act of revocation being equivocal, such declarations, not made at the time of tearing off the name, were admitted to make certain what otherwise was uncertain — whether the name was torn off by the testator or a
The next point which we shall notice is upon whom is the burden of proof as to testamentary capacity and undue influence. It will be seen, by reference to the elaborate note to Prentiss v. Bates (Mich.), 17 L. R. A., 494, (50 N. W. 637, 53 N. W., 153), that there is a great conflict of authority on the former question even; and, by reference to Baldwin v. Parker, 96 Am. Dec., 697, that like conflict of authority exists as to the latter. So far as the former question is concerned it is settled in this state, in Tucker v. Whitehead, 59 Miss., 594, that the burden is on the proponents throughout, and it is expressly so enacted by sec. 1825, Code 1892. As to the burden where the issue is undue influence, it is held, in Baldwin v. Parker,
In the the course of the trial the proponents offered the record of the probate of the will, and the will, and rested. The contestants then introduced their testimony as to testamentary capacity and undue influence and rested. The proponents then introduced testimony as to these two. matters in rebuttal. Contestants objected to this testimony as not in rebuttal, insisting that all the testimony proponents had on these points should have been offered in chief. The court correctly overruled this objection. That the course pursued in the conduct of this trial was correct is expressly decided in Runyan v. Price, 86 Am. Dec., 459, and In re Lehman's Will, 40 Minn., 371, 42 N. W., 286.
With respect to the rule as to allowing nonexperts to give their opinion as to the soundness of mind of the subject of inquiry, the true view is set forth in Wood v. State, 58 Miss., at page 742. They should testify as to the facts, acts, declarations, etc., of the subject of inquiry, and then give their opinions based upon these facts. Unless the attending physician (in this case, Dr. Lowry) is qualified as an expert, the rule applies to him, and should be observed. And this method of examination on the new trial should be rigidly adhered to as to all non-expert witnesses.
Most of the other very numerous assignments of error are to the action of the court in allowing proponent’s counsel to ask leading questions in chief. Very many of them are well taken.
Reversed and remanded.