12 S.D. 146 | S.D. | 1899
Lead Opinion
This was a proceeding commenced in the county court of Lakecounty to probate the will of one Jennie M. Bell, who died in that county on January 23,1896. The petition was presented to the county judge by W. J. Bell, husband of the deceased, and sole devisee and executor in the will. The petition was in the ushal form, praying that letters testamentary be issued to the petitioner, and appraisers appointed according to the rules and practice of the county court. At the time set for the hearing of the petition, Courtney Starkweather, a half-brother of the deceased, appeared and filed a contest, alleging, among other things, that the will presented by the petitioner for probate was not the last will and testament of said Jennie M. Bell, deceased; that at a time subsequent to Sepetmber 6, 1892, the date of the will presented by the petitioner for probate, the said deceased, Jennie M. Bell, executed a last will and testament, in due form, different in terms and provisions from the said pretended will aforesaid offered for probate, and that it expressly revoked all former wills by her
Section 5965 of the Compiled Laws provides: “An appeal by a party or a person who was present at a hearing, must be taken within ten days, and an appeal by a person interested and not present at the hearing, within thirty days, from the date of the judgment, decree, or order appealed from.” Section 5966 provides: “The appeal must be made: (1) By filing a written
The ground of the motion that the notice of appeal was insufficient was clearly without merit. The notice of appeal is very full and specific, stating that the appeal is taken from the judgment rendered by the said court on the 6th day of June, 1896, and giving substantially the entire contents of the judgment-, and concluding with the statement that said appeal is on questions of both law and fact, and stating the question of law and the question of fact the appellant desired to have reviewed.
The defect in the undertaking presents a more serious question. The undertaking follows the statute, substantially, but does not contain the usual concluding condition. Although the undertaking is somewhat irregular in form, the intention of the principal and sureties to be bound by the conditions is clear, and the parties could properly be held in case of default on the part of the principal. A notice of appeal and undertaking having been filed within the proper time, the circuit court had jurisdiction of the cause, and whether or not it would dismiss the appeal for the reason the undertaking was defective was within the discretion of the circuit court; and, in refusing to dismiss the appeal upon that ground, we discover no abuse of the discretion of that court. We would suggest, however, that it would have been the better practice on the part of the circuit court, when the defects of the undertaking were called to its attention, to have required the appellant to have filed a new undertaking.
This brings us to the merits of the case. On the trial it appeared that two wills had been executed by Jennie M. Bell either in 1892 or in 1892 and 1893, while she was a resident of De Smet, in Kingsbury county. Both wills were drawn and witnessed by A. P. Schenian. The one ottered for probate was witnessed by R. S. Gleason, and the other was witnessed by Dr. Earl Rice. It was claimed by the contestant that the will witnessed by Schenian and Rice was executed in the spring of 1893, and subsequent to the will of September 6, 1892, offered
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the conclusion that the judgment of the circuit court should be reversed, but am unable to concur in the reasons given by the majority of the court. , As the cause was tried by the court, acting without a jury, it should be presumed to have acted only on the legal evidence adduced (2 Enc. Pl. & Prac. 474), and this court should disregard the incomptent testimony of the defendant mentioned in the majority opinion. With such testimony excluded, I think there is a clear preponderance of evidence in favor of the plaintiff, and for this reason the judgment should be reversed.