193 Ind. 694 | Ind. | 1923
This is a second appeal (Manship v. Stewart (1914), 181 Ind. 299, 104 N. E. 505). The appellant, Harriet Deeter Sample joined with others in bringing an action to contest the will and eleven codicils of Madison Brooks, for reasons which were finally narrowed to the single proposition that he was of unsound mind at each of - the times when they were severally executed. At the second trial, the jury returned a general verdict in favor of the defendants, and answered
Each plaintiff separately filed a motion for a new trial for certain alleged reasons, and reserved an exception to the overruling of such motion. All of the plaintiffs attempted to perfect an appeal, but the appeal was dismissed as to all except Harriet Deeter Sample, who assigned as error only the ruling on her motion for a new trial. There was ample evidence to sustain the verdict if the jury believed defendants’ witnesses and drew from the testimony and the documents in evidence some inferences in favor of the soundness of mind of the testator which it was within their province to draw. This court does not weigh conflicting evidence, ñor undertake to decide' which of two possible inferences arising from certain items of evidence the jury ought to have drawn.
The examination in chief of each of the other witnesses referred to related only to acts done and statements made by the testator which were competent solely as tending to prove his mental condition, and obviously were offered as proof that he was of unsound mind. In
Appellant cites and relies on the cases of Swygart v. Willard (1906), 166 Ind. 25, 30, 76 N. E. 755, and Sanger v. Bacon (1913), 180 Ind. 322, 329, 101 N. E. 1001. In Swygart v. Willard, supra, an objection was overruled, and the witness was permitted to answer a question which the Supreme Court criticized as being unskillfully framed, but which it said seemed intended to elicit the opinion of the witness upon facts gathered from his acquaintance with and observation of the de
Appellant complains of the refusal to give certain instructions asked by the plaintiff. But there is no memorandum in writing at the close of the instructions so requested, signed by the judge, specifying the numbers of those given and those refused, as is required in order to reserve exceptions under §561 Burns 1914, Acts 1907 p. 652, and no attempt was made to reserve them in any other way. Therefore she has no available exceptions to such refusal. Wiseman v. Gouldsberry (1910), 45 Ind. App. 677, 91 N. E. 616.
Appellant complains because the jury was instructed that either of certain facts alone did not constitute unsoündness of mind. But each of these statements was qualified by the exception “if such person still have testamentary capacity as elsewhere defined in these instructions”, or “unless such mental impairment has advanced to such a stage as amounts to unsoundness of mind as defined in these instructions”, or something else to the like effect. And
The judgment is affirmed.