71 Conn. 392 | Conn. | 1899
The questions put to Mrs. Sturdevant, in order to bring out admissions showing her bias and active connection with the suit, having been answered in the negative, there is no occasion to pass upon their admissibility.
It is contended that the charge was partial and unfair. It appears that the evidence and the claims founded upon it by the proponents of the will were stated at much greater length than those of the contestants, and the appellant argues that they were put before the jury with greater force, and in a manner to indicate that the court was of opinion that they were entitled to more regard. The record does not disclose whether the proponents produced more or less testimony than the contestants ; but the weight and importance of evidence have no necessary relation to the number of the witnesses produced. It is the duty of the trial judge to call the attention of the jury to whatever he thinks especially worthy of their consideration, and it is within his discretion to intimate to them the effect upon his own mind of any particular testimony to a material point. State v. Fetterer, 65 Conn. 287; Wheeler v. Thomas, 67 id. 577. Tested by these principles, there is nothing in the record which indicates that the charge was not a fair and impartial one. Of. the many objections to it which are specifically assigned, but one merits serious attention. After stating the claims of the contestants, and referring to the evidence in support of their contention that the will was so unreasonable as to indicate mental unsoundness, undue influence, or fraud, the court proceeded as follows: —
“ I wish to say to you, that a will making a just distribution of an estate would be held in itself strong evidence of
The remark that a just will would be held in itself strong evidence of testamentary capacity was an unguarded one, especially in view of the statement immediately following, that one turning the property into an unnatural channel gives
The request for an instruction that the surviving brother and sister were the natural objects of Mrs. Sturdevant’s bounty, was properly refused. The descendants of her deceased brother who survived her, not to mention her husband, came also under that description, and it would have misled the jury to direct their attention in that manner to the brother and sister alone.
Exception is taken to that part of the charge in which the general presumption in favor of sanity is described “ as one
“ The burden of proof is in the first instance upon the proponents of this will, to show that the testatrix was of sound mind at the time of making this will. But the law, gentlemen, presumes every person to be of sound mind until the contrary is shown; and this presumption makes for the proponents of the will, and is of probative force in their favor, and must be considered by you along with the evidence offered by the proponents. This presumption must be cast into the scale with the evidence. If, gentlemen, using this presumption of sanity as of probative force, and, as suggested, you are satisfied by a fair preponderance of the evidence that Mrs. Sturdevant, the testatrix, had at the time of making this will the kind of capacity, understanding and mental strength, heretofore described to you, it will be your duty to find that she was of sound mind, and upon this issue render a verdict for the appellees. If, on the other hand, using this presumption of sanity as of probative force (and by probative force, gentlemen, I mean a force serving for proof), and as suggested, you are not satisfied by a fair preponderance of the evidence that Mrs. Sturdevant had at the time of executing this will the kind of mental strength and capacity which I have been describing to you, it will be your duty to find that she was not of sound mind, and your verdict upon this issue should be for the appellants, who are the contestants of this will.”
It is a settled rule of administrative jurisprudence that a man should be assumed to be sane, in the absence of evidence to the contrary. In Swift’s Treatise on Evidence (p. 189), published in 1810, this is described as a presumption of law. It has been said to be a general maxim in legal reasoning, having no peculiar relation to the law of evidence. Thayer’s Preliminary Treatise on Evidence at the Common Law, 335. Be this as it may, it has a just relation to the law of trials, and in civil causes where sanity is in question and the evidence preponderates on neither side, ought to control the verdict. The presumption of sanity is not in itself evidence,
The Superior Court was right in charging the juiy that the presumption of sanity must be considered along with the evidence offered by the proponents, and cast into the scales in determining on which side the evidence preponderated, Let us take the simplest case in which such a point may arise. The proponents of a holographic will prove the handwriting, and rest. The contestants introduce evidence of insanity. A metaphysician, addressing an academy of metaphysicians in terms of precision, might properly tell them that the evidence for the proponents was the existence of the testator, at the date of the will, and that in balancing this fact against the evidence of incapacity offered by the contestants, some weight should be given to the presumption which the law prima faeie makes that every man’s mind is sound. Such an instruction, however, would only confuse an ordinary jury. It is of no service to them, when called upon to pass on the question of testamentary capacity, to have their attention directed to the fact, which nobody disputes, that the man was alive when he signed the will, or to be told that this is to be considered as evidence, from which the law draws a certain inference. Any allusion to this intermediate step in proof can be safely omitted, and the presumption of sanity brought directly before them, without raising subtle distinctions as to’ its proper source. The important thing for the jury to understand in the case at bar was that the proponents had something to rely on beside the positive evidence which they had introduced to show testamentary capacity; that this was to be considered together with that evidence; and that it consisted in a presumption, recognized in law as based on
Nor is there any ground for the objection that it gave an inadequate explanation of what is sufficient to constitute testamentary capacity. The jury were told that it was sufficient if the mind and memory of the testatrix were sound enough to enable her to know and understand the business in which she was engaged at the time when she executed the paper in question. This is the fundamental test, and it was stated in proper form. Kimberly’s Appeal, 68 Conn. 428, 439.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.