170 Ind. 74 | Ind. | 1908
Albert Davenport died testate, leaving as his next of bin the children of a deceased brother and the daughter of a deceased sister. He bequeathed to his niece, the daughter of his deceased sister, $10, and the balance of his estate, alleged to be $50,000 in value, to his nephews and niece, the children of his deceased brother. The appellant, Mary Terry, the recipient of the $10 legacy, instituted this suit to contest the validity of her uncle’s will on the grounds (1). of undue execution, and (2) want of testamentary capacity.
The overruling of her motion for a new trial is the only error assigned.
The view we have taken of the case on the merits persuades us to pass by some questions raised by appellees involving the regularity and sufficiency of the appeal.
The court assumes the responsibility of error for any instruction he submits to the jury, whether signed or unsigned,
It is not pretended that any of the language used in any of the instructions was, of itself, erroneous or improper, but the insistence is that the frequent recurrence to the same facts was inclined to impress the jury with the belief that the court regarded such facts as controlling. Courts, in civil cases, at least, generally look upon the repetition of a correct proposition of law as harmless. The purpose of instructions is to guide the jury in the application of right principles to the facts of the case, and in such principles the jury cannot be too firmly grounded. Coffman v. Reeves (1878), 62 Ind. 334, 343; Murray v. New York, etc., R. Co. (1883), 103 Pa. St. 37, 43; Gran v. Houston (1895), 45 Neb. 813, 64 N. W. 245; 1 Blashfield, Instructions to Juries, §169.
In the ease of Murray v. New York, etc., R. Co., supra, it was said:' “This instruction was not too strong, and, as it was good law, its repetition to the jury could have done no harm. * * * I do not think seventy times seven would have been too often.” We do not, however, hold that even a correct proposition may in all cases be repeated without limit. All we decide is that the facts of the case warranted the presiding judge in the exercise of care in cau
It is also affirmed by appellant that the thirteenth instruction was both erroneous and in such obvious conflict with other instructions given, in which testamentary capacity was properly defined, as to be confusing and misleading-
Judgment affirmed.