184 Ga. 831 | Ga. | 1937
On application to probate the will of her father, S. A. Jones, Mrs. Annie Watkins filed a caveat on the following grounds: (1) “That at the time of making and executing the will offered for probate the testator was not of sound and disposing mind and memory.” (2) “That said will by item 5 bequeathed to her a certain note in the sum of $110, with interest thereon, while at the time said purported will was executed this caveatrix, by and through her husband, Homer Watkins, and for her benefit and account, had paid to the testator said note in full; and said note having been fully paid, the testator had no interest therein and nothing to will or bequeath to this caveatrix; and for
At the conclusion of the testimony, the court directed a verdict for the propounders. The caveatrix moved for a new trial on the general grounds, and by an amendment of her motion complained of certain rulings on the evidence, and of the direction of the verdict. A new trial was refused, and she excepted.
The proof- as to the testator's testamentary capacity generally was positive and uncontradicted. The three attesting witnesses swore affirmatively that at the time the instrument was executed he was of sound' and disposing mind and memory; and as to this there was no issue, unless, as argued by counsel for plaintiff in error, the following from the testimony of Mrs. John Owens, J. F. Owens, B. Y. Dickey, and Dr. R. M. Gray, as quoted in their brief, was sufficient to take the case to the jury. Mrs. Owens testified: “Whether in my opinion he was capable of making a valid will, in so far as related to Mrs. Watkins, I believe if he had been right, he would have been making the will like the law was written. I don't think he was competent to make a valid will in so far as Mrs. Watkins was concerned. I don't think so.” Mr. Owens testified: “I had known Mr. Jones for thirty-seven year's, and have been in the family that long. I had been dealing with him and had been associated with him for that period of time, and was intimately acquainted with him. I know the state of his feeling toward Mrs. Watkins. From his feeling toward her that I mentioned awhile ago he was not competent to make a valid will in so far as it related to Mrs. Watkins. I just don't think, gentlemen, that he was.” Mr. Dickey testified in part as follows: “If he was mad at his daughter and wouldn’t speak to her, I doubt that he would have been competent to make a valid will as to her.” Dr. R. M. Gray testified: “If Mr. Jones had no cause to become offended at his daughter, Mrs. Watkins, except that she and her husband were anxious to see a consolidated school, and on that account he became very incensed at her, and wouldn’t visit her or permit her to visit him, and wouldn't speak to her for the rest of his life, for a period of about ten years; if that was true, in my opinion he was not such a person as would be competent to make a valid will in so far as that will related to Mrs. Watkins.”
No copy of the will is in the record, but it is fairly inferable that the testator divided his estate among his other children, and excluded the caveatrix, except that he bequeathed to her a note signed by her, which the testimony tended to show had been paid, though its-possession had been retained by the testator. She seeks to have it adjudged that the will is inoperative as to her, because the will, she contends, was executed under mistakes of facts. The first of these related to the note. It is claimed that, since it was paid, for him to bequeath the note was a mistake of fact. She says next that the will was executed under the belief that her husband was the bitter enemy of the testator, when in fact the contrary was true; and she says this was a mistake of fact under which the will was executed. By amendment she added that her father at the time was laboring under a mistake of fact that she had accused him of killing her son’s pig; and that at the time he had mistakenly formed the opinion that she was actively opposing her father in the matter of a proposed school-bond election, when as a matter of fact she was taking no open and active part in it. The Code, § 113-210, declares: “A will executed under a mistake of fact as to the existence or conduct of an heir at law of the testator is inoperative, in so far as such heir at law is concerned, but the testator shall be deemed to have died intestate as to him.” The note referred to had certain credits entered on it,
That ground of the caveat which sets up, as a matter of fact, that the testator believed the caveatrix was actively opposing the opinion and desire of her father in the school matter, when as a matter of fact she was taking no open and active part therein, does relate to a mistake of fact as to the conduct of an heir at law of testator, to wit, the caveatrix; but the evidence in the record does not support the contention of the caveatrix as to this matter. She testified that he became offended with her about the consolidated school, that they expressed conflicting opinions about it, and that he ordered her out of his house, and never spoke to her again; but there is no evidence tending to show that he was laboring under a mistake of fact on the subject; none to indicate she was taking no active and open part in the controversy, and none to indicate that he believed that she was, except that she testified that he and she and another were arguing the pros and cons of the controversy, and that in the midst of the argument he ordered her out of his house, and she went. There was no room for any mistake of fact, as her testimony relates to what happened, and there is no other on the subject.
The remaining ground is that in making the will her father was laboring under a further mistake of fact that the caveatrix had accused testator of killing her son’s pig. There is an entire absence in the record of anything to support this ground of the caveat. The subject is hinted at in the testimony of Mrs. Owens, but no proof offered by that witness or any other to sustain the allegations of this ground. The result is that there was no evidence that would have justified the jury in finding that the will was the result of a mistake of fact as to the conduct of the heir.
The special grounds of the motion relate to rulings excluding testimony. Had it all been admitted, it could not change the
Judgment affirmed.