Cousin v. Cousin

192 F.2d 377, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2725
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1951
Docket14401
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 192 F.2d 377 (Cousin v. Cousin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cousin v. Cousin, 192 F.2d 377, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2725 (8th Cir. 1951).

Opinion

COLLET, Circuit Judge.

The jurisdiction of this action to set aside a will results from diversity of citizenship and the amount involved. The plaintiff is the son of the decedent. Defendants are decedent’s second wife and her two daughters by a former marriage. The purported will gave the entire estate to defendants with the exception of $1 to plaintiff. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court. There was a jury trial. At the close of all the evidence the trial court directed a verdict for the defendants sustaining the will. The sole issue presented at the trial was whether the signature of the testator to the will was a forgery. The primary question for determination on this appeal is whether the plaintiff made a submissible case, and the principal question in determining that issue is the probative force to be given to opinion evidence by a handwriting expert and two lay witnesses that the signature was not that of the alleged testator, and whether that testimony and certain facts and circumstances were sufficient to present a jury question, in the face of the direct testimony of the subscribing witnesses that the signature was genuine. The issue involves the ascertainment and application of the law of Iowa.

By statute the Legislature of Iowa has provided that evidence respecting handwriting may be given by comparison made by experts or by the jury with writings of the same person which are proved to be genuine. I.C.A. § 622.25. Hammond v. Wolf, 78 Iowa 227, 42 N.W. 778. But the Iowa Supreme Court has, in giving effect to that statutory provision, placed its own evaluation on the comparative weight to be given such testimony when it is opposed by direct testimony that the signature was genuine.

The first case we find on the subject is that of Borland v. Walrath, 33 Iowa 130. That case involved the genuineness of the signature to a mortgage. The party whose signature was in question was living at the time of the trial and testified that she did not sign or acknowledge the mortgage. She supported that testimony by evidence of facts and circumstances consistent with her denial of the signature, such as the condition of her health at the time, her absence from the place where she was said to have signed it, and the absence of any circumstance, as the court put it, “tending to cast suspicion upon her credibility.” The evidence of the plaintiffs, who were seeking to enforce the mortgage and who' were contending that the signature was genuine, consisted of the testimony of the notary public who certified to the acknowledgment, and of “certain skilled witnesses” who testified to the genuineness of her alleged signature upon a comparison thereof of signatures admitted to' have been made by her. The court noted that the notary did not pretend to state from memory that the acknowledgment was made before him, but based his testimony that the acknowledgment was genuine upon his habit of making certificates of acknowledgment only when the acknowledgments were actually made before him. The court then said, 33 Iowa loc. cit. 132: “The case assumes this attitude: The direct and positive evidence of the defendant, denying her signature, is to be weighed against the certificate of acknowledgment and the uncontradicted evidence of experts as to the similarity of the signature in question to defendant’s gen- *379 trine writing, together with their opinion based thereon.”

It was conceded, that the certificate of acknowledgment made a prima facie case of the genuineness of the signature and that the party seeking to deny the signature “ought to make a clear case against the certificate of the officer in order to overthrow the instrument.” And it was further said that “Public policy demands that instruments in writing pertaining to the titles of real estate, which are authenticated in the manner pointed out by the law, should not be lightly set aside. But they cannot be sustained against the positive and explicit evidence of credible witnesses.” The court goes on to say that, 33 Iowa loc. cit. 133:

“The evidence as to the genuineness of the signature, based upon the comparison of handwriting and of the opinion of experts, is entitled to proper consideration and weight. It must be confessed, however, that it is of the lowest order of evidence, or of the most unsatisfactory character. It cannot be claimed that it ought to overthrow positive and direct evidence of credible witnesses who testify from their personal knowledge. It is most used and is most useful in cases of conflict between witnesses as corroborating testimony.

“On the one hand we have the signature to the mortgage sustained as genuine by the certificate of acknowledgment and by the comparison of handwritings, upon which are based opinions of experts; on the other we have the positive evidence of the defendant, whose credibility is not doubted, corroborated in a degree by other testimony. In our opinion the preponderance is in favor of defendant. We are free to admit that we are not without doubts, and it is probable that questions of this character can never be determined with absolute convictions of certainty. We feel, however, that it is safer to give credit to the positive evidence of a credible witness than to disregard it upon presumptions that are not of the highest order.”

The action was before the court without a jury. The trial court found that the signature was not genuine. The Supreme Court appears to have weighed the evidence and found with an expressed hesitancy that the preponderance was against the expert testimony and the notary’s certificate. In the comparison of this case with later expressions of the Iowa court, particularly Butman v. Christy, 197 Iowa, 661, 198 N.W. 314, ante, we deem it of significance that in this case the court treated the expert testimony supported by the notary’s certificate as sufficient to present a doubtful question on the weight of the evidence.

The next case called to our attention dealing with the question was Whitaker v. Parker, 42 Iowa 585. That case involved the genuineness of a signature to a note. The defendant denied that he signed the note. The signature upon the note was compared with other signatures of his, admitted to be genuine, and witnesses who were shown to be experts testified for the defendant, declaring that in their opinion the name signed to the note was not written by defendant. The plaintiff testified that the note was signed by defendant in his presence, and he was corroborated to some extent by facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence. The defendant’s denial of his signature was also corroborated by facts and circumstances testified to. That was a jury case, and the court instructed the jury that although the statute provided that evidence respecting handwriting may be given by comparison made by experts or by the jury with writings of the same person which are proved to be genuine, yet evidence of this character, while proper for the consideration of the jury, was of the “lowest order of evidence, or evidence of the most unsatisfactory character.” And that “It cannot be claimed that it ought to overthrow positive and direct evidence of' credible witnesses who testify from their personal knowledge, but it is most useful in cases of conflict between witnesses as corroborating testimony.” Evidently that instruction was drawn in accordance with the language of the opinion in Borland v. Walrath, supra. The jury found the signature to be genuine.

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Bluebook (online)
192 F.2d 377, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 2725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cousin-v-cousin-ca8-1951.