Dawley v. Congdon

105 A. 393, 42 R.I. 64, 1919 R.I. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 31, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 105 A. 393 (Dawley v. Congdon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dawley v. Congdon, 105 A. 393, 42 R.I. 64, 1919 R.I. LEXIS 5 (R.I. 1919).

Opinion

Sweetland, J.

The above entitled cause is the appeal of William P. Dawley from the decree of the probate court of the city of Newport admitting to probate the will of Alice B. Slocum, late of Newport, deceased, including the eighth clause to which reference will hereafter be made.

Said appeal was heard before a justice of the Superior Court sitting with a jury and resulted'in the verdict that the instrument purporting to be the will of Alice B. Slocum, including the clause referred to as the eighth clause, is the will of said Alice B. Slocum.

The cause is before us upon the appellant’s exceptions to certain rulings upon the admission of testimony made by *66 said justice in the course of the trial, and upon the appellant’s exception to the refusal of said justice to grant the appellant’s motion that said justice direct the jury to return a verdict in favor of the instrument without said additional or eighth clause.

It appears that Mrs. Slocum, the testatrix was an elderly woman at the time of her death on August 22, 1917. It is stated by the appellant that at that time she was over eighty, and by the appellees that she was over seventy five years of age. She had been a widow since 1913. Her next of kin at the time of her death, and for a year at least prior thereto, were the appellant William P. Dawley, his brother Perry C. Dawley, the legatee named in said eighth or residuary clause, and Mary S. Langdon. William P. Dawley and Perry C. Dawley were the sons of a deceased sister of Mrs. Slocum, and Mrs. Langdon was the daughter of her deceased brother. Since the death of her husband the testatrix had lived in the family of the appellant. Perry C. Dawley visited her frequently and at her request had attended to certain matters of business for her. He appears especially to have had her confidence and esteem. Mrs. Langdon lived in Massachusetts. The testatrix rarely saw her and did not regard her favorably. On July 30,1915, Mrs. Slocum executed with legal formality said instrument as and for her last will and testament. At the time of its execution said instrument included at the foot of its third page the paragraph referred to throughout the trial in the Superior Court and in this court as the “eighth clause,” which paragraph is as f ollows: ‘ ‘ Eighth: All the rest, residue and remainder of my property of every kind and description, to which I may, in any way, be entitled at my decease, I give, devise,and bequeath unto Perry C. Dawley and his heirs forever; because of his kindness to me.” Said instrument was prepared in accordance with the instructions of the testatrix by the attorney at law who had acted as her counsel during about twenty-five years before her death. Said attorney was one of the witnesses to the execution of the will. After *67 its execution at her home the will was left in the possession of the testatrix. She died on August 22, 1917. On the day of her funeral, August 25, 1917, after the burial, said will was found by the appellant, his wife and the executor in a paper envelope which was contained in a locked tin box at the bottom of a locked trunk belonging to the testatrix. Said trunk was at that time in the bedroom which had been occupied by the testatrix during the last years of her life and in which she died. When so found that portion of the third page, upon which said eighth clause had been written, had been removed, apparently by cutting. The portion of the third page so removed, as far as the evidence discloses, was not found among the effects of the testatrix. The executor who was the proponent of the will claimed that said eighth clause had not been removed by the testatrix or by her direction and that said eighth clause should be probated as a part of said will. The will was typewritten and the executor sought to establish the contents of said eighth clause, and that it was part of the will when the same was executed, by the testimony of said attorney at law. At the time the will was typewritten in his office said attorney had caused a carbon copy thereof to be made. This copy he had retained, and it was in his possession at the time of the trial.

(1) The first two exceptions of the appellant relate to the action of the justice in admitting certain testimony of the attorney at law with reference to said carbon copy. At the beginning of the trial the will as found, with the lower part of the third page removed, was before the court: Said attorney, while upon the stand as a witness, was asked the following question: “Q. I will ask you whether or not at the time that will was executed that third page had anything cut off at the bottom? ” To this the witness answered, “It did not.” He was then asked, “Q. So that, was there or was there not in the will at the time you left it intact, as part of the third page an eighth clause?” The appellant excepted to the ruling of the justice permitting this question *68 to be asked. To this question the witness replied, “There was.” The witness then testified to the making of the carbon copy of the instrument in his office, and the appellant excepted to the refusal of the justice to strike out the following answer of the witness: “This is the duplicate copy that was in my possession.” Said carbon copy of the will was then put in evidence. We find no merit in these exceptions of the appellant. The contention of the proponent was that the will as found by the executor was not the complete will of the testatrix; that the so-called eighth clause had not been revoked by her, and hence should be probated as a part of said instrument. To maintain his position it was essential for the proponent to establish to the satisfaction of the jury that said eighth clause was a part of the will at the time of its execution; that.it had not been removed therefrom by the testatrix or by some person in her presence and by her direction with the intention of revoking the same and also he must establish the contents of said eighth clause. Of these separate facts he might present evidence in any order that his convenience or his judgment dictated, unless the circumstances were such as to warrant the justice in requiring the proponent to adopt some other order of proof. The carbon copy, made as the attorney testified, furnished secondary evidence of high probative value as to the contents of said eighth clause, as it stood in the will when the same was executed.

(2) The third and fourth exceptions of the appellant relate to rulings of said justice permitting certain questions to be propounded to the appellant in cross-examination. Said questions are numbered 165 and 170 respectively. Said justice ruled that the questions were proper in cross-examination. Neither of the questions, however, were answered by the witness. We find that the appellant was not prejudiced by said rulings of the justice.

*69 (3) *68 Without objection the appellant while on the stand was asked and he answered a number of questions in cross-examination relating to the larceny of a gold chain be *69 longing to Mrs. Slocum by a son of the appellant who was a member of the appellant’s household. These questions are numbered 171 to 178 inclusive.

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Bluebook (online)
105 A. 393, 42 R.I. 64, 1919 R.I. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawley-v-congdon-ri-1919.