Dawson v. Smith

8 Del. 335
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Del. 335 (Dawson v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dawson v. Smith, 8 Del. 335 (Del. Ct. App. 1866).

Opinion

*337 By the Court.

It is alleged in this case that a will was duly made by the deceased in the year 1857, but that it has been lost, and whether that be so, is one of the questions-involved in the issue sent up to be tried here, and that must not only first be proved before any testimony can be admitted as to the contents of it, but can only be proved by evidence aliunde and by paroi. The objection is therefore overruled.

The witness proceeded and stated that he saw her sign that will, and signed it himself as a witness in her presence, and also saw Nathanial B. Smithers do the same. Samuel' Oulbreth and his wife were present at the time, and after it was signed and executed, Mr. Oulbreth handed it to the deceased and she put'it in her reticule.

*338 " Rebecca Frazier

testified to the same effect, and that she saw Samuel Culbreth take some old papers out of her desk and carry them away with him.

William F. Culbreth

testified that Samuel Gulbreth died in October 1864, and that he was his administrator, and had made with James F. Allee a diligent search among his papers for the will of the deceased made in 1857, but had notbeen able to find it. They found, however, among his papers, a will of hers executed in 1842, and notes of another will of hers.

N. B. Smiihers

was then recalled and proved the notes of the will of 1857.

Ridgeli/, (Pennington with him).

The introduction of any testimony as to the note of the will, is not admissible, because there had not been sufficient proof of a proper search made for it, or of its loss in particular, to warrant the admission of secondary evidence as to the contents of it. There was no direct proof of its loss whatever, and under all the facts proved, the presumption of law would be, and in point of fact should b'e, not that it was lost, but that it was intentionally destroyed by the deceased herself, with the view to revoke, or to cancel and annul it, as it passed into her own hands immediately after its execution, and continued afterward in her own possession until the disappearance of it.

Fli Saulsbury (Massey with him).

That constituted the very question sent up by the Register to be tried be *339 fore a jury,' and was entirely a question of fact, and not of law, which Was to be decided by them. First, whether such a will had been made by the deceased; secondly, and if so, whether it had been lost, or intentionally destroyed by her; and thirdly, if it had been lost, and not destroyed by her, whether the notes of it sent up contains sufficient evidence of its contents to he admitted to probate before him, as her last will and testament. And these were all purely questions of fact to be decided by the jury under the issue.

By the Court.

Proof of the execution of the will in 1857, and of its existence at one time as a formal will of the deceased, and of a diligent search for it since her death without its having been found, is, we think, sufficient ground for the admission of paroi evidence to prove the substance and contents of it. The case before us is somewhat peculiar in its character, but such is the rule of evidence in regard to records, deeds and other instruments of writing. As to the presumption under the facts and circumstances proved in the case, that the deceased may herself have destroyed it anima revocandi, suggested by the counsel for the defendants, it is purely a question of fact to be determined by the jury under the issue sent here to be tried by them, and not by the court on any assumption or presumption whatever.

The witness then resumed his testimony and proved the notes, which consisted very much of a will in form and at full length, and read the same and stated that he had drawn from it the will of the deceased in 1857, and that he had no doubt from his recollections of it and the transaction, that the provisions contained in the notes, or original and rough copy of her will at that time, were incorporated into the will, as it was subsequently drawn therefrom and was signed and executed by her. The several items as he had just read them from the rough copy, he believed composed the will of the deceased as it was executed by her.

The counsel for the plaintiff next offered in evidence the *340 deposition of Philip 0. Culbreth, since deceased, taken before the Register on the propounding for "probate of a former will made by the deceased in 1852.

To which the counsel for the defendants objected, first, because it was not on a trial between the same parties as were now before this court, and secondly, because it was not an issue as to the same, but a different paper writing purporting to contain the substance of a subsequent will made by her.

The counsel for the plaintiff replied and cited 4 Serg. Rawle, 203.

The Court

overruled the objection, and remarked that the rule of evidence in such cases does not require entire mutuality or identity of the parties in the two suits. In respect to depositions it is in general sufficient if the matters in issue or controversy were the same in both cases, and the party against whom the deposition is offered, had full power to cross-examine the witness. For where the same matter is substantially in controversy in the two cases, though the parties may be different, and the one against whom the deposition is offered had full opportunity to examine the witness, it is admissible. 1 Greenl. Ev. sec. 553. Besides, in cases of this kind, it is competent for the Register to order any deposition before him, to be read in evidence on the trial of the issue before the jury.

Mathias Day

testified that in January 1864, the deceased, in a conversation with him, said she had a will and that it was in the possession of Samuel Culbreth, and when she went to Dover she meant to get it from him. She also said he had her land in a way she never intended for him to have it.

After the argument of the case by counsel on the facts proved,

The Court, Gilpin, C, J., charged the jury,

that it had been sufficiently proved by the evidence in the case that *341 the deceased duly made and executed a will in the year 1857, and as there was no proof that she ever made one after that, if it had been shown to their satisfaction by the evidence in the case, that after it was made, she took possession of it, and that it continued in her possession until it disappeared, the presumption would be that she voluntarily destroyed it anima revocandi, that is to say, with the intention of revoking or annulling it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Del. 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-smith-delsuperct-1866.