Franklin v. Franklin

16 S.W. 557, 90 Tenn. 44
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 557 (Franklin v. Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franklin v. Franklin, 16 S.W. 557, 90 Tenn. 44 (Tenn. 1891).

Opinion

Burton, J.

This is an issue of devisavit vel non 'The will in contest is one- purporting to have been [46]*46executed in October, 1871, by J. A. Franklin. Tbe testator died in November, 1871, and the paper sought to be probated was produced in 1885 by the defendant, Ed W. Franklin, who claims to have then discovered it in an old gun-box which had belonged to the testator. The discoverer and pro-pounder of the will is the brother of the testator and the beneficiary thereunder. It is unattested. Though claimed to be wholly in the handwriting of the testator, it is not insisted that it is good as a will of realty, because unattested and not found among the valuable papers of the testator. It is offered for probate as a common law will of personalty alone. The probate is resisted by J. W. Franklin, the father of both J. A. and Ed W. Franklin. There was a verdict for the will. Errors have been assigned upon the charge of the Court, and upon the rulings in admission and rejection of evidence. It is also assigned as error that the verdict is- unsupported by evidence sufficient in law to set up the paper as a will of personalty. There are no subscribing witnesses to the will, and there is no evidence that the testator ever acknowledged the paper as his will or that he ever claimed to have made a will. The evidence upon which it is sought to set. the writing up as a will, consists of proof that the entire paper is in the handwriting of the testator, and that it, on its face, purports to be the last will and testament of the writer of the paper, and is signed by him.

If such evidence is sufficient without other proof [47]*47of the execution, then there is abundant evidence, under the rule of this Court, to support the finding of the jury. Our statute of wills does not regulate the making • of wills of personalty; but it is well settled in this State that, without regard to the statute, two witnesses to the factum of the .will are necessary to the probate of such a will. This was the rule of the civil law, and hence the rule in the ecclesiastical courts of England. This rule of the civil law did not apply exclusively to wills, for under that jurisprudence every fact was required to be established by two witnesses or circumstances equivalent to two. It has never been ruled that such witnesses should be subscribing witnesses, nor witnesses to the execution of the paper. “It is enough,” said this Court in Johnson v. Fry, “that the proof made by two should be equivalent to that.” 1 Cold., 102.

If the paper purport to be a testament, and the body of the will be shown by two witnesses to be in the handwriting of the testator, such will is sufficiently proven as a will of personalty, though there be no other proof of its writing or publication. As to wills of chattels, Blackstone says: “As to written wills, they need not any witness of their publication. I speak not here of devises of lands, which are entirely another thing, a conveyance by statute, unknown to feudal or common law, and not under the same jurisdiction as personal testaments. But a testament of chattels, written in the testator’s own hand, though it [48]*48has neither his name nor seal to it, nor witnesses present at its publication, is good, provided sufficient proof cau be had that it is in his handwriting.” 2 Black. Com., 501.

So, in the early case of 8ucjge.it v. Kitchell, Judge Green said: “It is not always required that the proof shall be by subscribing witnesses; as, if the will be written in the testator’s own hand, although it is not signed by him nor attested by subscribing witnesses, it is good, provided his handwriting be sufficiently proven. This proof must, in general, be by two witnesses.” 6 Ter., 427.

There was no error of which appellant can ■complain in the charge of the Court as to the ■quantity or quality of evidence necessary to prove such a will; and the assignment of error touching this question, and that concerning the sufficiency •of the evidence to support the verdict, must be ■overruled.

It was not error to admit the evidence of Ed W. Erankliñ. He was not a subscribing witness, .and therefore not excluded by our statute of wills. 'That he was interested, went to his credit; it did •not render him incompetent.

The appellant sought to defeat this will by .■showing that it was a forgery, perpetrated by the beneficiary and propounder. On cross-examination, Hr. Eranklin was asked if theretofore he had not .forged the name of his father-in-law, the late .Hamel Hillman; and if he had not forged the [49]*49signature of Dr. Carr, and of his wife. He answered that lie had not. It was then proposed to prove that, in fact, lie had been guilty of the various forgeries he had denied. Upon objection, all swell evidence was excluded. . There was no error in this.

The fact of forgery of a particular paper cannot be shown by proof of other crimes of the same kind. If it had been shown that he had written this will, and the defense was that it was written innocently or by direction of the testator, then, to show guilty purpose or motive, it might have been admissible to show other offenses of the same kind. That was not the question here. That this paper had been written by Ed Eranklin had neither been admitted or proven. It was not competent to prove that he had written this will by proof that he had forged other papers. The motive of the witness ivas not involved. The evidence ivas of course incompetent for tlie purpose of contradicting him. The questions propounded were as to matters collateral, and the appellant was bound by his answers, unless he was entitled to the evidence subsequently offered as independent proof. ■

The same witness was on cross-examination asked if he had not the habit of using morphine and whisky to excess. This he denied. It was then sought to show that ho had both of these vices, and that he had carried the use of these things to such excess as to impair his mind and affect his moral character, thus rendering him capable of [50]*50peqmtrating crimes which, in a normal state he would have avoided. This evidence was properly rejected. If in his defense of a- criminal charge it had been sought to show that he was criminally irresponsible, such proof might ,have been admissible. But when offered as tending to show him capable of committing a forgery, it was wholly inadmissible. If offered by way of attacking his veracity, it was equally incompetent.

Appellant assigns error upon the' ruling of the Court that expert witnesses could not compare letters written by the proponent of the will, and admitted to be genuine, with the disputed will, and say from such comparison whether or not the writer of such letters was not the writer of the will. There was no error in this. Comparison of handwriting by experts was at common law inadmissible.

Upon a former trial of this case we held that it was not error to exclude opinions of experts based ujdou a comparison of the disputed will with genuine signatures and letters of. J. A. Franklin.

In at least two cases reported this Court had previously ruled that writings other than the one in dispute could not be introduced in evidence for the purpose of comparison by witnesses or jury. Clark v. Rhodes, 2 Heis., 207; Wright v. Hessey, 3 Bax., 45.

It is, however, insisted that the Act of February 26, 1889, is subsequent to these decisions, and the rule thereby changed. That Act is in these words:

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 557, 90 Tenn. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-v-franklin-tenn-1891.