Furlow's Adm'r v. Merrell

23 Ala. 705
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 23 Ala. 705 (Furlow's Adm'r v. Merrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Furlow's Adm'r v. Merrell, 23 Ala. 705 (Ala. 1853).

Opinion

GIBBONS, J.

The court, in our opinion, committed no error in permitting the answer to the fifth interrogatory set out in the bill of exceptions to be read to the jury. The objections were, that this answer “was not responsive to the interrogatory, and because the same was illegal and irrelevant, the question being as to the will of George M. Hill, and the answer being as to a will of George M. Hill.” It will be seen, when this answer is compared with the interrogatory, that it is for the most part directly responsive thereto. Nor can we see how the testimony was illegal or irrelevant. It is true, the will, when produced, purports to have been signed by George Hill, whereas [713]*713the interrogatory is as to a will of George M. Hill. In the answer to this interrogatory, as well as in answer to the fourth cross-interrogatory, also sot out in the bill of exceptions, the witness seems to speak indifferently sometimes of George Hill and sometimes of George M. Hill, but, as explained in the answer to tho fourth cross-interrogatory, always meaning the same person, viz., tho father of Cynthia Hill, alias Cynthia Furlow. If there was any doubt as to the- competency of tho answer to the fifth direct interrogatory standing by itself, that doubt, in our opinion, is entirely dispelled by the answer to the fourth cross-interrogatory; and this was introduced by the plaintiff below, in order to show the answer to the fifth direct interrogatory inadmissible. The effect, in our opinion, is the very reverse of what was intended by the party introducing it, as tho witness therein explains that, in speaking of a will made by George Hill or George id. Hill, he is all the while speaking of tho same person, and of him who made the will.

The defendant offered in evidence a paper purporting to be a copy of the will of George Hill. The bill of exceptions states, that the “plaintiff waived the necessity of the certificate of the judge to the'alleged copy will annexed, and admitted that W. B. Carter was the proper ordinary.” This copy will was appended to the answer of the fourth cross-interrogatory above referred to, which was offered by the plaintiff in evidence to the court, to show the incompeteney of the answer to the fifth direct interrogatory. The language of the bill of exceptions is, “ which annexed paper was attached to the deposition of Allen Bartlett, with the certificates and endorsements thereon.” The copy set out in the bill of exceptions has no certificate attached to it, and the only (indorsement which wo observe is as follows :' “ Proven in open court, this 6th June, 1814, Coleman Pendleton, C. O.” Tho objections to the introduction of this paper were : “ that it did not purport to be the will of George M. Hill inquired after; 2nd, because of the uncertainty of tho proof, as to the identity of tho will and of tho testator, the will deposed to being attested by only two witnesses, and that offered in evidence was attested by three ; 3rd, because there was no sufficient evidence of probate or of the same having been probated, that there was no such evidence offered’ as would [714]*714authorize the reading of said paper as a will, no evidence of letters testamentary or of administration with the will annexed; and 4th, because the bequest was to Cynthia Hill, when there was no such person in existence, as her rights were merged in her husband, John Fur low.” These several objections wo shall not take the trouble to examine minutely in detail, as the circumstances under which they are made relieve us from that necessity. According to a well established rule of this court, the bill of exceptions will be taken most strongly against the party excepting, and every reasonable and legitimate intendment will be made in favor of the decision of the court below. As above remarked, the above mentioned copy of the will comes appended to the fourth cross-interrogatory .of the plaintiff below, whilst the interrogatory itself is not set out. It is clear, if the plaintiff had called upon this witness to append a copy of the will to his answer to the fourth cross-interrogatory, he would thereby be estopped from objecting to it as evidence in the cause; having himself called for it, if the other party -wishes it it must be read to the jury.—Vide Edgar v. McCarn, at the present term. In the absence of the interrogatory propounded to the witness, we think it but fair to presume that the answer was responsive to the matter inquired of, and that the witness did that only which he was requested to do. If this is not the fact, and the plaintiff wished to rebut this legal presumption, he should have set out the interrogatory with the answer, in order that we might see whether the copy of the will was called for by it or not. There was, therefore, no error in permitting this copy of the will to be read to the jury at the instance of the defendant in the court below.

Independent, however, of these considerations, -we do not consider the objections well taken, as the three first raise the question, whether the will was in fact the one under which the defendant claimed title. This was a question of fact to be decided by the jury, and the plaintiff had the right to have the attention of the jury directed to this inquiry, by asking the appropriate charges, if he had thought proper. The fourth objection we could not sustain, if for no other reason than the fact that we are entirely unable to gather from the bill of exceptions whether Cynthia Hill was married or not when the will was made. This objection assumes such to be the fact; hut [715]*715the bill of exceptions does not, in our opinion, warrant the assumption. The only testimony upon the subject set out in the bill of exceptions is the answer of Bar Jett to the fifth direct interrogatory, in which he says, “he does not remember now whether Furlow was married to his wife Cynthia at the time the will was made, but he thinks he was.” But, if Furlow was married at the time the will was made, we apprehend his wife Cynthia would not loose a bequest, which happened to be made to her by her maiden name, if it was clear that slm was the person intended as the legatee by the testator.

The only remaining question is as to the charge of the court, and this raises the question as to what estate the said Cynthia Furlow, alias Cynthia Hill, took in the bequest made to her in the will. The words are: “I give to my daughter, Cynthia Hill, one negro girl, named Ann, together with all her increase, entirely for my daughter and her children.” The court charged the jury, that the above bequest gave to Cynthia Hill, alias Cynthia Furlow, “a separate estate, and excluded the marital rights of the husband ; and that no such estate vested in John Fur-low as rvould authorize his administrator to recover, and they must find for the defendant.” As above remarked, we are entirely unable to gather from the present record whether the legatee, Cynthia Hill, was married or not at the time the will was made, nor does it appear whether or not there were any children at the time that the testator died. These facts are, in our opinion, essential in order to determine, with any thing like precision, the rights that accrued to the legatee under the will at the time that the bequest took effect. Both the counsel in the cause, and the court, seem to have taken it for granted that the legatee was married at the time the will was made; but the only proof upon that subject which the record contains leaves the matter entirely in doubt. The words of the bequest, as we construe them, would under ordinary circumstances be sufficient to create a separate estate, if the legatee was married at the time the will was made, but not otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ala. 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furlows-admr-v-merrell-ala-1853.