Gaines v. Hennen

65 U.S. 553, 16 L. Ed. 770, 24 How. 553, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 434
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 14, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 65 U.S. 553 (Gaines v. Hennen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaines v. Hennen, 65 U.S. 553, 16 L. Ed. 770, 24 How. 553, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 434 (1861).

Opinions

[556]*556Mi’. Justice "WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

We will first give some of the facts of this case, that the litigation which has grown out. of the wills, of Daniel Clark may be correctly understood. Without them it could not be.

They have been the subject of five appeals to this court. This is the sixth. It presents the controversy differently from what it has been before. It also presents points for decision which were not raised in either of the preceding cases. Some of those that were, however, will necessarily be mentioned in this opinion to illustrate their'connection with this case. They may be so considered without our coming at all into conflict with any judgment heretofore ’given concerning the. rights of the parties in any antecedent appeal’. ■ Our conclusion will differ from one of them on account of testimony in this case which was not in that, but they will not be contradictory; and because we'have information in this, concerning a piece of téstimony then relied upon, which we shall exclude in this, as inadmissible for.any purpose.

Four of the five appeals were decided by this court substantially in favor of Mrs. Gaines. The fifth was adverse, not in anywise excluding the re-examination of the only point then ruled by the use of the same testimony, and that which is new. Considered in. connection, both have impressed us with a different impression of the status of Mrs. Gaines’s legitimacy ' from that which this court did not then think was sufficiently proved, as we now think it b^as been. Now she is here with a support which her cases have not had before. She comes with a decision of the Supreme Court of Louisiana, directing, upon her application, that the will of Daniel Clark, dated at New Orleans, July 18,1818, as set forth in her petition, should be recognised'as his last will and testament, and that it should be recorded and executed as such. In that will her father acknowledges that his beloved Myra; then living in the family of Samuel B: Davis, is his legitimate and only daughter, and bequeaths to her all the estate, real and personal, of which he might die possessed, subject only to the payment of certain legacies named in the will.

Her petition for the probate of that will was first addressed [557]*557to the second district court of New Orleans, in which Judge ' J. N. Lea presided.

After asserting that such a will had been made by her father, its contents were set out as they were recollected by witnesses who had read it, and by other persons to whom it had been shown by the testator, with whom he spoke of it in the last moments of his life, as his last will and testament, in favor of his legitimate daughter,' Myra, charging them to take care of it, and telling them it would be found locked up in a trunk, describing it, which he had. placed in a certain room in his house.

■The will 'is then stated in the petition to have been olographic; that is, altogether written and signed in her father’s handwriting, with his seal attached to the same; that- immediately after his death diligent searches'were made for it; that it could not then be found; that it has not been since, and that it had been mislaid, lost, or destroyed.

She then declares,' that when her father died she was a •minor, absent from New Orleans, and living with Samuel B. Davis,, to whom and whose lady she.had been confided in the year 1812. • Judge Lea took cognizance of her petition, proceeded throughout its pendency with great judicial exactness and caution, and, as the wh.ole rcteord shows, with .official liberality to every one concerned in resisting the application, without in any particular having denied to the petitioner her rights. ■

The Judge, however, finally decided against the sufficiency of the proof to establish the will according to the requirements of the Civil Code of Louisiana, but without prejudice to the right of the petitioner to renew her application, with such proofs as might be sufficient to establish an olographic will. She applied for a new trial, and upon that being denied, solicited an' appeal to the Supreme Court, and that was allowed.

The Supreme Court tried the case. It differed with Judge Lea as to the proof which was required by the Code to establish a lost or destroyed olographic will. It reversed the judgment of the court below, and decreed that the will of Daniel [558]*558Clark, dated on the 13th July, 1813, should Be recognised as his last will and testament, and ordered it to be recorded and to be executed as such, it being posterior to'the will of May, 1811, which Relf and Chew had presented for probate, uuder which they had taken possession of the property of Daniel Clark, and had disposed of it to the entire exclusion of Mrs. Gaines from, any part of it — an estate shown by the proof in : the cause inti’oduced by the defendants, which had been regis- • tered or inventoried a short time before Clark’s death, at more than seven hundred thousand dollars, in which Clark and Coxe were interested, and an estate exclusively belonging to Clark of'two hundred and ninety-six thousand dollars.

But to return to the decree of the Supreme Court establishing the will of 1813; it must be understood, that its admission of' the will to probate does not exclude, any one who may desire to contest the will with Mrs. Gaines from doing it in a direct proceeding, or from using any means of defence by way of answer or exception, whenever she shall use the probate as a muniment' of title. And the probate does not conclude Relf and Chew, or any other parties having any interest to do so, to oppose the will, when it shall be set up against them, by such defences as the law.will permit in like cases. It was. with those qualifications of the probate of the-will of 1813 that the case was tried in the court below, and they have been constantly in our minds in the trial of the appeal here.

Upon the rendition of the probate by the Supreme Court, Mrs. Gaines filed her bill in this case. It shall be fully stated hereafter, with the defences made against it.

Before doing so, it- is due to the merits of the controversy to advert to the. decisions of the probate court'of the second district of New Orleans, and to that, of the Supreme Court reversing it, inore minutely than has been done. Especially, too, as they are coincident with our conclusions upon the testimony regarding the execution by Mr. Clark of his olographic will of 1813, and of the concealment or destruction of it after ' his death.

The Supreme Court adopts the prepared statement of the facts of the case as it was made by Judge Lea in the court [559]*559below. Its accuracy has never been denied by any one of the parties interested in this suit, nor by any one else.

It is as follows: «“The petitioner alleges, that on the 16th of August, 1813, the late Daniel Clark, her father, departed this life, having previously, on the 13th of July, executed an olgraphic wi.ll and testament, by which he recognised her as his legitimate and only daughter, and constituted her universal legatee. That the will was wholly written, dated, and signed,' in the handwriting of the testator, and was left among his papers at his residence; that after his death search had been made for it, but that' it was not found, and that it had been mislaid, lost, or destroyed.”

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Bluebook (online)
65 U.S. 553, 16 L. Ed. 770, 24 How. 553, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaines-v-hennen-scotus-1861.