Harley v. Williams

145 P. 957, 50 Mont. 142, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 6
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1915
DocketNo. 3,435
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 145 P. 957 (Harley v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harley v. Williams, 145 P. 957, 50 Mont. 142, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 6 (Mo. 1915).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE - SANNER

delivered the opinion of the court.

Rachel E. Williams died on March 3, 1907, leaving an estate worth approximately '$100,000, and only- one near relative, a granddaughter, then aged seven years, the appellant in this court. An instrument in writing, purporting to be the last will and testament of Mrs. Williams, was offered by respondents for probate, by- the terms of which the sum of $500 is given to the appellant, $1,000 to Mary Sullivan, a domestic, and all the balance of the estate to Andrew J. Davis, of Butte. Mr. Davis and Mr. Lyman M. Harley are named as executors. This instrument is not holographic, but, with the exception of the signatures and [149]*149the places of residence of the attesting witnesses, it is entirely written in the handwriting of a distinguished attorney of Butte, who was not present at its execution. It occupies the whole of one and part, of a second page. On the first page is the body of the instrument, the signature of Mrs. Williams, and the following part of the attesting clause: ‘ ‘ The foregoing writing was signed, published and declared by Rachel E. Williams.” On the second page is the remainder of the attesting clause in due form, the signature of Frank C. Norbeck, with his place of residence, and the signature of Warren A. E'stabrook, with his place of residence.

The right to have this instrument received and regarded as the last will and testament of Mrs. Williams is contested by the appellant on several grounds, the chief of which is that Mrs. Williams did not declare to the attesting witnesses that it was her will, and that they were not requested by her to attest it as such. Trial was to the court, Hon. J. B. Poindexter, judge presiding without a jury. Mr. Norbeck was not personally present or within the county, but his deposition, taken at the instance of appellant, was on file. So far as the question now involved is concerned, the respondents rested upon the attesting clause, the testimony of Mr. Estabrook, which was received without challenge, and the testimony of Mr. Harley, which was admitted over the vigorous contention of appellant that it was inadmissible because of his interest in the outcome and because both attesting witnesses were before the court. The deposition of Mr. Norbeck was then read into the record as part of appellant’s contest, and it was agreed, to save repetition, that all the testimony given should be considered in the record for all purposes. Findings of fact and conclusions of law were filed in favor of the will,, and a decree was entered admitting the same to probate. Notice of intention to move for a new trial was served and filed; and, Judge Poindexter having been disqualified, this motion was heard by Hon. R. Lee McCulloch as judge presiding. The motion was denied; the order expressly stating, however, that “the testimony of Lyman M. Harley has been disregarded.” [150]*150From tbis order, as well as from the judgment, the contestant has appealed.

It is advisable at the outset to determine the nature and effect [1] of the order appealed from. In this connection counsel for respondents say: “It will.be presumed, we believe, that Judge McCulloch did not assume that it was his province to reject evidence properly introduced and received at the trial before Judge Poindexter. If it was Judge McCulloch’s opinion that the findings made by Judge Poindexter, who tried the contest, were fully sustained by the evidence, without considering the testimony of Mr. Harley, his expression of such opinion was entirely proper and is fully sustained by the record. But the insertion of such opinion in the order overruling the motion for a new trial was not proper. ’ ’ The inference sought to be drawn is that the order is in effect a general one, to be considered by this court as having been made upon all the evidence, including the testimony of Mr. Harley, if that testimony be necessary to an affirmance. To this we cannot assent. The order denying a new trial expressly disregards the testimony of Mr. Harley and excludes it from consideration. The order is, in effect, a special one, and must be reviewed by this court as such, unless the rejection of Harley’s testimony was itself improper. The assumption that, because Judge McCulloch did not preside at the trial, he was powerless to reject the testimony of Mr. Harley is wholly unwarranted. It is quite true that, when a motion for new trial for insufficiency of the evidence is decided by a judge who did not preside at the trial, “he ought not to go further than to determine upon the dead record whether there is a decided preponderance of evidence against the verdict or decision,” and the presumptions commonly invoked to sustain the trial judge in like circumstances do not apply (Gibson v. Morris State Bank, 49 Mont. 60, 140 Pac. 76); but this does not mean that the reviewing judge is deprived of all judicial faculty in considering the record before him,- he must still “determine upon the dead record” where the preponderance of evidence rests; he must still estimate, as best he can, the weight and sufficiency of the evi[151]*151dence as a whole and the value of its component parts, for his legal powers and duties in determining the motion are the same as those of the trial judge. That the trial judge, in passing upon a motion for new trial, can, in the exercise of a sound discretion, disregard any testimony which he deems unworthy is not open to doubt, and we can see no reason why a reviewing judge should not similarly determine whether any given evidence was improperly received or was so unsatisfactory in character that its want of value is patent on the printed page.

We do not hold, however, that Harley’s testimony was improperly received, and do not assume that Judge McCulloch so held. The contentions of appellant are that Harley was disqualified for interest under section 4732, Revised Codes; and that his testimony was inadmissible, at least when received, under section 7400, Revised Codes. Neither position is sound. Section 4732 has no application, for the reason that Harley was not a subscribing witness, was not put forward as one, and was [2] not treated as such. While the fees to accrue to the executor might well be called an interest, to be considered in weighing his testimony, they are, in the eye of the law, but compensation for services, and can in no sense be denominated a “legacy,” or a “devise,” or a “beneficial gift,” within the meaning of section 4732. Section 7400 is sought to be applied on the theory that both attesting witnesses were “present in the county,” for which reason, it is asserted, other testimony to prove due execution could not be received at all, and certainly not until after they [3, 4] had been called and examined. Where the. attesting witnesses are present in the county, they must be called and examined, and this means, of course, that under such circumstances other testimony to prove the will cannot be received to the exclusion of theirs; but their testimony, when given, is not necessarily conclusive upon either party. (Farleigh v. Kelley, 28 Mont. 421, 72 Pac. 756, 63 L. R. A. 319.) It was therefore the right of respondents to have the testimony of Harley at some stage of the proceeding and to have it on their preliminary proof, if they deemed it necessary to the establishment of a [152]*152prima facie ease.

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Bluebook (online)
145 P. 957, 50 Mont. 142, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harley-v-williams-mont-1915.