Harris v. Harris

61 Ind. 117
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 61 Ind. 117 (Harris v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Harris, 61 Ind. 117 (Ind. 1878).

Opinion

Howk, J.

On the second day of the April term, 1878, of the court below, the clerk thereof reported to the court, that, on the 11th day of April, 1873, he had issued letters of administration upon the estate of Joshua Har-. ris, deceased, to Thomas "W. Morgan.

On the same day of said term, Simeon K. Crume produced and showed to the court a copy of the last will of said¡ decedent, and of the record of the prohate thereof, duly certified and authenticated by the clerk and judge, having custody thereof, of the county court of Owen

[119]*119I county, in the State of Kentucky, and also filed his application in writing, asking the court to order the said copy to be filed, recorded and allowed as the last will of said decedent.

Thereupon, on the same day, the appellees, "William Harris, Sophia Rice, Melissa Gambold and Thomas W. • Morgan, administrator of the estate of said Joshua Har- : ris, deceased, filed their complaint in writing, in the court below, against the appellants.

In their complaint, the appellees alleged, in substance, that said William Harris was a brother, and said Sophia Rice and Melissa Gambold were sisters, and the said Morgan was the administrator of the estate, of said Joshua Harris, deceased; that said decedent had neither father.nor mother living at the time of his death, nor did he ever have wife or children; that, on the 17th day of : April, 1878, the appellants Simeon K. Crume and James Harris presented and produced to the clerk of said court a document or paper purporting to be the copy of the last will of said Joshua Harris, made on the 15th day of March, 1873, attested by J. W. Johnson and II. P. Montgomery, and proven before one Thomas A. Ireland, clerk of the Owen County Court, in the State of Kentucky, by • which supposed will said Joshua Harris devised four thousand dollars to the appellant James Harris, four thousand dollars to the appellant Simeon K. Crume, and . one thousand dollars to Haney Ann Murray, a person unknown to the appellees; that the appellees were informed that said supposed legatees were asking to have the said supposed will admitted to probate and entered of record,. in Hendricks county, Indiana; that the appellees objected to the probate and record of said will and denied the validity thereof, for the reason that said Joshua Harris was not a man . of sound mind or disposing memory, at the time of the execution of said will; “that said Joshua Harris had been duly convicted on a charge of insanity by the Common Pleas Court of Hendricks county, and; [120]*120committed to the Hospital for the Insane in the State of Indiana, in the year 1860, and’remained there in confinenlent for six years, or thereabouts, from which insanity he never recovered: ” that said Joshua was old and infirm, both in body aud mind, at the time of the execution of said supposed will, and easily influenced and persuaded; and that said James Harris and Simeon E. Grume, being- in the company of said Joshua Harris, and having unusual control and influence over him,- by the exercise of undue influence over him, procured him to execute said will, if he ever did execute it.

The appellees further alleged, that “Joshua Harris,who was a resident of Hendricks county, Indiana, for about thirty or forty years, departed this life on the 29th flay of March, 1873,- while temporarily absent from this State, in the State of Kentucky; and that said deceased was, at the time of his death, the owner of personal property in the county of Hendricks and State of Indiana, consisting of promissory notes, money, etc., of the probable Value of seven thousand dollars.”

The appellees prayed, that, upon a full hearing of this cause, the said supposed will might be set aside and held for naught, and the' estate of said Joshua Harris be adrflinistei’ed as an intestate estate, and the proceeds be distxibuted under the law, and they demanded judgment for cb'sts aixd for all proper relief.

This complaint was duly verified.

The appellants James Harris, Simeon K. Crume and Nancy Amx Murray, answered the cohiplaint by a general denial, and the other defendants made default.

The issues joined were tided by a jury,- and a- verdict wás returned, as follows:

“ The jury is directed by the court to find a- special verdict o'n the following issues:

■ “ 1st. Is the plaintiff William Harris the brother, and áre the plaintiffs Sophia Rice and Melissa Gambold the sistex’s and heirs at law of the deceased, Joshua Hams, [121]*121and is the plaintiff Thomas W. Morgan the administrator of his'estate?

“Answer. Yes.

“2d. Was the said decedent, Joshua Harris, at the time of the execution of the will presented for record in this proceeding, a man of unsound mind?

“3d. Had the said Joshua Harris, at the time of the execution of said will, sufficient disposing memory to understanding! y dispose of his estate?

“Answer. Ho.

“4th. Hid the defendants James Harris and Simeon K. Crume, or either of them, procure the execution of said will by the said Joshua Harris, by the exercise of undue influence over the said Joshua Harris?

“Answer. Yes.”

Thereupon the appellants James Harris and Simeon K. Crume moved the court, in writing, in ai’rest of judgment, for the following reasons, to wit:

“1st. Because the court has not jurisdiction of the subject of this action; and,

“2d. Because the complaint in this cause does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.”

This motion was overruled,-and to this decision the appellants excepted. Thereupon judgment -was rendered by the court below, that the said supposed will was null and void, and ought not to be allowed as the last will of said Joshua Harris, deceased, and that the appellees recover of the appellants' the costs of this action; from which judgment this appeal is now here prosecuted.

In this court the appellants have assigned the following alleged errors:

1. That the court below erred in overruling their motion, made at the conclusion of the introduction and hearing of the evidence, to withdraw the submission of the trial of said cause from the jury, and to discharge the jury from further consideration of the same;

[122]*1222. That the court erred in overruling their motion in arrest of judgment; and,

■ 3. That the complaint in this case did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

The questions presented by these alleged errors will be considered and decided in the order of their assignment.

1. It appears from a bill of exceptions properly in the record, that, after all the evidence on the trial of this cause had been introduced and heard, the appellants moved the court in writing, “to withdraw the submission of the trial of this cause from the jury, aud to discharge the jury from the further consideration of this cause.”

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Bluebook (online)
61 Ind. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-harris-ind-1878.