In Re Estate of Cocklin

5 N.W.2d 577, 232 Iowa 266
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 22, 1942
DocketNo. 45998.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 5 N.W.2d 577 (In Re Estate of Cocklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Cocklin, 5 N.W.2d 577, 232 Iowa 266 (iowa 1942).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

Lewis A. Cocklin died a resident of Gris-wold, Cass county, Iowa, on August 10, 1940. He left a surviving spouse, Margaret Cocklin, but left no direct heirs. His only heirs at law are his surviving brothers and sisters. He had been sick for more than a year, suffering from cancer of the *267 liver. On August 10, 1940, a will made and executed by Lewis' A. Cocklin on February 3, 1940, was filed for probate. On the 16th day of August 1940, Fanny Watkins, a sister of Lewis A. Cocklin, filed objections to the probating of her brother’s will. On January 8, 1941, the contestant filed.amended and substituted objections, alleging therein, first, lack of testamentary capacity, and second, undue influence. The case was tried to a jury upon said issues. The trial was commenced on June 16, 1941. Many witnesses, both on behalf of the proponents and the contestant, testified. At the close of the contestant’s evidence, a motion for directed verdict was made by the proponents, which was overruled, and at the conclusion of the taking of all of - the evidence, the motion for a directed verdict •was renewed and overruled and the case submitted to the jury. The jury returned a verdict for the proponents, and the contestant Fanny Watkins has appealed.

There are but two errors argued by the appellant why the case should be reversed. First, it is contended that the court committed prejudicial error in not permitting the attorneys for the contestant to open and close the arguments to the jury. After the evidence was all taken and both sides had rested, the contestant asked that her attorneys be allowed the right to open and close the arguments. This request was denied by the trial judge, to which the contestant objected. The proponents were permitted to open and close the arguments to the -jury.

While the contestant raised no question as to the formal execution of the will, nowhere did she concede that it had been properly executed. In the instructions to the jury the'trial court said, we quote:

“There is no pleading or evidence in denial of the execution of said purported will of said Lewis A. Cocklin in controversy and the execution of said will by said Lewis A. Cock-lin is to be taken by you as established. ’ ’

The trial court submitted to the jury the only questions for it to decide when in its instructions it said, we quote:

“There are just two questions for you as jurors to determine in this case:

*268 “First: Did tbe testator, Lewis A. Cocklin, at tbe time be signed and executed tbe purported last will and testament referred to in evidence as exbibit one, bave testamentary capacity to make a will?

“Second: Was said purported will procured by undue influence practiced upon tbe testator by C. T. Cocklin and Harvey Cocklin ? ’ ’

These were tbe only two questions for tbe jury to decide, and tbe burden of proof was placed upon tbe contestant, tbe appellant in this court. She asked that her attorneys be permitted to open and close tbe arguments to tbe jury, and proper objection was made when that was denied.

This court was confronted with tbe question of the right to open and close the argument in a will contest in tbe case of In re Estate of Wharton, 132 Iowa 714, 722, 109 N. W. 492, 496. In tbe opinion we find this language:

“Error is assigned in allowing to contestant tbe opening and closing of the argument to tbe jury. But there was no controversy in tbe evidence as to tbe fact of tbe execution of the will, tbe only issues submitted to tbe jury being as to mental capacity, and undue influence, and there was no error, therefore, in bolding that the burden was on contestants which would entitle them to tbe opening and closing.”

In the case of O’Conner v. Kleiman, 143 Iowa 435, 438, 121 N. W. 1088, 1089, this court said:

Section 3701, Code, provides: ‘ In tbe argument, tbe party then having the burden of'the issue, shall have tbe opening and closing.’ Under this section tbe defendant was clearly entitled to open and close tbe argument, in view of tbe burden of proof which tbe instructions of the court laid upon him. The contention of plaintiff is that tbe general denial contained in defendant’s answer left tbe burden upon him, and therefore he was entitled to open and close. This contention can not be sustained. Tbe issue at this point is to be determined by the state of the evidence. Shaffer v. Des Moines Coal Co., 122 Iowa, 233; Schoonover v. Osborne, 117 Iowa, 427. In tbe state of tbe evidence, and under tbe instructions as tbe court gave them, tbe *269 clear and complete burden was laid upon the defendant; and, under the burden laid on him by the instructions, he would have been entitled to open and close even though his general denial had not been qualified by an express admission of the signing of the note. This is a question of procedure, however, on which we are always reluctant to base a reversal. As a rule, large discretion must be permitted on such a question to the trial court, and we will not reverse on such ground, unless an abuse of discretion and prejudice appear. In view of the fact that, the trial court erroneously laid upon the defendant an undue burden of proof, as will be indicated in another paragraph, it emphasized the right of the defendant to open and close, and necessarily emphasized the prejudice resulting from the court’s refusal to permit it, and the defendant is clearly entitled to a reversal on one ground or the other. ’ ’

Section 11487 of the 1939 Code of Iowa provides as follows:

<<* * * ^ ^ argmment, the party then having the burden of the issue shall have the opening and closing * ®

Clearly, in this ease, under the record, where there was no contest as to the proper execution of the will and where the court in its instructions stated that there was “no pleading or evidence in denial of the execution of the will,” and rightfully placed upon the contestant the burden of proving the two questions which the jury were to determine — first, whether Lewis A. Coeklin had testamentary capacity to make a will, and second, whether there was undue influence practiced upon the testator — the contestant had tbe legal right to open and close the argument and should have been given that right by the court. But, as said in the case of O’Conner v. Kleiman, supra:

1 ‘ This is a question of procedure, however, on which we are always reluctant to base a reversal. As a rule, large discretion must be permitted on such a question to the trial court, and we will not reverse on such ground, unless an abuse of discretion and prejudice appear.”

The court is of the opinion in the case at bar that there *270 was not such an abuse o£ discretion or showing of prejudice as would justify this court in reversing the case on this ground.

It is next argued that the lower court erred in giving orally what is referred to in the cases as a “verdict urging instruction.” The trial in this case commenced on June 16, 1941. Evidence was taken from day to day, up to and including June 26, 1941, on which day the arguments to the jury commenced. They were concluded about 6 p. m. on June 26, 1941, at which time court adjourned until 9 a. m.

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.W.2d 577, 232 Iowa 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-cocklin-iowa-1942.