In Re Estate of Hewitt

218 P. 778, 63 Cal. App. 440, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 373
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 15, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 4570.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 218 P. 778 (In Re Estate of Hewitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal 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 Hewitt, 218 P. 778, 63 Cal. App. 440, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 373 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

NOURSE, J.

This is an appeal from a general verdict in favor of contestant in a proceeding for the probate of a will. Mrs. Hewitt died on March 17, 1921, leaving an estate valued at about two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. She left surviving her Kenneth Hewitt, a son, the contestant herein, and Aimee Botcher and Florence B. Towle, sisters, the proponents herein, and a brother, Fred McCune. On January 26, 1909, she executed the will offered for probate wherein she left approximately two-thirds of her estate to her son, and the remainder, less some minor bequests, to her two sisters. The will consisted of four typewritten pages bound together and backed. It was apparently executed in *443 due form in the presence of two witnesses and signed by the testatrix at the bottom of the first three pages as well as at the end of the final clause on the fourth page. It was found some four or five weeks after the death of the testatrix in a small bag belonging to the deceased which was hanging on the knob of a door which had been removed from its hinges and stood in a hall clothes-closet on the first floor of the home where the testatrix and her son resided at the time of her death and for some ten years prior thereto. The will was found by one of the proponents while the two were clearing up that portion of the house during the absence of the contestant but under his sanction. The bedrooms on the upper floor of the house were under lock and seal, having been so left by the contestant before his departure. One of these sealed rooms contained a secretary belonging to the deceased in which she had kept her papers and other valuables. Prior to the death of the testatrix the will had been kept in a safe-deposit box to which the testatrix and her son had joint access. No testimony was offered to show when or by whom it was removed from this depository and no witness was called to testify that he had ever seen the will before its discovery by these proponents. When discovered it showed signs of mutilation, the signatures had apparently been cut away from the first three pages, and the clause naming executrices had been cut away from the third page. The pieces containing this clause and the three signatures were missing, but the attesting signature and the attestation clause with the signatures of the witnesses on the last page had been carefully preserved and attached in the proper place and folded in with the rest of the instrument.

Contestant laid out his ease on the theory that the will having been found in a mutilated condition the presumption immediately arose that it had been mutilated by the testatrix and that from this presumption followed the other that the testatrix had mutilated it with the intention of revocation. The theory of the proponents was that the mere fact of mutilation was not proof of revocation, but that the jury was to draw its inferences from all the facts and circumstances in evidence.

On this appeal the proponents have presented many grounds for reversal, of which consideration need be given only to the following: (1) Error in denying the proponent’s *444 motion for a nonsuit on certain issues and in receiving a general verdict; (2) Errors of the trial court in giving instructions and in refusing to give instructions requested by the proponents.

(1) The contestant opposed the probate of the will upon six separate assignments of contest. The first four grounds related to the execution of the will, including the subscription, acknowledgment, and publication thereof by the testatrix and the attaching of the signatures thereto by the witnesses. The fifth and sixth grounds related alone to the mutilation or cancellation of the will. Upon the conclusion of contestant’s ease the proponents moved for a nonsuit upon the issues relating to the execution of the will upon the ground that no evidence had been offered to sustain them. The trial court denied the motion and required the proponents to proceed with their proof. They very properly refrained from offering any proof on the issues because the contestant had offered no evidence of any nature to support these grounds of contest. The motion for non-suit should have been granted or, more properly, these issues should have been withdrawn from the consideration of the jury and the one issue relating to revocation of the will should have been submitted to the jury in such a way that the jury could have returned a special verdict upon that issue. (Sec. 1314, Code Civ. Proc.) This was not done, but the whole cause was left with the jury under an instruction which called for a general verdict in favor of contestant or proponents. The jury returned its verdict upon the form given it by the trial judge and which read: “We, the jury in the above-entitled cause, find a verdict in favor of the contestant (plaintiff). ’ ’

That such a verdict is not permissible under our probate practice seems well settled. (Sec. 1314, Code Civ. Proc.; In re Langan, 74 Cal. 353, 355 [16 Pac. 188]; Estate of Benton, 131 Cal. 472, 474 [63 Pac. 775]; Estate of Gould, 188 Cal. 353, 365 [205 Pac. 457].) In the latter case it is said: “The law requires a special Verdict in a will contest . . . and a general verdict is unauthorized.’’

In the Langan matter the court said (74 Cal. 355 [16 Pac. 189]): “The general verdict was not authorized, and consequently furnished no support for the judgment. . . . "We have, then, a case where there was simply a mistrial, and *445 where there was no lawful authority to enter any judgment. ... A judgment entered under such circumstances is void, and may be set aside on motion.”

In the Estate of Benton, supra, the issue involved was whether the proponent had been guilty of fraud in procuring the execution of the will. Numerous questions were submitted to the jury purporting to bear upon this issue and as ' a result of the answers returned the will was denied probate. The judgment was reversed upon the ground that these questions called for answers upon probative facts only, and -that the ultimate fact whether the mind of the decedent, at the time of the execution of the will, was free from fraud practiced upon him by the proponent was not submitted to the jury. In this connection the court said (131 Cal. 480 [63 Pac. 778]): “The case then presents itself exactly as a case where there is no finding of fact upon a material issue, and the judgment must be reversed for that reason.”

In Holler v. Western Union Tel. Co., 149 N. C. 336 [19 L. R. A. (N. S.) 475, 63 S. E. 92], the supreme court of North Carolina, in construing a similar statute, held that it was the duty of the trial judge to submit such issues to the jury as will enable it to dispose of the controversy and proceed to judgment, and that this was true even though the parties did not tender the issue for submission to the jury. The theory of the case is the same as that of the early California cases cited above that when the statute requires a special verdict a judgment based upon a general verdict is like a judgment without findings. The reason for the rule seems to be that when a will is offered for probate and is accompanied by all the necessary proofs of due execution, it is the duty of the court to admit it to probate.

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Bluebook (online)
218 P. 778, 63 Cal. App. 440, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-hewitt-calctapp-1923.