In Re Will of Bowling

64 S.E. 368, 150 N.C. 507, 1909 N.C. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 21, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 64 S.E. 368 (In Re Will of Bowling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Will of Bowling, 64 S.E. 368, 150 N.C. 507, 1909 N.C. LEXIS 85 (N.C. 1909).

Opinion

Connor, J.

The caveators lodged a large number of exceptions, but in their brief, discuss only those which go to the merits of the controversy. Tbe evidence tended to show that the testator signed the paper writing at bis home and took it with him to Rougemont, a village near by, where be requested Mr. Flin-tom and Mr. Lawson to witness it. B. P. Bowling, son of the testator, one of the executors and devisees, testified: “I saw the paper writing, now shown me, purporting to be the will of Captain Bowling. My father signed it before be carried it down to *509 the store tbat morning. He signed it that day, before he left home. It was in the evening, right after dinner. I went with my father to Rougemont. We traveled in a buggy.” Counsel proposed to ask the.witness, “State what your father said and did, when he reached Rougemont, when he saw ’Squire Elintom and Mr. Lawson.” Caveators objected; overruled; exception: “Where was this paper, now shown you, purporting to be his will, at that time, if you know?” Objection. “The court allowed witness to state, if he knew, the locality of the paper— where he saw it — but does not allow him to make any statement as to any transaction or communication between himself and his father.” Exception. The witness proceeded to say that he carried his father in his buggy to Rougemont; that his father got out of the buggy, in front of the store of Carver & Lawson; that he (witness) drove down the road, tied his horse and went back to the store, and that his father and Elintom and Lawson had gone into the store. He described the position of his father and the other persons in the store, saying that, from where his father was standing at the time Lawson and Elintom were at the desk, his father could see them and the top of the desk and a paper on the desk. Caveators excepted. The first five exceptions are directed to the admission of this testimony, and are based upon the alleged incompetency of the witness to testify to any transaction or ‘communication with his father. The record shows that his Honor carefully confined the testimony to what he saw his father do, and excluded any evidence of declarations or conversations. It will be noted that no objection was made to the testimony of the' witness that his father signed the will before going to Rougemont. It is decided, in Pepper v. Broughton, 80 N. C., 251, that the inhibition of section 1831 of the Revisal applies to the trial of an issue of devisami vel non, that persons excluded on account of interest to testify in regard to transactions or communications with the deceased, the validity of whose alleged will is involved, are within the statute. The correctness of his Honor’s ruling depends upon whether the witness was permitted to testify to a communication or transaction with the deceased. It has been found impracticable to give a satisfactory definition to- the words used in the statute *510 for the .purpose of establishing a precedent for cases as they arise. Many of the cases found in the reports are very near to the line which separates those which come within the language and mischief intended to be avoided. The interpretation of the .words “transaction or communication,” as they are used in the statute, which was introduced into our law by the Code of Civil Procedure of 1868, was first considered in Whitesides v. Green, 64 N. C., 307, in which Rodmcm, J., said: “No interested party shall swear to a transaction with the deceased to charge his estate, because , the deceased cannot swear in reply. * * * But there is no prohibition against the witness testifying as to any matter other than a transaction or communication with the deceased.” In Gray v. Cooper, 65 N. C., 183, it was held that the plaintiff was competent to prove that the defendant’s intestate “had and enjoyed the services of slaves,” for whose kin the suit was brought, because it was “a fact which the plaintiff might know and which he says he did know otherwise than from a transaction or communication with the intestate.” In March v. Verble, 79 N. C., 19, plaintiff was permitted to testify that he had but one animal, for the price of which the action was-being tried. Smith, C. J., said: “The plaintiff did not testify to any conversation or transaction with the intestate, within the meaning o-f the statute, but to a substantive and independent fact.” In McCall v. Wilson, 101 N. C., 598, it is said that an interested witness may testify what he saw 'the deceased do, as that he “saw the deceased stand off with, the money and bring back the deed.” Lane v. Rogers, 113 N. C., 171. In Davidson v. Bardin, 139 N. C., 1, Clark, C. J., said: “The plaintiff was competent to testify that he went to the house of the defendant’s intestate, and his condition and- what she saw or heard, so long as these were independent facts and did not tend to show a ‘communication or personal transaction.’Johnson v. Rich, 118 N. C., 268, "With the light thrown upon the subject by these decisions, and “upon the reason of the thing,” we conclude that the witness B. P. Bowling was competent to testify within the limitations prescribed by his Honor. The fact that the testator rode to Rougemont with the witness, and that he left him in front of the store, cannot reasonably be said to be personal *511 transactions or communications. The testimony in regard to the position of the attesting witnesses and the desk and counter in the store are manifestly independent facts. We do not express any opinion upon the competency of witness to say that his father signed the will before he left home, because there is no objection'to the admission.

Caveators insist that the testimony does not show that the attesting witnesses signed their names in the. presence of the testator. The testimony upon this point tended to show that 'Captain Bowling, the testator, went to the home of Mr. Elintom and said to him that he wanted him to witness his will — wanted to know where Mr. Lawson was, wanted them to witness his will. They met Mr. Lawson at the store. He says: “Immediately after," Captain Bowling pulled out his paper and gave it to me and Mr. Lawson, and we went in the store, in a little room where Mr. Carver did his writing, and I signed the paper. The Captain was twenty or twenty-five feet from the front door of the store when he handed me the paper. * * * The desk was opposite the door. . The gap was two feet from the desk. There was a little screen, about two and a half feet square, placed on the desk; this cut the view from the desk, if you stand in the floor opposite the desk. The screen don’t cut off the view of a person who was in the gap between the counter. "When I signed my name I was in that place. The paper was on a little writing desk, or table, which desk had the screen to it. * * * Mr. Lawson signed it at the same time; we were both together, in each other’s presence. * * * I think a person standing where Captain Bowling was when he handed me the will could have seen the desk through the window that I speak of. * * * The bench on which Captain Bowling was sitting was ten or twelve feet from the window opposite the desk.” Mr. Lawson testified substantially as the other attesting witness in regard to the place at which they signed and the position of testator.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 S.E. 368, 150 N.C. 507, 1909 N.C. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-will-of-bowling-nc-1909.