In re Wood's Will

115 A. 231, 95 Vt. 407, 1921 Vt. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 7, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 115 A. 231 (In re Wood's Will) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Wood's Will, 115 A. 231, 95 Vt. 407, 1921 Vt. LEXIS 232 (Vt. 1921).

Opinion

Chase, Supr. J.

At the trial of this cause, which was an appeal from the decree of the probate coprt for the district [409]*409of Orleans, the jury returned a verdict “that the instrument propounded is the last will and testament of the said William Wood” and two special verdicts to the effect that the testator at the time he executed the will had sufficient mental capacity so to do and was not under the undue influence of the proponent James Wood and the wife of James, or either of them. The proponent was a nephew of William Wood. The contestants are all nephews and nieces. Mr. Wood never married and left no nearer relatives. He died, on his farm at Greensboro, February 27, 1919, being almost eighty-seven years old. His will was executed July 22, 1918.

[1] Before judgment the contestants filed a motion to set aside the verdicts: “First. That said verdict is against the weight of the evidence that was presented in said case. Second. That said verdict is manifestly contrary to the instructions of the court, in his charge to the jury in the trial of said cause.” The transcript of the evidence and the charge were referred to and made a part of the motion. It was denied.

The claim now made is that, while the court admittedly ruled as a matter of discretion, the action it took was under the circumstances an abuse of discretion which amounted to reversible error.

The transcript shows that the contestants produced many witnesses whose testimony tended to prove that the testator lacked the neeessary mental capacity to make a will when he executed the instrument in suit, and that he then was under the. undue influence of the proponent and'his wife. It is also true that the case discloses a large amount of testimony in support of the proponent’s claim that he was mentally alert enough to possess, and did possess, testamentary capacity and that he acted wholly in accordance with his own desires. This motion called for a decision which the judges, who had observed the witnesses when they testified and were acquainted with the many things that develop during a trial which cannot be preserved in the bound volumes of the transcript, were especially qualified to render. They had a peculiar opportunity to know whether the verdict was against the weight of the evidence when weighed by those having the best'means to test it. When, as here, there is evidence which will support a verdict, the action of the trial court in refusing to set it aside will not be disturbed on review. French v. Wheldon, 91 Vt. 64, 99 Atl. 232; German v. Bennington and [410]*410Rutland R. R. Co., 71 Vt. 70, 42 Atl. 972. The second ground of this motion was not briefed by the contestants.

[2] At the time the motion to set aside the verdict was made the contestants also moved as follows: “That the court

from a consideration of all the evidence presented at said hearing make a finding of facts. (1) That at the time that the supposed will was executed the said William Wood was not of sound mind and memory. (2) That the said William Wood at the time of the execution of said supposed will was unduly influenced thereto by the proponent James Wood and his wife, Mary Wood. (3) That the said supposed will is not the will of the said William Wood. That judgment be rendered that the said supposed will is not the will of the said William Wood.”

In denying this motion the court held that the verdict was not advisory, and that it did not have the discretionary power to-disregard it in view of the statute as it now exists. Of course, the sum and substance of the exception taken, which was to the refusal to grant the motion, is that the court refused to exercise its discretion. Nor do the contestants claim that they were entitled to more than to have a decision dictated by a sound and just discretion. This being so, we do not overlook the fact that the motion to set aside the verdict, which the court denied in its discretion, is so closely related to this motion and the granting of it so necessary as a preliminary step to the granting of this that the court could hardly exercise its discretion in overruling the first without in a very practical way exercising it as to the second also. Nevertheless, the ruling was made to rest upon the statute as a matter of law, and we will so treat it here.

In re Peck’s Estate, 87 Vt. 194, 88 Atl. 568, is ample authority for the proposition that before No. 98 of the Acts of 1915 took effect such a motion as this was properly directed to the discretion of the trial court, which had power to grant it. But the amendment of 1915, which controlled at the time of this trial, took from the court the discretion it formerly had as to whether the trial should, or should not, be by jury in language to be found in G-. L. 3466: “* f '* And when the appeal is from a judgment allowing or disallowing an instrument purporting to be a last will and testament, a right to trial by jury shall follow. ’ ’

This change in the statute was made' after the law.relating-to compulsory references (G. L. 2071), and put such a ease as [411]*411this among those unaffected by that section. Hurlburt v. Miller’s Estate, 72 Vt. 110, 47 Atl. 393. The contestants recognize this but say that the amendment deprives the court only of its power to determine whether the issue should be submitted to a jury, and leaves it clothed with exactly the same power it had before as to its acceptance or rejection of the verdict. In this they lose sight, we think, of the precise thing which before enabled the court to disregard the verdict. Then the right of the parties to-a jury trial depended in the first instance upon the discretion of the court, and a trial once begun by jury was subject from beginning to end to this same discretionary power. In re Peck’s Estate, supra. Now the right to trial by jury is absolute. The court has no part in determining that. Unless it is waived there can be no other kind of trial. With the power gone to submit the issue to a jury or not as is thought best, the court no-longer has the secondary power which flowed from the first to-treat the entire proceeding as a matter of favor and eventually decide the issue itself contrary to the verdict rendered, if that course is prompted by its own views of what facts are established by the evidence. In such a case as this the court now has only those inherent powers in dealing with the verdict which apply generally to all civil jury trials and are not material here. There was no error in overruling this motion. Collins v. Brazill, 63 Ia. 432, 19 N. W. 338.

Yet the character of the investigation in a case of this kind and the rules governing the same are such that the trial court should, when properly appealed to, examine the record with deliberate care, and, if in its judgment injustice is done by the verdict, unhesitatingly exercise its supervisory power by setting it aside.

[3-5] Two of the attesting witnesses were entire strangers to the testator, went to his house with the lawyer who prepared the instrument for the purpose of acting as witnesses, and saw him only at that time. After testifying concerning the execution of the will, the appearance of Mr. Wood, his conduct and conversation, they were both permitted, against the objection and exception that a sufficient basis had not been shown, to give their opinion as to his mental capacity, basing it upon the testimony they had already given.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 A. 231, 95 Vt. 407, 1921 Vt. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-woods-will-vt-1921.