Keene v. Herr

194 S.W. 538, 175 Ky. 462, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 339
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 8, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 538 (Keene v. Herr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keene v. Herr, 194 S.W. 538, 175 Ky. 462, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 339 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming.

This is a. contest over the will of Sam T. TIerr, an unmarried man, between his niece, Mrs. Keene, the appellant, and his brother, Hugh Herr, the appellee. ,

[463]*463The testator gave all his property, consisting of a large estate, to his only brother, Hugh Herr. If he had died intestate, his property would have descended in equal shares, to his brother, Hugh Herr, and his niece, Mrs. Keene, the daughter of a deceased brother. The jury found for the will, and judgment was entered accordingly, followed by this appeal on the part of Mrs. Keene, the contestant.

The testator made his will in May, 1911, when he was about 48 years of age, and died in October, 1913. The grounds of contest were mental incapacity and undue influence, and it may here be said that the great weight of the evidence establishes that the testator was entirely capable of making the will and was not unduly influenced in its execution, so that there is no complaint about the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, nor are the instructions given by the court open to objection.

The first ground of reversal relied on is that the jury were not selected and impaneled as required by the statute. Upon this point the facts shown by the record are these: When the case was called for trial the court directed the clerk to prepare a panel of twenty-four from which to select the jury, “and it was thereupon ascertained that only twenty of the regular panel of twenty-four jurors were present in court and qualified to serve as jurors upon the trial of this cause. The plaintiff thereupon moved the court that twenty-four names of jurors be drawn from the jury wheel and placed in the box from which to draw a panel of eighteen. This motion was overruled by the court, to which the plaintiff at the time objected and excepted. The name of one juror, J. K. Beck, Esq., was thereupon drawn from the wheel by the judge of the court and he was impaneled as a regular petit juror, and added to the twenty jurors theretofore found competent for service. The court thereupon ordered the sheriff to summon three bystanders to complete the number of twenty-four jurors whose names were to be placed in the jury box from which to draw the panel of eighteen. To this the plaintiff objected and excepted and renewed her motion for the names of twenty-four jurors to be drawn from the wheel and placed in the box from which the panel of eighteen should be drawn and made up, which motion was overruled. In obedience to the summons of the sheriff, three bystanders were thereupon called by the court and their names placed in the box, and from the names thus made up the derk of [464]*464the court thereupon drew the names of eighteen jurors from the names so placed in the box, and the list so made up was furnished to the plaintiff and defendant, from which they were required to select a jury for the trial of this cause.”

Section 2243 of the statutes provides, in substance, that at each term of circuit court thé judge shall draw from the drum or wheel case the names of not less than thirty nor more than thirty-six persons to act as petit jurors, and from the list not less than twenty-four nor. more than thirty jurors shall be selected by the.judge as the regular panel "of the next petit jury. Under this section it is customary for the judge at the beginning of the term to select from the names so drawn from the jury wheel twenty-four men competent to serve as jurors, but if a panel of twenty-four cannot be secured from the list so drawn it is provided in section 2247 of the statutes, that “if there shall fail to attend, or there shall be excused by the court, for good cause, such a number as will not leave the number of jurors required, the judge shall draw from the drum or wheel case double the number of names to supply the places of such as are excused or fail to attend, and the jurors so drawn shall be summoned by the sheriff, .... and if, at any time during the term, it becomes necessary to supply one or more jurors, double the number of names necessary for supplying their places shall be drawn from the drum or wheel case and summoned by the sheriff: Provided, That when the number of vacancies does not exceed three, the judge may direct the sheriff to summon bystanders to supply the vacancies.”

Under these statutes a regular jury panel consists of twenty-four persons selected‘from those drawn from the wheel and when the vacancy in this panel does not at any time exceed three, the judge may summon bystanders to supply the vacancies, but not more than three vacancies can be filled by bystanders over the objection of either of the parties entitled to demand a jury trial. If more than three vacancies in the regular panel exist, then a sufficient number of names must be drawn from the wheel to fill the vacancies or to so fill them as that there will be only three vacanies to be supplied by bystanders. In other words, the chief purpose of the statutes in respect to the matter now under consideration was to give to every litigant an opportunity to have a jury panel on which there were not more than three bystand[465]*465ers. When it appears that twenty-one of the names .on the panel of twenty-four have been drawn from the jury wheel, a party cannot demand that the remaining vacancies, or any of them, shall be filled by drawing from the wheel. Except for the proviso in section 2247, allowing three bystanders to be empaneled, the judge would be compelled in every instance to draw from the drum or wheel case a sufficient number of names to supply vacancies in the regular panel, whether these vacancies appeared at the beginning of the term or at any time during the term, and the manifest purpose of adding the proviso allowing the selection of three bystanders to supply vacancies was to permit the judge, when he had a panel consisting of as many as twenty-one drawn from the jury wheel, to supply the three vacancies with bystanders, no matter how or from what cause these vacancies may have occurred, or whether they occurred at the beginning of the term or during the term; and as twenty-one of the members of the panel of twenty-four in this instance had been drawn from the jury wheel, the judge had the right to fill the three vacancies with bystanders. Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. King, 161 Ky. 324; Brashears v. Combs, 174 Ky. 344; Winchester v. Watson, 169 Ky. 213; Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. Jones, 164 Ky. 557.

Another assignment of error is the admission of evidence tending to show the value of the property owned by the mother of Mrs. Keene. It appears from the evidence that the mother of Mrs. Keene is a widow of considerable wealth, and Mrs. Keene is her only child, and it is also shown that Hugh Herr and Mrs. Keene have each large estates. On the trial of the case witnesses for the propounder were permitted to testify, over the objection of counsel for the contestant, as to the value of the estate owned by the mother of the contestant.

It is a very well-established principle in will contest cases that evidence may be introduced showing the financial condition of the contestants as well as that of •the propounders, for the purpose of showing the reasonableness, or unreasonableness, as the case may be, of the will made by the testator, and for the further purpose of illustrating, so far as it may, his capacity or lack of capacity to make a will and his freedom from or coercion by undue influence in its execution. Under this rule no question could be made as to the competency of evidence [466]

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Martin v. Combs
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295 S.W. 445 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 538, 175 Ky. 462, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keene-v-herr-kyctapp-1917.