Livingston's Appeal From Probate

26 A. 470, 63 Conn. 68, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 7, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 26 A. 470 (Livingston's Appeal From Probate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livingston's Appeal From Probate, 26 A. 470, 63 Conn. 68, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 25 (Colo. 1893).

Opinion

FenN, J.

An instrument purporting to be the last will of one Julia Gibbons having been proved and approved by the court of probate for the district of Thompson, an appeal from the order and decree of said court was taken to the Superior Court, where the case was tried to the jury, who rendered a verdict sustaining the will, which was accepted by the court, and judgment rendered thereon. An appeal was taken from that judgment to this court. The appellants, in the Superior Court, filed a single reason of appeal, to the effect that the instrument was not the last will and testament of said Julia Gibbons, because she was improperly and unduly influenced to make the will by one of the legatees named therein. The appellees denied this allegation, and upon these pleadings the case was tried.

We quote from the record : At the opening of the trial the appellants claimed the right, and made a motion to be *72 allowed to open and close tbe evidence and tbe arguments to tbe jury, on tbe ground that the only issue raised by tbe reasons of appeal was undue influence exercised upon the testatrix, and that tbe affirmative of this issue was upon tbe appellants; but tbe court admitted the testimony of the attesting witnesses, offered by the appellees, as to the due execution of the will and tbe mental capacity of tbe testatrix, and permitted the appellees to open and close tbe argument. The appellants excepted.

Was this ruling erroneous ?' That tbe affirmative of tbe issue of undue influence was upon tbe appellants there can be no doubt. Rockwell’s Appeal from Probate, 54 Conn., 119. The trial court so understood, and tbe only evidence, as the finding states, offered by tbe appellees in opening, was that of the attesting witnesses, and was confined to tbe due execution of the will and tbe mental capacity of the testatrix. Of course the burden of proving such due execution and capacity, unless lawfully dispensed with, rested upon the ap-pellees. But it is claimed that they were dispensed with, being admitted. If this were any ordinary case or issue it must be conceded that tbe appellants’ contention would be correct, and that tbe appellants would be entitled to open and close. Thus in Young v. Newark Fire Insurance Co., 59 Conn., 41, an action upon a, fire insurance policy, where the answer admitted the- allegations of the complaint, it was held that the defendant was entitled to go forward, though how far a ruling denying such right was a matter of discretion, not open to revision on appeal, was not determined, the case having-been decided on other grounds. But this is not an ordinary case, and has never been treated as such in this state, but as a “statutory and special proceeding.” Thus in Comstock v. Hadlyme Ecclesiastical Society, 8 Conn., 254, this court, in holding- that on an appeal from a decree of probate establishing a will the burden of proof as to the capacity of the testator rests upon the party claiming under the will, who is therefore entitled to go forward on the trial, though such right was subject to the discretion of the court and error therein not ground for a new trial, said (p.261:) “The real *73 question to be tried was whether there was a valid will, and this question was to be decided in tbe same manner as if it bad not been decided in the court of probate. Those who claim under the will must therefore take upon themselves the burden of proof, and the rule is that where there is a necessity for any proof on the part of the plaintiff he ought to begin.” While in St. Leger's Appeal from Probate, 34 Conn., 446, courts of probate are described as “ special and limited courts, without any common law jurisdiction, and created by statute for the probate of wills and the settlement of estates,” the statutes in reference to wills are stated, and it is then said: “ When therefore the executor, in conformity with his prescribed duty, exhibits the will to the court of probate which has jurisdiction, it becomes the imperative duty of that court, of its own motion, to take the custody of it, and proceed to inquire and determine whether it was executed according to the formalities prescribed, freely, by a person of lawful age, and of sound mind and sufficient capacity, and is a valid will; and to approve or reject it accordingly.” Then, coming to the duty of the Superior Court on appeal, the opinion continues, (p. 447:) “ An appeal from the judgment of a court of probate accepting or rejecting a will, takes up to the Superior Court for re-trial that special statutory issue, and nothing more ; and the appellate court, having no jurisdiction of probate or testamentary matters, can only re-try that special issue, and affirm or reverse the judgment of the court of probate as that issue shall be determined by a jury, and certify such affirmance or reversal to that court as a guide for its further action. Every fact which shows that the will is not a valid one is material under that issue, and an element of it, and is involved in its determination.” And finally, speaking of reasons of appeal, the court said: “ Reasons of appeal, therefore, are not necessary in our practice to make issues, and if they are filed and issues joined upon them, they are subordinate issues on the elemental facts of the main or real issue, which the jury must try and determine. * * * Reasons of appeal are necessary in those states where the main issue is not sent to the *74 jury, but one or more special issues, real or feigned, are made up on the disputed elemental fact or facts, and are sent by the court to a jury of the same or a different court, to be tried and determined by a special verdict, and the court, on the return of the special verdict, determines the main issue in accordance with it. But in our simple practice, and under our statute, the main or real issue goes directly to the jury, and with it go the subordinate elemental issues or facts on which it turns ; and that main or real issue must be found by the jury by their verdict in some form as the basis for a judgment by the court, or there will be a mis-trial. * * * Unquestionably thej^ ” (reasons of appeal) “ have served and now serve a useful purpose as a notice to the opposite party of the grounds of objection to the will which will be relied upon at the trial, and by limiting the party filing them to evidence of the objections alleged in them ; and were probably introduced for that reason. But however that may be, as the law now stands, and the whole case goes to the jury, they can have no other practical effect.” Since these decisions were rendered, and quite recently, by the rules of practice, 58 Conu., 588, sec. 3, the filing of reasons in case of appeal from orders of courts of probate, allowing or disallowing the probate of a will, by the party opposing such probate, which before that time had become customary, was made mandatory. But it was not the intention of the court, by the adoption of that rule, to change the existing law in reference to the real issue, the main issue, the special statutory issue, which the appeal took up to the Superior Court, and which, in the language which we have quoted, “ must be found by the jury by their verdict in some form as a basis for a judgment by the court, or there will be a mis-trial.” Nor, since the proceeding is a strict and statutory one, would the court have power, by rule or otherwise, to alter that issue.

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Bluebook (online)
26 A. 470, 63 Conn. 68, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingstons-appeal-from-probate-conn-1893.