Lucas v. Parsons

24 Ga. 640
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 24 Ga. 640 (Lucas v. Parsons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucas v. Parsons, 24 Ga. 640 (Ga. 1858).

Opinion

McDonald J.,

By the Court. delivering the opinion.

This-cause was tried in the Superior Court of Monroe county. Several points were made during the progress of the trial, the decisions of which by the Court below, were excepted to bj' counsel for the caveator of the will, and after a verdict in favor of the propounders, they were incorporated, with other grounds, in a motion for a new trial.

The Court refused .the motion, and his judgment thereon is assigned as error. As we put our judgment on a single point, it is scarcely necessary to go into an elaborate consideration of all the grounds presented in the record. We will, however, advert to them in a manner to narrow the points of controversy between the parties, on a future trial.

[1.] It is'first objected that the Court erred in holding the paper propounded to be testamentary in its character, and entitled to probate. The paper propounded is short, but the whole tenor of it is testamentary. The testator, for we may call him so, declares it to be his last will and desire as regards his property, and the disposition of the same. It is true, that this declaration alone would not constitute it a will ^ but, taken in connection with its contents, it is entitled to much consideration. He proceeds to say that he had theretofore made a will, which was out of his possession, and he could nor obtain the same to destroy it. Here is indicated strong dissatisfaction with a will which he had made, and his wish to cancel it. He assigns a good reason for desiring to cancel it; that it would be unjust to some of his children, as. he had, by that will, given all his money and notes to one legatee, and they had largely increased since the date of it. He-revokes and annuls that will, and a"ny other will which he-may have made. He leaves his property to be distributed! under the laws of Georgia, reserving to himself the right indispose of it thereafter.

His will, as it then was, was not such as he desired it to be.. It was unequal. One of his his children would, by the accu[659]*659mulation ofmoney and notes, since it was written, haveconsiderably more than the rest, whichwould.be unjust. He revokes that will, leaving his property for distribution under the laws of Georgia. It was the same as if he had said, “1 leave my property to be equally divided amongst my wife and children.” It was a bequest of his entire estate to his wife and children. They were legatees, therefore, and the paper was a will. It disposes of his property differently from his first will. Itis-said, however, that the paper is inopera tive as a will, because it disposes of the entire estate precise ly as the law would, distribute it, and the.heirs-at-law, in such case, take by descent, and not by purchase, that is, under the will.

[2.] The reason.of the rule in -England, to that effect, does not apply in this State. It was adopted in- that -country in favor of the Lord for the preservation.of his tenure, and o creditors for the preservation of their debts. 1 Powell on Dev. 421. In.England, an estate in chattels is not transmisible to the issue, and is incapable of any kind of descent. Knight vs. Ellis, 2 Brown Ch. Rep. 578. Chattels go to the .ejecutor or administrator, and are held in trust by them, first for creditors, and . then for those entitled under the will or the statute of distributions. In this State, there is no distinction in respect to -the.payment of debts, between .real and personal estate, except that real estate must.not be so applied, until the personalty is-exhausted, and then only by making it appear that it is for the.benefit of the parties interested that it should.be sold. Hence, the lands as well as .personalty go, in this State, to the executor or. administrator, fpr the payment, of debts, and creditors are. not .-driven to a proceeding against the heirs-at-law for the recovery of.their debts,' after exhausting the personal assets. Them is, therefore, no reason for the rule contended.for, anda will embracing .real and personal estate, here, is just as good as a'will of personalty to the same purport would be in ■ England. There are many reasons why a will of this sort should be. sustained. But. [660]*660is unnecessary to encumber this opinion with them. We think that the paper is testamentary in its character, and that the Court of Ordinary had jurisdiction- over it.

[3.] The Court acted properly in submitting the paper to the jury. It was not a case in which the paper was relied on as evidence of title; but it was itself the subject of the suit, and the questions were on the paper, whether it was the will of the deceased, made and executed by him under circumstances which entitled it to probate as a will. On such an issue, the instrument should be presented to a special jury, precisely as it is to the Ordinary, whose duty it is to pass upon it primarily. The reading it to the Ordinary, or to the jury, gives it no validity whatever. It only discloses the subject to which the testimony is to apply, and in many cases, it is necessary to a correct application of the testimony, by the mind of the Court or jury, that the instrument should be before them. The result depends almost entirely on the testimony, extrinsic of the will, and its contents are seldom, I may say, perhaps, never, considered when extraneous evidence makes out a clear case of capacity and uninfluenced testamentary intention.

[4.] The subscribing witnesses were allowed to testify that they subscribed in the presence of the testator. This testimony does not contradict the attestation clause and the Court below committed no error in admitting it.

We overrule all the grounds of special exception made in the record to the charge of the presiding Judge to the Jury. We think that he laid down the law fairly and accurately^ and quite as favorably to the caveator as he was entitled to' have it, as far as he went, and it was a very full charge, with one exception. Indeed, the exception to the charge, set forth in the 7th ground of the motion for a new trial, is not borne out, by the evidence given on the trial. It is too much to assume, that the paper propounded as a will showed a total departure from former testamentary intentions long adhered o, without any adequate or rational motive or reason for the [661]*661same, when the testator had expressed dissatisfaction with his former will, before he became deranged, to as many as three witnesses, Woodward, Jackson and Banks, and assigned to some of them very good reasons for desiring to make a new will. This request was very strong in favor of caveator, and it was given in the language of the request; but the exception is to the remark made by the Court to the jury, "but such doubt must exist as to the capacity of the testator, at the time of the execution of the will.” This addendum of the Court is identical, in substance, with the charge as requested, and as it was given, unless a distinction is drawn between the “ma7cing,> and the “execution” of the will; and if there be any distinction, the Court was correct in its explanation in confining the doubt to the time of the execution of the will.

The 4th ground dn the motion for a new trial, is a general exception as to the meaning of the terms “testamentary capacity” as applicable to this case.

[5.]

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24 Ga. 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-parsons-ga-1858.