McDaniel ad. v. Crosby

19 Ark. 533
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 19 Ark. 533 (McDaniel ad. v. Crosby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDaniel ad. v. Crosby, 19 Ark. 533 (Ark. 1858).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hanly

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a petition brought by Daniel P. Crosby and others, heirs of Joseph R. Crosby, deceased, against James McDaniel, as administrator of Richard H. Finn, deceased, and the widow and heirs of Finn, to the June term, 1856, of the Hempstead Circuit Court, to set aside and hold for nought a certain instrument of writing, proved up before the Court of Probate of that county, as the last will and testament of the above named Joseph R. Crosby, and duly recorded as such.

. The petition states, in substance, that the petitioners are the sole and only heirs at law and distributees of Joseph R. Crosby, deceased, who died in Hempstead county some time in the year 1852; that after his death, Richard H. Finn produced and proved up a paper, purporting to be the last will and testament of Joseph R., which, by its terms, gave all the estate of Joseph R., after the payment of his just debts, to Finn, who was made the executor thereof; that Finn died after proving up the will, and taking upon himself the execution thereof, leaving his wife and children him surviving; that petitioners, as legal heirs and dis-tributees of Joseph R. Crosby, are precluded from obtaining possession of his estate, as Finn, in his lifetime, and his widow and heirs since his death, claim that all the property left by Joseph R. Crosby at his death, vested in Finn, in his lifetime, under the will, and since his death, constitute a part of his estate.

The grounds assumed in the petition to authorize the relief sought, are as follows:

1. That the testator was not possessed of a sound and disposing mind and memory at the time the will was executed,

2. That the will was not the result of the voluntary act of the testator, but was made by him under the stress of fear, produced on his mind by Finn, caused by the harsh, cruel and barbarous conduct of Finn practiced on him, rendered weak in body and imbecile in mind, by a long continued intemperate use of ardent spirits. And,

3. That said will was written and dictated by Finn, and was executed by the testator, and witnessed by the subscribing witnesses thereto, at the solicitations and under the directions of Finn; the testator passively acting, fearing to incur the displeasure and resentment of Finn, and the witnesses signing and attesting the same to accommodate themselves to his wishes and views.

The prayer of the petition was to the effect, that the admin-trator, widow and heirs of Finn, be made defendants; for process against them, and that an issue be formed as to the validity of the will, to be tried by a jury, and that judgment be rendered setting aside the former probate, and declaring the will void and of none effect.

Process was issued against the defendants, and returned executed upon them. At the return term they all appeared by counsel, and entered their general denial to all the allegations stated in the petition. The issue thus formed was directed to be tried by a jury. On the trial before a jury, the issue was found for the petitioners, the verdict stating that the paper in question was not the last will and testament of Joseph R. Crosby, deceased. The Court rendered judgment final in accordance with the verdict and for costs of suit.

The defendants filed a motion for a new trial, setting out sundry grounds: which, being considered by the Court, was overruled, and they excepted and appealed to this Court.

The motion for a new trial states the following grounds:

1. The verdict is contrary to law and evidence.

2. The Court permitted improper and illegal evidence to be given.

3. The Court gave the instructions at the instance of the petitioners.

4. The Court refused to give those at the instance of the defendants.

5. Because after the jury retired to consider of their verdict, they returned into Court, and asked the Court, if a witness to the will was, in the eye of the law, such a third person as the law authorized to request the signing of the will; when the Court instructed the jury contrary to law.

Although the bill of exceptions does not profe'ss to contain all the evidence adduced at the trial, we propose, notwithstanding the rule which obtains in such cases, (see Jordan vs. Adams, 2 Eng. R. 350; Everett vs. Clements, 4 Ib. 480; Collins vs. McPeak, 5 Ib. 528; Bankhead vs. Hubbard, 14 Ark. 300,) to consider the several grounds set out in the motion for a new trial, as if the bill of exceptions in reality embodied all the evidence; which, for the time being, we shall assume as being the case.

1. Is the verdict warranted by the law and the evidence?

In answering this question, we shall necessarily have to consider (1.) The sanity or mental capacity of the testator to make a will, at the time the one in question was executed: (2.) Whether he was induced to make it under circumstances showing it was not a free and voluntary act on the part of the testator, but was the result of fear, restraint, force or fraud of Finn: And (3.) Was the will attested in the manner prescribed by law.

First. Had the testator mental capacity to make the will?

The substance of the proof on this point is, that testator had been addicted to constant intemperance and continuous intoxication for more than two years before the will in question was executed: that his health, about the time, had become greatly impaired and enfeebled from that cause; so much so, it is said, he was rarely able to leave his room, or his bed: that his mind was also greatly involved in the decay, which was evident in his body; not unfrequently giving indications of mania a poiu; so that when the will was executed, in the language of several of the witnesses, he was “ in an awful condition.” It is also in proof, that after the two attesting witnesses had reached the testator’s house, where the will was executed, they had no conversation with him, and did not hear him speak or converse with any one present, except possibly to say, to one of the witnesses, “ how do you do?” and in the hearing of the other, “that he thought more of Finn than any one else, and that he should give him his property.” One of the attesting witnesses seems to have seen the will signed by the testator.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ark. 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniel-ad-v-crosby-ark-1858.