McMechen v. McMechen

17 W. Va. 683, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 82
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 17 W. Va. 683 (McMechen v. McMechen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMechen v. McMechen, 17 W. Va. 683, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 82 (W. Va. 1881).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge,

announced the opinion of the Court.

The first question presented is: Could tbe widow of the testator in her own right prosecute this appeal ? The widow had no right to contest her husband’s will, for she was not bound by it. She might have had her statutory dower and her statutory share of his personal estate, if she did not like the will; and she must leave it to her husband’s heirs to dispute the will. She had the power to renounce the will, and so far as it affected her rights her will was stronger than his, and as to her rights she might have set it aside by a simple election. McMasters v. Blair, 29 Pa. St. 298. She elected not to renounce the will, as she might have done, and therefore she in her own right was only interested in sustaining the will. .But her children, who were the heirs, who would have taken the entire property after the widow’s share was taken out, had the undoubted right by their mother as next friend to take the appeal from probate, and if they could, prevent the probate of the will; and that the widow in her own right was improperly joined with them in the appeal, in no wise affects their rights. The appeal as to the widow might properly by the circuit court have been dismissed, and that dismissal could not affect the rights of the infants by their mother their next friend, in the appeal.

This disposition of the right of the widow to take the appeal will assist us in deciding, whether her evidence as to conversations had with her husband were improperly admitted in evidence. There was certainly nothing in [691]*691the communications themselves of such a confidential character, as would make them improper evidence at common law. White v. Perry, 14 W. Va. 66. One of the communications had, which will show their character was: He asked me to put him into another room on the opposite side of the hall.” The conversations were not ex'cluded by the statutes. Section 23, chapter 130 of the Code among other things declares, that “a party shall not be examined in his own behalf in respect to any transaction' or communications had personally with a deceased person, against parties, who are the executors, administrators, heirs at law, or next of kin, or assignees of such deceased person, where they have acquired title to the cause of action from or through such deceased person, or have been sued as such executors, administrators, heirs at law, next of kin, or assignees.” The italics are mine. The statute had with certain restrictions taken away the obstacle to a party testifying, where he was interested in the subject, upon which he was called to testify.

Syllabus 4. syllabus s.

It has been held in New Tork upon the construction of a statute similar to ours, that the devisees of real estate are the assignees of the testator within the meaning of their statute, and we think properly so; and therefore the devisees of the real estate under the will of Shepherd McMeehen are the assignees of said Shepherd McMeehen within the meaning of section 23, chapter 130 of our Code. Buck v. Staunton, 51 N. Y. 624; Cornell v. Cornell, 12 Hun. 314.

Mrs. McMeehen was testifying against some of the devisees under the will. But, to exclude her evidence of conversations with her husband, her evidence must not only be against such devisees, but must be in her own behalf. The object of the exceptions to the statute permitting interested witnesses to give evidence was to prevent false swearing and its consequences to .other parties interested in the suit; and it was supposed, that this object would be obtained by preventing the witness from [692]*692swearing in his own interest or behalf, wbicb is the same thing. The witness by the statute in such a case is not prevented from giving evidence against his interest.

Syllabus 6. Syllabus 7.

Mrs. McMechen declining to renounce the will, moving for the appointment of an administrator with the will annexed, and the will itself providing so liberally for her, as the evidence shows, convinces my mind, that it was her individual interest to have the will sustained; her evidence therefore was not in her. own behalf, but against her interest. It is no answer to say that her evidence was in favor of her children. That is not prohibited by the statute, but expressly allowed, notwithstanding the witness may be interested in the suit. This is not one of those cases, where a party may choose his side of the controversy. Mrs. McMechen, as we have seen,,could not contest the will of her husband, and she was not therefore at liberty to choose her side. She had elected by failing to renounce the will to be a devisee thereunder; and while she had an interest in the will, by her own choice that interest was in favor of and not against the will; and she ought therefore to have been made an appellee. But her being made so would not compel her to use any exertion to sustain the will. She could, as the next friend of her children carry on the appeal in their name even against herself, and as we have seen, her evidence being against the will is competent.

Should the testimony of the medical expert, Dr. G. W. Bruce, have been excluded ? The bill of exceptions raising this question shows, that Dr. Bruce was a graduate of a medical college and had been a practicing physician for over twenty-five years. It seems, that he did not hear the testimony pf the witnesses at the trial, but that he had heard Dr. Frissell’s evidence read, and that of Dr. Ford. After testifying in a general way as a medical expert with regard to the effect of physical disease upon the mind, &c., the following question was propounded to him : “ Please state, whether in your opinion [693]*693a person, who was suffering, as Mr. McMechen was, as testified to by —-wbo was conditioned as Mr. McMechen was, as testified to by Doctors Ford apd Frissell and Carter McMechen, and who was cold to the elbows and knees at five o’clock and at e,leven o’clock, and who died at or about five o’clock of the same night, whether he would be physically able to write his name or not ?” To which question the witness answered as follows : I believe it was testified here, that he was cold at five o’clock in the afternoon — testified by Dr. Ford — and at eleven o’clock — by Dr. Frissell, and at five o’clock in the morning died. You asked me the question, if a short time before he died he would be able to — ” and the counsel for contestants then interrupting the witness said : “ No I ask this question ! ‘If a person in the condition he was at these two times, as testified by these two medical gentlemen, and who was cold to the elbows, and cold to the knees, and did die at about five o’clock, would be physically capable of writing his name twenty or thirty minutes before his death ?’ ” The answer is: “ It is not likely that he would have been able to have done it.”

Dr. Bruce was asked also the following question: “Please state if a person conditioned as Mr. McMechen was on the night of his death, and who was, as testified to by Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
17 W. Va. 683, 1881 W. Va. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmechen-v-mcmechen-wva-1881.