Osborn v. Whitlow

185 Iowa 1307
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 24, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 185 Iowa 1307 (Osborn v. Whitlow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborn v. Whitlow, 185 Iowa 1307 (iowa 1918).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The testator is known in the record as Dal Osborn. The contest was based upon alleged mental incompetency and undue influence. No evidence was offered, however, on the question of undue influence, and such issue was not submitted to the jury. The testator died, July 29, 1915. The will was executed on July 26, 1911, and on its face appears to be executed in due. form. The testator was married to the contestant’s mother on March 23, 1881. A few days thereafter, the contestant was born, in lawful wedlock. At the time of the testator’s marriage, both civil and criminal proceedings were pending against him, wherein he was charged with the paternity of the unborn child. After the marriage, the parties lived together for several months as husband and wife. In November following, the wife left the testator, together with her child. In 1884, the testator obtained a divorce from his wife, on the ground of desertion. No question is made of the paternity or of the legitimacy of the contestant as the child of the testator, though the circumstances of the marriage and separation were allowed consideration, as bearing upon the naturalness and reasonableness of the will.

[1310]*1310The record does not disclose the age of the testator. It is undisputed that, in the year 1913, the testator met with a severe accident, and that, about July, 1914, he had a stroke of apoplexy, and that he died in July, 1915. Immediately after July, 1914, a guardian was appointed for him, who continued as such until his death. It is without controversy that, from and after July, 1914, the testator was mentally incompetent.

i. wills: requisites and validproofexecution: I. The appellant’s first contention is that the will was not sufficiently proved by the witnesses thereto. It appeared regular upon its face. The purported witnésses thereto were Dr. Embree and R. L. Huston, Huston had died before the presentation of * th® will for probate. His signature was proved by the opinion of a witness familiar therewith. Dr. Embree also testified:

“R. L. Huston signed at the time I signed it. We signed as witnesses, at the request of this man Osborn.” The objection of the contestant to the proof of the will is based upon the cross-examination of this witness, whose actual recollection of the event was confessedly slight. He testified, on cross-examination:

“I have a slight recollection, but not very much. Q. As I understand you, one reason you know G. M. D. Osborn signed this is that you would not have signed as a witness unless he did? A. That is the best reason. Q. And you have no recollection of seeing him sign that on the bottom of that first page? A. I know this: I would not have signed it unless he did. Q. Read the question. (Question read.) A. To the best of my knowledge and belief, he did. Q. I am inquiring whether you have an independent recollection of seeing him sign it. A. I recollect that Huston signed it; I would not have signed it if they hadn’t both signed. Q. That is the only reason you say you know Osborn signed it? A. That is the best one, [1311]*1311and that is a good one. * * * Q. Were these two sheets fastened together at the time you signed it? A. I ain’t going to say that. Q. You don’t know? A. I don’t remember.”

The objection made to the will, and now pressed upon our attention, was that its execution had not been “proved by two competent witnesses, as provided by the statute.” The evidence was sufficient at least to go to the jury. No complaint is made of any instruction to the jury on the subject.

2. Witnesses : credibility, impeachment, etc.: conviction of misdemeanor. II. One of the witnesses for the proponent was confronted, when cross-examined, with an indictment which had been found against him some 20 years ago, and with his written plea of guilty thereto. The charge in that indictment was that of unlawfully obstructing the course of justice by spiriting away a witness. Over objection, the witness was - interrogated, on cross-ex-animation, concerning the indictment and the plea, both of which were identified and offered in evidence. The trial court ruled out such cross-examination as “improper and incompetent.” Complaint is now urged against such ruling. Counsel for appellant state the point in their brief as follows:

“The court excluded the testimony, doubtless, upon the theory that the crime charged in the indictment was not felony, and hence the matter did not fall within the provisions of 4613 of the Code, which authorizes the interrogation of a witness as to his previous conviction for a felony. The right to the introduction of the testimony was not claimed under this section, but is claimed on the theory that the crime charged in the indictment, Exhibit 7, was an infamous' one, even though not a felony; and hence the matter would be governed by the provisions of 4602 of the Code, rather than by 4613 of the Code.”

[1312]*1312If counsel had made the point in the lower court as they have made it here, they would be in a better position to ask review of the ruling. It is undoubtedly true that the ruling of the court was predicated upon the provisions of Section 4613 of the Code. There was no suggestion to that court that the offer was made in pursuance of the provisions of Section 4602 of the Code. This section of our statute has been rendered a quiescent one. If any evidence has ever been received exclusively pursuant thereto in any case, it does not appear in the annotations. The only case where its provisions appear to have been considered is Palmer v. Cedar Rapids & M. R. Co., 113 Iowa 442. In that case, the evidence was held properly rejected. The offer of the evidence by contestant could have been construed as pursuant to Section 4613. So construed, the ruling was right. In view of that fact, it was incumbent upon the contestant to be more specific in its disclosure of purpose to the lower court. If the ruling were erroneous, therefore, we should incline to hold that the error was not available to the appellant. But we think that the propriety of the cross-examination was governed by Section 4612, Code Supplement, 1913, which protected the witness against any cross-examination which would tend “to expose him to public ignominy * * * except as provided in the next section [4613].”

Section 4613 is:

“A witness may be interrogated as to his previous conviction for a felony. But no other proof is competent, except the record thereof.”

Section 4602 provides:

“Facts which have heretofore caused the exclusion of testimony may still be shown for the purpose of lessening its credibility.”

The indictment identified and offered was for a misdemeanor, and not for a felony. But appellant contends [1313]*1313that the misdemeanor was an infamous offense at common law, conviction for which rendered the witness incompetent to testify at all; and that, though such incompetency has been removed under our statute, the purpose of Section 4602 is to allow the fact to be shown, to lessen the credibility of the witness. Assuming this view, without now passing upon it, Section 4602 does not, in terms, permit such fact to be shown by an examination of the convicted person. Section 4612 expressly forbids such examination, except as permitted by Section 4613. The permission of Section 4613 applies only to convictions for felony. There is authority for holding that conviction for an infamous offense, though not a felony, may be shown by cross-examination of the convicted person.

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185 Iowa 1307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborn-v-whitlow-iowa-1918.