Raub v. Carpenter

187 U.S. 159, 23 S. Ct. 72, 47 L. Ed. 119, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 804
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 1, 1902
Docket64
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 187 U.S. 159 (Raub v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raub v. Carpenter, 187 U.S. 159, 23 S. Ct. 72, 47 L. Ed. 119, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 804 (1902).

Opinion

*160 Me. Chief Justice Fullee

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to a- judgment of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, affirming certain orders of the Supreme Court of the District, holding a special term for orphans’ court business, admitting a will and codicil, to probate and granting letters testamentary thereon; and denying a motion to ivaoate that decree.

Plaintiffs in error filed a caveat to the probate and record of the writings, purporting to be the will and codicil, and issues, addressed to both, as to mental capacity, fraud or coercion, and undue influence, were framed for trial by jury.

Trial,was had, and on the conclusion of the evidence the court, at the request of' the caveatees, instructed the jury that there was no evidence tending to show fraud, undue influence or coercion, and that on these'issues the jury should render its verdict :for the caveatees. To which the caveators made no objection,. and preserved no exception. Three instructions in respect of the mental capacity of the deceased to make a valid will or codicil were given on behalf of the caveators as requested by them.

The jury returned a verdict June 15,1900, in favor of the "caveatees. \No motion for a néw trial was made within four days as required by rúle 53 of the court, or prior to June 26, when the- court entered an order and decree admitting the will and codicil to probate, and granting letters testamentary thereon, from which an appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals.

Several exceptions were preserved to the rulings of the court in the progress of the trial, which were disposed of by the Court of Appeals satisfactorily- as we think. But.one of them has -been pressed on our attention.

Dr. George B. Heinecke, a practicing physician in Washington, and a grandnephew of deceased, testified that he had known deceased evei since he could recollect,,and was accustomed to seeing him frequently ; that he had seen him when recovering from attacks of epilepsy subsequently to the execution of the will and codicil; that testator had stated to him that he was *161 a sufferer from urethal calculus; that on the 13th of March, 1896, he had seen the testator have a fainting spell;” “that he had on one occasion seen testator laughing to himself; that on or about the l'3th of February, 1899, during the blizzard, the testator acted peculiarly about the snow in his. yard; did not know how it got in there, all of it, and went out there and tried to get it removed; ” and witness stated the result of the autopsy and the cause of death. He was then asked the following', question: “ Doctor, have you formed any opinion, from your uncle’s general condition of health and the conditions disclosed ■ by his brain at this investigation, and from, all you Tcnow about him, yourself, what his condition of mind was ? ”

To that portion of the question which called for an opinion from the witness from “ all that you know about him yourself,” the caveatees objected.on the ground that no sufficient basis had been laid for that portion of the question, and that the ¡facts .relied upon in this particular should be first adduced. The court sustained the objection and caveators preserved an exception.

We agree with the Court of Appeals that the trial court did hot err in holding that portion of the question objectiónable, and, if so, the question as framed could hot properly have been allowed to be propounded, though caveators were left- free to put it with the objectionable words omitted. Clearly the opinion of the witness from facts he did not disclose was inadmissible. If he knew anything about the deceased other than what he had stated, which aided him in arriving at a conclusion, that knowledge should have been developed. In that particular the question assumed the existence of facts for which there was no foundation in the evidence.

So far as the conduct of the trial was concerned we find no reversible error.

On July 16, 1900, twenty days after the decree was entered, caveators moved that.that decree be vacated on the ground that one of the jurors was disqualified for service on the jury by the fact that he was under the age of twenty-one years, and by the fact .that he had several times been convicted of the crime of petty larceny in the police court of the District. The motion *162 was supported by transcripts from the records of the police court, and by affidavits, sustaining both disqualifications, the affidavits also showing that at the beginning of the trial term of the court at which they had been summoned, the jurors had all been examined on their voir, dire by the presiding justice as to their qualifications to serve on the jury; that the juror now charged to be disqualified had then and there falsely answered that he was over the age of twenty-one years, and had never been eonvicted of crime; that one of the counsel for the cave-ators was present in court at the time of such examination; and that the falsehood of the statements of the juror in question was not known to the caveators or their counsel until after the entry of the order now sought to be vacated. The motion to vacate was denied, the record stating “ the court further being of opinion that at the trial there was no evidence of mental incompetency, fraud, or undue influence.”

From this order the caveators took their second appeal.

Tie wed as. an ordinary motion for a new trial, the motion was not seasonably made under the rules, nor is it contended that the judgment came within the Maryland act of 1787, ch. 9, sec. 6, 2 Kilty; Spalding v. Crawford, 3 App. D. C. 361, as having been obtained by fraud, deceit, surprise or irregularity in the sense of that statute. But it rests on the power of the court to set aside a judgment at the term at which it is rendered under circumstances calling for the exercise of its discretion in that regard, or on the assumption that the trial and verdict were absolutely void because of the incompetency of the juror.

■By section 872 of the Revised Statutes relating to the District of Columbia, as amended by the act of March 1, 1889, 25 Stat. 749, it is provided: “ No person shall be competent to act as a juror unless he be a citizen of the United States, a resident of the District of Columbia, over twenty-one and under sixty-five years of age, and a good and lawful man, who has .never been convicted of a felony or misdemeanor involving moral turpitude.”- ' ■ '

Treating the application as open to consideration by reason of the discovery of the existence of the alleged objection after *163 verdict and judgment, but as amounting to no more .than a motion for new trial'made in apt time, it was within the discretion of the trial court to grant or deny it, and the Court of Appeals held that the order denying it was not appealable. But the court also held that the discretion of the trial court was properly exercised ; that there was not only no evidence in support of the charges of “ fraud, undue influence, circumvention, or coercion,” which was conceded, but that “ the charge of mental unsoundness is wholly unsustained and without any support.

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Bluebook (online)
187 U.S. 159, 23 S. Ct. 72, 47 L. Ed. 119, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raub-v-carpenter-scotus-1902.