Rush v. Megee

36 Ind. 69
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 36 Ind. 69 (Rush v. Megee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rush v. Megee, 36 Ind. 69 (Ind. 1871).

Opinion

Pettit, J.

This suit was brought to contest the will of John Megee, deceased. A trial by jury was had, which rc[71]*71Suited in a verdict for the defendants below, who are appellees here. Mo.tion for a new trial was overruled,, exceptions properly taken, judgment on the verdict, and appeal to this court.

The complaint charges that at the time of the execution of the will the testator was of unsound mind; that the will was unduly executed by reason of duress and fraud; and issue was formed by the general denial. There are, in form, fourteen errors assigned, but in fact there is but one assigned error, the thirteenth in number, which is that the court erred in overruling the appellant’s motion for a new trial. The twelve preceding assignments are only causes, why a new trial should have been given, and are proper to be considered under the assignment of error for refusing to grant a new trial. The fourteenth is that the court erred in rendering judgment on the verdict for the appellees. This is not properly assignable as error; for after the motion for a new trial was overruled, it was, as a matter of course, the duty of the court to render judgment on the verdict.

We lay down these rules of lawfirst, every man is presumed to be sane or of sound mind until the contrary is made to appear by evidence; second, when it is shown by evidence that a man has been at one time insane or of unsound mind, the law presumes that he remains so, until it is shown by evidence that he has been, either wholly or temporarily (called a lucid interval), restored to sanity or soundness of mind. It follows, that if the appellants had proved that the testator had been of unsound mind at any time before making his will, it then devolved upon the appellees to show that he had been wholly restored, ,or that at the time of making the will he had a lucid interval.

The evidence is very voluminous, covering about two hundred pages, and .cannot be set out at length here, nor successfully abbreviated in this opinion. This is not attempted to be done in the abstract or brief; but we have carefully read it, and on the part of the plaintiffs below (appellants here) it very strongly tends to prove that the testator had [72]*72been insane or of unsound mind for and during many years previous to making the will. The evidence is so strong on this question that it would, unrebutted, fully justify the jury in finding that he was of unsound mind. The evidence of the defendants was mostly directed to show that he had been somewhat successful as a farmer; that he took interest in public matters, political and others; and that at the time of making the will he was sane, or at least that he had at that time a lucid interval. There is nothing in the will itself to show that the testator was of unsound mind, unless it is to be found in the great inequality in the disposition of his property among his children, which would seem to be unnatural and unreasonable, without some good cause or reason assigned for it.

The first question urged for which a new trial should have been granted is, that the court refused to allow Thomas N. Linck, one of the plaintiffs, and husband of Manetta Linck, also one of the plaintiffs, and daughter of the testator, to testify as a witness. Our law allows all parties to a suit like this to testify; except that husband and wife shall not testify for or against each other. A majority of the court hold that Linck was properly excluded as a witness, Pettit, J., dissenting.

The second reason for a new trial is, that on the cross examination of one Lakin, a witness for the plaintiffs, the defendants having procured the witness to say that he had tried to buy a piece of land from the testator, asked him this question, which was allowed to be answered over the objections of the appellants : “ If your proposition to purchase the land adjoining you from the testator had been accepted by him, would you have taken a conveyance from him ?”

The witness had testified to facts and circumstances strongly tending to show that the testator was insane before the execution of the will, and about the time the proposition was made to purchase lands of him. We do not think this question was beyond the reasonable limits allowed in a cross examination, for it was calculated to test or try the intelli[73]*73gence or honesty of the witness; but, however this may be, it did not do the appellants any injury, for the answer was more favorable to them than to the appellees.

It had been shown by the evidence, that many years before the making of the will, the testator, then, residing in Rush county, Indiana, had mysteriously left his home without the knowledge of his family, and had been gone some time. While Mrs. Margaret Rush, one of the plaintiffs, and daughter of the testator, was on the stand as a witness for the plaintiffs, she was asked: “ What was said, if anything, to the defendants, or the family in the presence of the defendants, in relation to the absence of your father at the time he was in Kentucky?”

The evidence shows that the testator in this absence had gone to Kentucky, and, among other wild and irrational acts, had shot himself; but we think this question was too loose and broad to be asked, and that the court committed no error in refusing it.'

The court permitted the appellees, over the objection of the appellants, to ask Dr. Athon, an expert, this question: “ If, at any time or times, before the making of his will, John Megee was the subject of a delusion on the subject of poisons, and that delusion had relation to any of his sons-in-law, then, judging from the evidence of his acts and language on that day, and from all the evidence in the case, what was his condition at the time of making his will ? ” Some of the witnesses had testified to facts and circumstances tending to show, and had given their opinions, that the testator was of unsound mind; while others had testified to facts and circumstances, and given their opinions, that he was of sound mind. We are not enamored with expert testimony, however procured or presented. The best discussion of and collection of authorities on this subject we have ever seen is published in the January and April numbers of the Law Review for 1871. The article took the first prize at the Harvard Law School, May 1, 1870. We quote from it: “ Lord Denman said: It may be that medical men may be [74]*74more in the habit of observing cases of this kind than other persons, and there may be cases in which medical testimony may be essential, but I cannot agree that moral insanity can be better judged of by medical men than by others.’ Reg. v. Oxford, 9 C. & P. 525, 547.

“'Experience,’ said Mr. Justice Grier, 'has shown that opposite opinions of persons professing to be experts may be obtained to any amount, and it often happens that not only many days, but even weeks, are consumed in cross examinations to test the skill or knowledge of the witnesses and the correctness of their opinions, wasting the time of the court and wearying its patience, and perplexing -instead of elucidating the question involved in the issue.’ Winans v. N. Y. & Erie R. R., 21 How. 88, 100.

“Chief Justice Chapman said, in a late case in Massachusetts : ' I think the opinions of experts are not so highly regarded now-as they formerly were; for while they often afford great aid in the determination of facts, it often happens that experts can be found to testify to any theoiy, however absurd.’ Trial of Samuel M. Andrews, p. 256.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ind. 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rush-v-megee-ind-1871.