Stewart v. Lyons

47 S.E. 442, 54 W. Va. 665, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 150
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 47 S.E. 442 (Stewart v. Lyons) 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
Stewart v. Lyons, 47 S.E. 442, 54 W. Va. 665, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 150 (W. Va. 1903).

Opinion

BRAnnon, Judge :

A writing was admitted to probate by the clerk of the county court of Wetzel comity as the will of Mary A. Brookover. When this probate came up for confirmation before the county court, Aaron Lyons and others contested such confirmation and denied the validity of the will, and upon trial of the contest the court held the paper not to be such will,, and refused to confirm the probate made by the clerk. An appeal was taken by Houston Stewart, the sole devisee and legatee under the will, of the circuit court, and after two trials without decision by reason of hung juries a third trial was had before a jury, and the proponent demurred to the evidence of the contestants, and the court having compelled the contestants over their objection to join in the demurrer, gave judgment that the writing was the will of Mary A. Brookover, from which judgment the contestants have sued out a writ of error from this Court.

The first question presented for decision is based on the compulsion of the contestants to join in the demurrer to evidence. It is argued that he who bears the burden of proof cannot compel his adversary to join in demurrer to evidence, and that as the proponent of a will carries the burden of proof, there is error in the ruling of the court compelling the contestants to .unite in the demurrer. In West Virginia, the rule is not that a party on whom rests the burden cannot demur. Either party may demur to the evidence, unless the case be very clearly against the demurrant, or the court itself has reasonable doubt as to what facts should reasonably be inferred from the evidence. Hollandsworth v. Stone, 47 W. Va. 773; Bowman v. Dewing, 50 Id. 445. The evidence on both sides must be incorporated in the demurrer. Then comes the question of the principle of the consideration of that evidence, and here the rule is properly put in the opinion by Judge Dent in the latter case, that all the evidence on both sides must be considered as if there were a motion to set aside a Verdict for the demurree, and that is, discard all evidence of the demurrant conflicting with that of the demurree, or the credit of which is' impeached, and all inferences which do not fairly arise from his own evidence, and as admitting all that may be fairly and reasonably inferred from the evidence of the demurree. Shaver v. Edgell, 48 W. [668]*668Va. 502; Hogg’s Plead. & Forms, 537; Lewis v. Railroad, 47 W. Va. 656; Gunn v. Railroad, 43 Id. p. 681; Garrett v. Ramsay, 26 Id. 345.

Therefore, there is no error in enforcing a joinder in the demurrer.

The next question is the sanity of the testatrix. Mary Lyons was born a poor country girl, witl out apportunitics for education, culture or refinement. “Chill penury repressed the living rage and froze the genial current of the soul.” She worked as a domestic, as a menial, from childhood. When up in years somewhat, after hard years, she accepted the offer of marriage with an aged man, Jennings, who owned a home in the town of New Martinsville, so that she might have a home, or perhaps under promise that it would be given to her at her husband’s death, as it was. She was compelled to and did support her aged husband and herself at the washtub of the families of New Martinsville. After her husband’s death she continued at the washtub or in the kitchens of other people. Soane years later she married a very respectable man, Brookover, prominent in his county, who was twice its sheriff, and once a justice, and who owned a home in New Martinsville and some land irear it, a few acres, which he devised to- her. Thus she was owner of considerable property, not of great value when she so acquired it, but which later came to be of considerable worth, but not a large estate. She was a dutiful, kindly wife to both husbands. She had only one child, which died when a few weeks old. She had brothers and sisters, the contestants of her will. Her aged mother lived with Mrs. Brookover, and while there secured a pension. The brothers and sisters claimed part of it from the mother, and Mrs. Brookover, proposing to take care of her, denied them their right, and a bitter quarrel arose between her and her brothers and sisters about it, and they became perfectly estranged, not exchanging visits, and Mrs. Brookover forbade them entry to her house. She blamed one brother also for furnishing her mother tobacco. The feeling between them for years before her death was intense, as is admitted mi both sides. Mrs. Brookover was warm and kindly to friends, but intensely resentful and bitter towards enemies, or those whom she regarded as such. We can say that if, for real or fancied cause, she- took up a dislike or prejudice against a person, she never [669]*669forgave or relented. She was illiterate, just able to read a little print. She was rude, sometimes coarse, often using profane language, especially when excited or angered. Sometimes, as a witness says, she seemed refined, but often otherwise. A witness says, she came in the last years of her life several times a day to his saloon and drank liquor. This does not seem well established; but certain it is that no set drink habit or inebriety is established. No one says she was a drunkard, or even seen drunk. She was,, in the opinion of several witnesses, peculiar and eccentric, but not many features or exemplifications of this are shown. For instance: She owned a little dog, and when she moved from the house to which it was accustomed it refused to go with her. She manifested special attachment to it, going back to see it, taking it candy, and on one occasion killing a chicken and giving it the gravy to lick, and covering it up to keep it warm. When her husband, Brookover, died she sent to Sistersville to an undertaker saying she wanted a ñne casket for him, refused to take one offered, wanted a silver one, say-png she wanted “Pap” to be put away nicely, as ho had been good to her, and she did not want a wood coffin that would let the water in. She wanted a silver one, the witness thinking she meant an alluminum one. She refused to accept one he offered, and ordered him to get one regardless of cost, and he ordered a heavy steed one costing $190, and she was pleased with it. On one occasion she shoved about an acquaintance visiting her house and kicked him, and he caught her foot and threw her. The witness says he regarded that she did this in joke. Her husband, Brookover, had a life insurance policy, and upon his death she went to the agent to inquire about it, and learned that Brookover had got the money on it, when she exclaimed: “The damned old son of a hitch, if I had known that I wouldn’t have bought him an iron coffin. I would have bought him a chestnut coffin, so he could go through hell a-eraekin.” She was offered a good price for some property, but suspecting that the purchase was being made for a certain person she said she would sell, but she would see that person in hell before she would soil to him; she would not sell to “them sons of bitches.” She became incensed at this family because in the great flood in the Ohio the water deluged her home, and she went into the house of this family, and she thought that her husband was not treated right [670]*670•while there. The head of this family says she got angry, he did not know why. A witness says that she was governed by prejudice and “would always have foolish, silly talk. I can’t recollect the talk.” lie then relates the talk just given in relation to selling some property. One of the strongest witnesses against the sanity of the testatrix is Dr. Dinsmore, a doctor of Pennsylvania, who visited Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.E. 442, 54 W. Va. 665, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-lyons-wva-1903.