Stutsman v. Sharpless

101 N.W. 105, 125 Iowa 335
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 24, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 101 N.W. 105 (Stutsman v. Sharpless) 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
Stutsman v. Sharpless, 101 N.W. 105, 125 Iowa 335 (iowa 1904).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

Samuel Sharpless was horn in 1822, and married the contestant, then a widow, in 1851. Shortly afterwards his mother came to live with them, bringing with her a grandchild two years old,' the daughter of deceased’s only sister. This child continued in the family, after the grandmother’s death, until 1891, when she was married, and to her was born Charlotte Sharpless Stutsman, May 12, 1891, and Jean Elizabeth Stutsman,.May 20, 1900. Samuel-died June 5, 1901. Two wills were filed for probate, one, executed in 1868, leaving all his property to his widow, and [337]*337the other, executed in 1901, giving her the use of it for life, with the remainder to the children of Mrs. Stutsman, save a legacy to a supposed namesake. The widow objected to probating the last will, on the gtound of the alleged incapacity of the testator. Charles M. Dutcher was appointed guardian ad litem for the children, and a trial was had which resulted in a verdict for the contestant December 6, 1901. A motion for new trial was filed and then'withdrawn. On the 10th day of the same month the court entered an order admitting the will of 1868 to probate, and appointed executors thereunder. The proponents perfected an appeal December 12, 1901, but this was dismissed by this court on the ground that no judgment had been entered on the verdict. On December 31,1902, appellants requested the district court to enter judgment as of December 10, 1901, rejecting the will of 1901, in order to enable them to appeal, and this motion was sustained, notwithstanding objections interposed by contestant. The proponents again perfected an appeal June 5, 1903.

1. Second appeal. I. Appellee moves to dismiss the last appeal on the grounds that a second appeal cannot be taken in the same case, and that, as the guardian ad litem of proponents claimed and received compensation from the executors of the proponents are estopped from prosecuting this appeal. That á second appeal cannot be taken while the first is pending is evident, for the cause is then before the Supreme Court for consideration. Newbury v. Getchell & Martin Lumber Co., 106 Iowa, 140. But after that has been dismissed on motion of appellant the judgment in the district court stands precisely as before, -and is subject to review if the second appeal is perfected within the time fixed by statute. Groendyke v. Musgrave, 123 Iowa, 535. Here the second appeal was perfected within six months of the entry of the nunc pro tunc judgment, but not until nearly eighteen months after the return of the [338]*338verdict and the date as of which the judgment nunc pro tunc was entered, and it is argued that this was not in time.

2. Time for taxing appeal. In Callanan v. Votruba, 104 Iowa, 672, we held that there is no judgment until that rendered is actually spread upon the records of the court, and in Kennedy v. Citizens’ Nat. Bank, 119 Iowa, 123, that appeal may not be taken from the mere order for judgment by the judge not entered of record. In Carter v. Sherman, 63 Iowa, 689, the parties agreed that judgment might be entered in vacation as of the September, 1882, term of court, which adjourned during that month. The decision was not made until December 19th of the same year, and the court held that the time within which an appeal might be taken should be computed from the actual entry of the judgement, rather than from the date as of which it was rendered. In principle these decisions are controlling, for in effect they lay down the rule that the period within which an appeal may be taken begins to run from the entry of the judgment of record, regardless of when announced orally or in writing by the judge, for until then there is no judgment from which an appeal may be taken. For some purposes the judgment may relate back, may be now as of then, but not in respect to procedure essential to secure a review, else a mere ministerial officer of the court, by omitting to make the proper entry, might defeat the right of an appeal entirely. As directly in point, see Andrews’ Adm’r v. Branch Bank at Mobile, 10 Ala. 375; In re Fifteenth Avenue Extension, 54 Cal. 179; Coon v. Grand Lodge, etc., 76 Cal. 354 (18 Pac. Rep. 384); Johnson v. Smith, 14 Tex. 412. The appeal was in time.

3 Wills- contest; appeal. But it is said that the entry in December, 1901, admitting the will of 1868 to probate, was an order or judgment from which the appeal might and should have been taken- A sufficient answer is that the due execution of that will was not an issue in the case. True, Mrs. Sharpless alleged its existence as a basis of her [339]*339objections, but as deceased was'childless she was interested to the extent of one-sixth of tire estate, regardless of that will, and, doubtless for this reason, the parties stipulated that the only issue to be tried was whether deceased was of sound and disposing mind May 11, 1901, the date of the last will. See In re Fallon’s Will, 107 Iowa, 120. The first will was not even introduced in evidence, nor was proof of its execution offered. Before it could be admitted to probate, other evidence must have been received. Whether deceased was of sound mind when he executed the will of 1901 being tire only issue, an order in another matter upon which no evidence had been adduced cannot be regarded as pertaining to the case. The most that can be said is that probating the first will was likely to follow as a natural consequence the rejection of the last will. A decisive test, as we think, is that'the rejection of the last will would not, under the circumstances disclosed, bar those interested from contesting the first, and this being true, the order with respect to the first must be treated as foreign to the case.

4. Same. It appears that after the last will was admitted to probate the guardian ad litem filed with the executors thereunder a claim for legal services rendered by himself and an assistant in behalf of proponents, and that the claim was settled by the executors by the pay-' ment of $600. This is made a ground of the motion to dismiss, the theory being that, having accepted the judgment, they may not complain. But the guardian ad litem, in presenting his claim for services to the court, acted for himself, and did not represent his wards. Indeed, his position was somewhat adversary to their interests, as their property might be subjected to the reasonable compensation for his services. See Tyson v. Richardson, 103 Wis. 397 (79 N. W. Rep. 439). Moreover, the settlement of the claim does not appear to have been made dependent in any way upon anything to be done in this case, and ought not to be treated as a waiver of the right to appeal.

[340]*3405. insanity: opinfoii.61*4 II. Attention has been directed in previous decisions to the difference between the foundations to be laid for a nonexpert’s opinion of the sanity and of the insanity of a person under investigation. See Alvord v. Alvord, 109 Iowa, 113; In re Hull's Will, 117 Iowa, 738. The facts on which an opinion that deceased’s mind was unsound should appear in their natures somewhat inconsistent with mental soundness, as that the acts or talks of deceased were unnatural or unusual, or such as would not ordinarily be anticipated from a person of his character. In other words, the facts and circumstances must have been such as tended to support the witnesses’ conclusion.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.W. 105, 125 Iowa 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stutsman-v-sharpless-iowa-1904.