Tobin v. Jenkins

29 Ark. 151
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 29 Ark. 151 (Tobin v. Jenkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tobin v. Jenkins, 29 Ark. 151 (Ark. 1874).

Opinion

Walker, J.

The plaintiffs, heirs at law of Nathan Jenkins, deceased, filed their petition, in-, the Jefferson circuit-court, against the other heirs of said Jenkins, for the purpos e-of having the will of Nathan Jenkins (which had been probated before the clerk) set aside upon the grounds :

1. That the testator, at the time the will was made, was not-of sound and disposing mind and memory.

2. Because the will was not the result of the voluntary act-of the testator, but was procured to be executed by an undue; influence over him by William H. Jenkins, a son and a devisee in the will.

3. That the provisions /of the will were agreed upon by William H. and James H. Jenkins, to whom the whole estate of the testator was devised, and who procured the'will to be written and dictated its provisions, and thereby perpetrated a fraud and an imposition upon the testator.

The prayer of the petition was, that an issue be formed to be tried by a jury, as to whether the instrument probated was, or not, the will of Nathan Jenkins.

The defendant answered and denied all that" part of the petition which set up the invalidity of the will. A jury was impaneled and sworn, who, after having heard the evidence and the instructions of the court, returned a verdict that they found for the defendants, upon which judgment was rendered in their favor.

The complainants filed their motion for a new trial, and assigned as cause several errors in the proeeedings, and in the giving and refusing to give certain instructions. The motion for a new trial was overruled, exceptions taken, and the case brought before this court by appeal.

The first error complained of and made a ground for a new trial is, that the court refused to permit the complainants to conclude the argument before the jury.

It is provided in the Code, sec. 349, that the party having-the burden of proof shall have the conclusion of the argument; The complainants in this case held the affirmative, and were consequently entitled to conclude, as held by this court in Rogers et al. v. Diamond, 13 Ark., 479; McDaniel v. Crosby et al., 19 id., 533. We must therefore hold that it was error in the court below to deny to the complainants the right to conclude the argument before the jury. That there is a decided advantage before a jury in having the concluding argument, there can be no doubt; the extent of the wrong, however, it is hard to estimate. It may suffice that it is a right and a privilege to which complainants were entitled.

' .The next error presented for consideration is, that the court permitted a paper which purported to be the will of Nathan Jenkins, dated February 26, 1862, to be read in evidence to the jury over the objection of complainants. It is true that the will of 1862 was never probated as a will, but it was proven by the subscribing witness to have been executed by the testator. This will was executed at a time when there seems to have been no question as to the capacity of the testator to. make a will, and as its provisions with regard to the disposition of his property to his sons, to the exclusion of the children of his daughters, are, with unimportant differences, the Same as those in the will of 1868, the validity of which is in contest, we think that it was competent evidence to be considered in connection with all of the other evidence offered by the parties to show whether the testator’s mind was rational, and was, or was not unduly influenced at the time the will, in 1868, was executed.

The next ground for a new trial is, that the court erred in allowing the cause to be tried without having first directed an issue to be made up, according to law, to try the validity of the will.

The record states that the jury were duly sworn, but it does not appear that any issue was formed as provided for in sec-. tion 32, ch. 180, Gould’s Dig., which provides that “it shall be the duty of the circuit court to direct an issue to try the validity of such will, which issue shall, in all cases, be tried by a jury.” "We do not suppose that any very formal order would be required; but under the provisions of this statute, the distinct issue of devisavit vel non should have been presented, and the jury should have been sworn to try it. This, however, appears not to have been done, and there is nothing, not even the verdict, to indicate what the issue was the jury were sworn to try. This objection was well taken.

The remaining grounds for a new trial arise out of the instructions given at the request of the defendants, and those asked by the complainants and refused by the court; to all of which, exceptions were taken by complainants. The first is, that the court erred in giving the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th instructions asked by defendants. The second is, that the court erred in refusing to give the 8d, 4th, 7th and 8th instructions asked by the complainants.

The 5th instruction given at the instance of the defendants, is: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the testator, Nathan Jenkins, knew what he was about when he executed his will, and the consequences of what he was doing; if he had sufficient capacity to make a contract, he might make a valid will, and the testator might even not have had sufficient strength of mind and vigor of intellect to digest all the parts of a contract, and yét be competent to direct the disposition of his property by will; the question for the jury to determine being, were the mind and memory of Nathan Jenkins, at the time he executed his will, sufficiently strong to enable him to know and understand the business in which he was engaged at the time when he executed the will ?”

This is a long, instruction, and embraces several distinct propositions, but fails to cover the question of undue influence, of which there was evidence, whether slight or strong, we are not called upon to determine. The substance of the instruction was, that if the testator knew what he was about when he made the will, and had sufficient capacity to make it, or if they should find that the testator had not sufficient mind to digest and understand all the parts of a contract, he yet might be competent to make a will. This might all be true, and still, if the mind was not free to act, if constrained to act, or lulled into repose to submissiveness to the will of another, who was present at the time, and had before and at the time exercised a commanding control over the testator, by reason of which the freedom of thought was suppressed, under such circumstances the act might be declared invalid; and as there was evidence upon this question, the instructions should have been so qualified as to leave the jury free to consider of it, and by its omission the jury were left to infer that, irrespective of the question of undue influence, they might find for the defendants. This question of capacity, or incapacity, and that of undue influence, are intimately connected, and the character and extent of the influence so dependent upon the state of the mind,- as well as of all of the surroundings of the party who contracts, that both must of necessity be considered together. The power of the influence depends much upon the state of the mind. Thus, in Kelly's heirs v.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Ark. 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tobin-v-jenkins-ark-1874.