Townshend v. Townshend

7 Gill 10
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 7 Gill 10 (Townshend v. Townshend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Townshend v. Townshend, 7 Gill 10 (Md. 1848).

Opinion

Martin, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

It appears from the record in this case, that at the trial of the cause in the county court, after the jury had been impannelled, the appellees, as the caveators of the will in controversy, claimed the privilege of opening and concluding the argument before the jury. This claim was resisted by the appellants, who maintained, that they were entitled, as the caveatees of the will, to begin and conclude the argument, upon these issues. The court below decided in favor of the position taken by the caveators, and whether they erred in the opinion thus expressed by them, is the question raised for our consideration, by the first bill of exceptions.

It appears from the proceedings, as exhibited by the record, in this case, that on the I6th of May 1846, the instrument of writing of the 17th of September 1844, purporting to be the last will and testament of John Townshend, was propounded for probate in the orphans court of Prince George’s county, by the appellants, as executors; that on the Sth of June, in the same year, the caveat and petition of the appellees was interposed, in which they aver and charge, that the pretended will was invalid, upon the two-fold ground, that the testator was, at the period of its execution, mentally incapable of making a valid deed or contract, and that the paper purporting to be his will, was procured from him by fraud or undue influence; and, in their petition, they prayed, that, for the purpose of trying the validity of the said pretended last will and testament, issues might be transmitted to Prince George’s county court, involving the objections presented by the caveat.

The appellants appeared in the orphans court on the 20th of October 1846; one of them, John B. Brooke, in his answer to the petition of the appellees, distinctly denies the allegations of the caveat, with respect both to incapacity and fraud, or undue influence, as therein contained, and the issues in dispute, and transmitted to the county court for the determination •of a jury, are predicated on an affirmation of facts, introduced [25]*25for the purpose of impeaching the will by the caveators on the one side, and a negation of those facts by the caveaf.ee in his answer. And it appears to us to be perfectly clear, that in a case thus situated, the caveators are to be regarded as the assailants of the will; as the actors who originated this proceeding, and who were therefore entitled to be placed upon the record in the attitude of plaintiffs. And, assuming this to be the true position of the caveators, it results from the decision of the Court of Appeals, in the case of Kearney against Gough, 5 Gill & John., 457, that, they possessed the right to open and close the argument before the jury.

In that case, an action was instituted against the defendant, for a libel on the plaintiff’s wife. The defendant pleaded a justification as to a part of the libel, and contended at the trial, that inasmuch as he had justified the language charged to him in the declaration, the affirmative of the issue was upon him, and that he had the right to open and conclude the argument. But the court below refused the application, and the Court of Appeals, in concurring with this opinion, say :

“The decision is in conformity with the settled practice throughout the State,-giving to the. plaintiff on the record the opening and conclusion, except in cases of avowry for rent in arrear, in relation to which the practice is not uniform.”

The ruling of the court below upon the point presented in this exception, was, therefore, we think, correct; and we proceed to consider the questions raised for our examination, by the second bill of exceptions.

We are informed by this exception, that after the counsel for the caveators had made his opening speech before the j ury, the caveators insisted, that upon the issues which the jury were sworn to try, it was incumbent on the caveatees to prove the execution of the will, to try the validity of which the issues were framed, before the caveators could be obliged to offer any evidence to impeach its validity; and that this application was granted by the court below, who hold :

“That the instrument of writing to which the several issues relate, musí be in evidence to the jury, and the execution of it by the alleged testator, ought t.o be proved by the caveatees [26]*26rather than the caveators, when it is to be read in evidence to-the jury.”

We cannot concur with the ruling of the county court as disclosed to us by this exception. The factum of'the will was admitted, and indeed assumed by the issues in the cause, and' the introduction- of evidence to establish a conceded fact, was an-act of supererogation, and therefore to be treated as irrelevant and inadmissible. The court was certainly correct in declaring, that it was indispensably necessary to place before the jury the instrument of writing, in reference to which- the issues were framed; but if the will was not produced in court by the register of wills, to whose custody it had been confided, it was the-duty of the caveators, who were the plaintiffs upon the record, and entitled to open the cause, to have coerced its production by a subpoena duces tecum,, directed to that officer. A' subpoena-of this character, would have been ordered by the court, on the-application of the caveators.

It follows from the views we have thus presented, with re-1 spect to the questions suggested by the second exception, that the evidence introduced, and proposed to be adduced, by thecaveatees in the third exception, was entirely irrelevant and inadmissible. It was proposed to prove, by the testimony of the attesting witnesses, the factum of a paper, the execution of which was admitted by the pleadings and issues in the cause. This could not be done; and the act of the court below, in excluding evidence, the aim and object of- which was to establish the execution of a will in this condition, cannot be complained of as error, because, according to the law of the case, as now enunciated, the testimony proposed to be offered by the-appellants, would be considered, in legal contemplation, as in all respects, incompetent. The ruling of the court, as.expressed in this bill of exceptions, must therefore be affirmed; but whether the law announced by the court below, with regard to the point intended to be reserved by that exception, assuming, that it was incumbent on the appellees to have proved affirmatively the factum of the will, be correct or not, has become an abstract question, upon which it is not proper for this court to express an opinion.

[27]*27It appears from the fourth exception, that the caveatees produced a witness, who proved, that he had been a neighbor of the testator, and had known him well for twenty-five years; that he had often had dealings with him, and would never, during his acquaintance with him, have hesitated to buy from him, or sell to him, land and negroes, for any amount that might have been agreed on between them. This evidence was admitted without objection. The caveatees then offered to prove by the witness, that, in his opinion, based on the foregoing facts, and from his acquaintance with the testator, the testator was of sound and disposing mind, and capable of executing a valid deed or contract, during all the period of the witness’s acquaintance with him.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Gill 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townshend-v-townshend-md-1848.