Tucker v. Houston

112 So. 360, 216 Ala. 43, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 35
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 7, 1927
Docket7 Div. 716.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 112 So. 360 (Tucker v. Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tucker v. Houston, 112 So. 360, 216 Ala. 43, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 35 (Ala. 1927).

Opinion

*46 SAYRE, J.

The last will and testament of Margaret T. Johnson, deceased, was contested by appellants by a bill filed on the equity side of the circuit court of Calhoun. Complainants (appellants) demanded a trial by jury, and, such trial being had, a verdict was returned in favor of the validity of the will, and on November 11, 1925, the court entered its decree in agreement with the verdict. November 30th, thereafter-, complainants “moved the court to set aside the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court in this óause.” December 5th the motion was overruled. A bill of the exceptions reserved at the trial by jury was presented to the judge who presided at the trial on March 1, 1926, and a bond for appeal was filed and approved June 2, 1926. A bill of exceptions must be presented to the judge or clerk at any time within 90 days from the day on which judgment is entered, but presentation of the bill within 90 days after the granting or refusing of a motion for a new trial is sufficient to- preserve for review the rulings of the trial court on the trial of the original cause, as well as the ruling of the court on the motion for a new trial. Section 6433 of the Code. An appeal in the ordinary case must be taken within six months from the rendition of the judgment or decree. Section 6127 of the Code. It will be observed that, if the presentation of the bill of exceptions and the filing of the bond for appeal be dated from the decree of November 11, 1925, both came too late; but, if dated from the decree overruling the motion for a rehearing —new trial, it is called — both were within the time prescribed by statute. In Lewis v. Martin, 210 Ala. 401, 98 So. 635, the trial of the issue of devisavit vel non before a jury is likened in every respect to the trial of a civil case at law. The court in that case went so far as to hold that, pending a motion for a “new trial or rehearing,” the decree does not become final and will not support an appeal, and that rule 81 of chancery practice has no application to a case of this character. In other words, it was ruled that, notwithstanding the bill to contest a will must be filed on the equity side of the court, it is to alb intents and purposes an action at law. This seems to the writer to be at variance with the decisions in Ex parte Colvert, 188 Ala. 650, 65 So. 964, and Kilgore v. T. C. I. & R. Co., 191 Ala. 189, 67 So. 1002; but the court here and now prefers to stand by the precedent afforded by Lewis v. Martin, supra: Accordingly, the motions to' strike the bill of exceptions and to-dismiss the appeal are both overruled.

Birmingham College, now known as. Birmingham-Southern College,, a Methodist institution, was named in the will of deceased as residuary legatee, and this-made it the-largest beneficiary under the will. Appellants-, sought to challenge a number of jurors on the-ground that they were members of the Methodist Church. As members- of the Methodist Church, these jurors had no pecuniary interest in the issues involved, and the court committed no error in overruling appellants’ objection to these jurors. Ex parte State Bar Association, 92 Ala. 113, 8 So. 768; Burdine v. Grand Lodge, 37 Ala. 478.

Appellants by numerous assignments of error seek to get before the court their proposition that they were entitled to have the-jury consider the question of undue influence on the part of -Woolverton, who prepared the will in contest at the instance and request of testatrix and was in it named as executor. Our opinion is that no such issue was propounded by the contest filed, and hence there-was no error in excluding from the jury all evidence or refusing instructions by which-, appellants sought to raise the question.

The original bill averred as grounds of contest (1) “the said Margaret T. Johnson [testaLrix] was of unsound mind” ; and (2) she “did not have testamentary capacity.” By an. amendment it was charged that “the said purported will of the said Margaret T. Johnson is not the will of the said Margaret T. Johnson.” These averments related to the-time of the execution of the will, as the original and amended bill sufficiently showed. No objection by demurrer to these averments was-taken. By them and the denials of the main defendant, the Birmingham-Southern College,, an issue was formed as to the testamentary capacity of testatrix. When it is determined *47 that the proponent or any interested party has exerted undue influence, thereby inducing the execution of the will, such instrument is not the will of the deceased by whom it was executed. But this proposition has nothing to do with the construction of the pleadings in a cause of this character. It is far from the equivalent of an assertion that, to raise the issue of undue influence, it suffices to allege merely that the instrument in contest is not the will of deceased. It has been held, very correctly of course, that, to require the contestant, who would contest a will on the ground of undue influence, to set out in detail the means by which the influence was acquired and the manner in which it was exercised, would require in most cases the impossible, since the knowledge of these facts most frequently, if not always, rests in those who are most interested in withholding it. Coghill v. Kennedy, 119 Ala. 641, 24 So. 459; Strickland v. Strickland, 206 Ala. 452, 90 So. 345; Alexander v. Gibson, 176 Ala. 258, 57 So. 760; Barnett v. Freeman, 197 Ala. 142, 72 So. 395. And in Letohatchie Church v. Bullock, 133 Ala. 548, 552, 32 So., 58, 59, McClellan, C. J., summed up the authorities of antecedent date as follows:

“We have never understood it to be necessary to allege with particularity the quo modo the result complained of was accomplished, but only that it was accomplished by undue influence exerted by named persons. * * * Hence it is that the averment should be rather of the result than of the particular and special .acts and modes of causation.”

Appellants, we may presume, had in mind a part of the statement quoted above when they framed the amendment of the bill heretofore (Stated. But it seems elea'r they overlooked, avoided, or ignored that part of the statement in which it was said, in effect, that it is necessary in such cases to aver that the execution of the instrument in contest was accomplished by undue influence exerted by named persons. That this would have been held on demurrer to be a fatal oversight has been ruled in later cases. Johnson v. Johnson, 206 Ala. 523, 91 So. 260; Daggett v. Boomer, 210 Ala. 673, 99 So. 181. We would not impose the .duty upon the court, nor confer the privilege, <of demurring to bills brought to contest wills. But our opinion is that, if appellants desired to contest the alleged will on the ground of undue influence, they should have so informed the court, and were properly not allowed to require the court, as often as appellants proposed some action on its part, to east about for some possible ground, some relevant issue .unstated in the pleadings, on which to rule in .•agreement with appellants’ contention. As the case was, the averment that “the said purported will * * * is not the will” of deceased, without more, no more expresses one possible ground of contest than another. It ,<iid no more than express the desire of appellants to contest the will of deceased on some unstated ground.

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Bluebook (online)
112 So. 360, 216 Ala. 43, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-houston-ala-1927.