Will of Smith

8 N.W. 616, 52 Wis. 543, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 118
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 8 N.W. 616 (Will of Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Will of Smith, 8 N.W. 616, 52 Wis. 543, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 118 (Wis. 1881).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed April 19, 1881:

Lyon, J.

The judgment of the circuit court went upon the ground that it is essential to the validity of a will that it be attested and subscribed by two witnesses in the presence of each other, as well as in the presence of the testator. Our statute contains no such provision. It only requires that the will shall be attested and subscribed in the presence of the testator by two or more competent witnesses.” R. S., 650, sec. 2282. So far as we are aware, the eases on this subject arising under statutes similar to ours (many of which are cited in the brief of counsel for the appellant), uniformly hold that the witnesses need not attest and subscribe the will in the presence of each other. To hold otherwise would be to interpolate a provision in the statute which the legislature has not written there, and which cannot properly be implied from anything which is written. It must be held, therefore, that the alleged will is not invalid merely because the witnesses thereto did not attest and subscribe it in the presence of each other.

We are next to determine whether the findings of the jury are supported by the evidence. The testimony is quite voluminous, but it is unecessary to state it at length. A summary of it is sufficient.

It appears that John B. Smith, the alleged testator, was an early settler of Milwaukee. In 1848 he was elected senator for Milwaukee county, and served as such in the legislative sessions of 1849 and 1850. At one time he was quite wealthy, but in 1857 he became interested in the Milwaukee & Horicon Railroad Company, and ultimately lost all his property in that enterprise. At one time he was president of that company. About 1867 he went into bankruptcy. Soon after he engaged in the business of manufacturing machinery, and continued in [548]*548that business until he died. lie was also a solicitor of patents. He accumulated some property after his financial reverse; but the precise value of the estate which he left does not appear. It was estimated, on the argument of the cause, at $6,000 by counsel for the appellant, and the accuracy of the estimate was not seriously questioned by the opposing counsel.

Several prominent business men of Milwaukee, who were intimately acquainted with the deceased for a quarter of a century and more before his death, were examined and gave testimony concerning his mental character and condition during the time they knew him. From their testimony, and from all the testimony in the case, it satisfactorily appears that the deceased was a gentleman of excellent moral character, and that his intellectual powers were of a high order. His mind was cultivated by reading and study, and his general information was very extensive and varied. One witness says, no doubt truly, that he was a first-dass mechanic and scientist; that he had a good theory of mechanics, and was a well-read man. He seemed to have some talent for invention, and did . invent several articles, which he sought to bring into use. He attempted other inventions and failed. He possessed great self-reliance and firmness, and was not easily swerved from a purpose deliberately formed. Some of the witnesses say he was very conceited and self-willed. Except that he was somewhat more reserved in his demeanor after his reverse of fortune than before, no particular change is observed in his character during the time covered by the testimony, which was from about 1840 until he died.

In short, the deceased was a person of vigorous intellect and will, had unbounded faith in the accuracy and soundness of his own judgment, and was moved to action by an earnest, sanguine temperament. In such a man we should naturally expect-some peculiarities or eccentricities of conduct, but we find fewer of these disclosed in the evidence than might reasonably be looked for. It appears that for a short time — perhaps two [549]*549or three months, but during what year is not shown, — -he advertised one of his callings by wearing on the front of his hat a small paper on which was printed the words, “Solicitor of Patents.” Also, that he was seen at different times on skates in a public street of the city. It seems, however, that he was testing a new kind of skate which he had invented. Thus far we find no evidence that the deceased was not of sound mind when he executed the instrument propounded as his last will and testament. But there was another peculiarity of the deceased, which will now be considered. He was what is commonly called a spiritualist. He had come to believe that, through certain mediums, he could communicate with the spirits of deceased persons. He received, through one of these mediums, what purported to be a message from his deceased wife, advising him to marry the appellant, to whom he was then paying his addresses. He doubtless believed the message was from his deceased wife. He also consulted mediums quite frequently concerning his business and proposed inventions. He once engaged in wheat speculations on advice from such sources. At first he was successful, but later operations were not so successful. It does not appear that he persisted in these speculations very long after fortune turned against him.

During the French and German war he believed reports of the condition of the contest which he received from mediums, although different from the current newspaper reports. But when the evidence of the truth of the newspaper reports became strong, his confidence in the infallibility of the other reports was weakened. He received a communication purporting to be from his deceased wife after his last marriage, and after he had trouble with some of his children, approving of what he had done. This was evidently after he had executed his will. It does not appear whether or not he regarded the communication as genuine, but probably he did so regard it. But the intense faith of the deceased in the accuracy of his own judgment was a counterpoise to his belief in the pos[550]*550sibility of obtaining direct messages from the other world. It led him to admit another element in his belief which would leave him free to follow his own judgment in a given case, no matter how strongly he might be pressed by supposed supernatural advice or entreaty to act against it. So he came to believe, as one witness states it, that there was more than one kind of spirits — some might try to fool him, and others might not.” It is perfectly obvious from the whole testimony that the infallible test which he applied to determine from which of these classes of spirits a given message came, was this:’ If it accorded with his judgment, it came from the reliable class; if not, then it came from the other class, and was to be disregarded.

The witness from whose testimony the above extract was taken, and who is a gentleman of great intelligence and accurate perception of character, testified further as follows: “Mr. Smith was a man of pronounced views and opinions; very decided. I am not sure that his spiritualistic views were chiefly in the nature of investigation into the subject. I think he was convinced that it was not merely an experimental investigation. He believed, I think, in spiritualism. My impression is, he believed there were different kinds of spirits. He seemed to acknowledge that the spirits might deceive. The impression I formed was, that where the advice he received corresponded with his own views, he followed it; otherwise,not.” We do not doubt that this is a perfectly correct view of the belief of the deceased, and indicates' just how far he could have been influenced by alleged communications from the other world.

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.W. 616, 52 Wis. 543, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/will-of-smith-wis-1881.