Where the issue is whether a person is of sound or unsound mind,
a lay witness who has had an adequate opportunity to observe the
speech and conduct of that person may, in addition to relating the
significant instances of speech and conduct, testify to the opinion
formed at the time of observation as to the mental capacity of such
person.
While a general rule cannot be framed for all cases, and in
clear cases of abuse the appellate court should reverse, the
determination of whether a witness is qualified to state his
opinion as to the mental
Page 213 U. S. 258
condition of a testator is for the trial judge who has all the
evidence and the witness before him, and in this case the trial
judge does not seem to have abused his discretion as to the
admission of testimony.
Evidence as to an alleged delusion of testator thirty years
before execution of the will
held to be properly excluded
both because of remoteness and of the tendency to raise a
collateral issue as to whether the statements connected therewith
were or were not actually false.
Where the wife as caveator attacks testator's soundness of mind
because he referred to himself at times as a widower and at times
as divorced, an agreement of separation and a deed referring to
himself as widower, admitted solely to explain why testator so
referred to himself,
held competent for that purpose, but
evidence by the wife as to her reasons for signing the agreement
and other instruments, in which she joined with her husband as his
wife, were properly excluded.
The admission of incompetent evidence is not reversible error if
subsequently it is distinctly withdrawn from the jury, and so
held in this case where a letter was erroneously admitted
but the presiding judge at request of the party objecting to its
admission, instructed the jury that nothing in such letter was to
be taken as evidence of truth of the statements therein or even to
be used for purposes of cross-examination.
29 App.D.C. 460, affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity of the will of Henry E.
Woodbury, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we are asked to review, on appeal and writ of
error, a judgment of the Court of Appeals of the District of
Columbia, affirming a decree of the Supreme Court of the District,
sitting as a probate court, which admitted to probate certain paper
writings purporting to be the will and codicils thereto
Page 213 U. S. 259
of Henry E. Woodbury. The decree was based upon the findings of
a jury upon two issues submitted to it, namely:
"(1) At the time of the execution of the said several paper
writings propounded for probate as the last will and testament of
Henry E. Woodbury, deceased, was the said Henry E. Woodbury of
sound and disposing mind and capable of making a valid deed or
contract?"
"(2) Was execution of said paper writings procured by the fraud
or undue influence of Sallie Woodbury, Mena Stevens, or either of
them, or any other person or persons?"
The jury found that the testator was of sound mind and that he
was not unduly influenced. The questions brought here arose upon
the trial of those issues, and are stated in the bill of exceptions
duly allowed. There are nineteen assignments of error, relating to
the admission or exclusion of evidence, and to the instructions or
refusal of instructions to the jury. There was conflicting evidence
upon the issues. As no question of the sufficiency of the evidence
of either party is properly here, a brief preliminary statement of
facts is sufficient, and any other facts which may be needed to
explain the questions of law will be stated in connection with the
disposition of those questions.
According to the practice in the District in a contest of this
kind, those propounding the instrument for probate are called
caveatees and those opposing its probate caveators.
The testator, Henry E. Woodbury, died January 15, 1905,
seventy-nine years of age. The will was executed April 11, 1902,
and five codicils were executed at different times from January 5,
1903, to December 20, 1904. With slight exceptions, the will and
codicils devise and bequeath the real and personal property to
charities. The testator had been a physician until 1881, when an
injury compelled him to cease the practice of his profession. He
was childless. He had married in 1870, and in less than two years
had parted from his wife, and thereafter they lived separately,
though without being divorced. A sister, Sallie Woodbury, lived
with him until her death, in December, 1902. After the death of the
sister, Mena M. Stevens became
Page 213 U. S. 260
his housekeeper and nurse. A nephew, Molyneaux L. Turner, was
his heir and next of kin. His wife survived the testator, and, with
the nephew, filed a caveat against the probate of the paper
writings purporting to be a will and codicils.
1. The first eleven assignments of error relate to the admission
or exclusion by the trial court of the testimony of lay witnesses
as to their opinion for or against the mental capacity of the
testator. In the view we take of these assignments of error, they
may be considered together, and without any statement as to the
testimony of the several witnesses.
The rule governing the admission of testimony of this character
which has been prescribed by this Court for the courts of the
United States is easy of statement and administration. Where the
issue is whether a person is of sound or unsound mind, a lay
witness who has had an adequate opportunity to observe the speech
and other conduct of that person may, in addition to relating the
significant instances of speech and conduct, testify to the opinion
on the mental capacity formed at the time from such observation.
Insurance Co. v. Rodel, 95 U. S. 232;
Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Lathrop, 111 U.
S. 612;
Queenan v. Oklahoma, 190 U.
S. 548. In no other way than this can the full knowledge
of an unprofessional witness with regard to the issue be placed
before the jury, because ordinarily it is impossible for such a
witness to give an adequate description of all the appearances
which to him have indicated sanity or insanity. Such testimony has
been well described as a compendious mode of ascertaining the
result of the actual observations of witnesses. Ordinarily, and
perhaps necessarily, the witness, in testifying to his
opportunities for observation and his actual observation, relates
more or less fully the instances of his conversation or dealings
with the person whose mental capacity is under consideration, and
it is, of course, competent, either upon direct or
cross-examination, to elicit those instances in detail.
The order of the evidence must be left to the discretion of the
trial judge; but, when sufficient appears to convince the
Page 213 U. S. 261
trial judge that the witness has had an opportunity for adequate
observation of the person's mental capacity, and has actually
observed it, then the judge may permit him to testify to his
opinion. This was the course pursued by the trial judge in this
case. With respect to each witness whose testimony as to opinion
was admitted or excluded, the judge exercised his discretion upon
the qualifying testimony.
We are asked to review that discretion, and to say that, in the
case of the eleven witnesses before us, it was improperly
exercised. We have no hesitation in declining to do this. No
general rule can well be framed which will govern all cases, and an
attempt to do that would multiply exceptions and new trials. The
responsibility for the exercise of the judicial power of
determining whether a given witness has the qualifications which
will permit him, to the profit of the jury, to state his opinion
upon an issue of this kind, may best be left with the judge
presiding at the trial, who has a comprehensive view of the issue
and of all of the evidence, and the witness himself before his
face.
This is not to say that, in a very clear case, an appellate
court ought not to review the discretion of the trial judge. For
instance, if it should appear that the witness had never spoken to
the testator or seen any significant act, but merely observed him
driving from day to day through the streets, and the opinion of
such a witness as to sanity had been received, it would be the duty
of the appellate court to correct the error. On the other hand, if
the witness for years had been in constant communication with the
testator, had frequently conversed with him and observed his
conduct from day to day, the exclusion of the opinion of the
witness ought to be corrected by the appellate court. These are
instances of a plain abuse of judicial discretion.
The true rule of action for an appellate court is stated in
Wheeler v. United States, 159 U.
S. 523. In that case, this Court was considering the
admissibility, upon the trial of an indictment for murder, of the
testimony of a boy five and a
Page 213 U. S. 262
half years old at the time of the trial. The court, speaking by
Mr. Justice Brewer, said (p.
159 U. S.
524):
"The decision of this question rests primarily with the trial
judge, who sees the proposed witness, notices his manner, his
apparent possession or lack of intelligence, and may resort to any
examination which will tend to disclose his capacity and
intellignce as well as his understanding of the obligations of an
oath. As many of these matters cannot be photographed into the
record, the decision of the trial judge will not be disturbed on
review unless, from that which is preserved, it is clear that it
was erroneous."
Though the question of competency in that case differed
materially from the questions of competency in this case, the
spirit which underlies the statement of the court there ought to
govern here.
We have examined these eleven assignments of error and brought
them to the test of the foregoing principles. We find that no
admissions or exclusions of testimony were clearly erroneous, and
accordingly all the assignments are overruled.
2. The caveators, on the issue of unsoundness of mind of the
testator in 1902 and the following years, offered in evidence the
record in a suit for divorce brought by the testator in 1872, and
more especially that part of the record wherein he alleged, as a
cause for divorce, that his wife was incapable of a valid marriage
on account of a physical malformation. The physicians appointed by
the court reported, after an examination of the wife, that the
condition alleged did not exist. The offer of this evidence was
accompanied by the contention that it showed a delusion on the part
of the testator. The evidence was excluded, and we think rightly,
either upon the ground that it was too remote in point of time, or
that it would lead to a collateral inquiry whether the statement
was actually false, and, if so, whether it was the result of a
delusion, or of malice or falsehood.
3. The caveators had introduced evidence that the testator had
spoken of himself as a widower and as having been divorced
Page 213 U. S. 263
from his wife, both of which statements were untrue. Obviously,
the testimony that these statements had been made by the testator
could only have been admitted as proof of mental unsoundness. To
meet this testimony and the inference which might be drawn from it,
the judge admitted in evidence a written agreement made in 1887 by
the testator with his wife. The material parts of the agreement
follow:
"Witnesseth: That, whereas the said Anna L. Woodbury is seised
and possessed of certain lands and real estate in her own right in
the City of Washington, District of Columbia, and Cambridge,
Massachusetts, and whereas the said Anna L. Woodbury desires to be
able to sell, dispose of, and convey the same as she could were she
a femme sole, and whereas she is unable to do so unless by and with
the consent and agreement of her said husband aforesaid, Henry E.
Woodbury:"
"Now, therefore, it is agreed by these presents that the said
Henry E. Woodbury will permit the said Anna L. Woodbury to sell,
dispose of, and convey any and all of her real estate as at any
time she may desire to do, and, in consideration of this
relinquishment of all right, title, interest, and claim of him, the
said Henry E. Woodbury, in and to the property and lands of the
said Anna L. Woodbury, the said Anna L. Woodbury hereby covenants
and agrees for herself, her heirs and assigns, to relinquish all
and every right, title, interest, and claim that she (or they
through her) may have to any and to all of the property, personal
or real, that the said Henry E. Woodbury possesses now or may
hereafter acquire, together with her right of dower in any estate
the said Henry E. Woodbury may leave in case of his demise. And
she, the said Anna L. Woodbury, further covenants and agrees with
the said Henry E. Woodbury, that under no circumstances will the
said Anna L. Woodbury ask for, demand, or claim from him alimony or
a support for any time past, present, or to come."
"In short, this covenant and agreement is intended to restore to
each of the aforesaid parties -- Anna L. Woodbury and Henry E.
Woodbury -- the same right to contract, to use or to dispose
Page 213 U. S. 264
of their respective properties, lands and estates -- personal
and real -- as they possessed before they were married."
Counsel for the caveatees offered this to explain the statements
of the testator, and urged its admission in connection with the
fact of separation. The caveators' counsel objected to it because
it showed neither a divorce nor that the testator was a widower.
The judge then said: "I think it may be competent to explain the
situation here, and I will admit it." The judge further said:
"Inasmuch as you have two contradictory statements from him, I
think this may come in in response to that." Counsel for the
caveatees, in the course of the discussion, said: "We have a right
to show the relations existing between Dr. Woodbury and members of
his family;" but the court did not assent to this proposition, and
made no response to it.
We think it is clear that this agreement was admitted solely for
the purpose of explaining the testator's statement about his
divorce and widowerhood. If the cavestors wished to limit its use
any further than it was limited by the judge in the ruling
admitting it, an instruction to the jury should have been asked. We
think it is competent for the purpose for which it was offered and
admitted, and that its weight was for the jury. In it the wife
relinquished all claim to her husband's property, real or personal,
and all right to dower or of alimony, or of other support, and
concluded by saying:
"This covenant and agreement is intended to restore to each of
the aforesaid parties -- Anna L. Woodbury and Henry E. Woodbury --
the same right to contract, to use or to dispose of their
respective properties, lands and estates -- personal and real -- as
they possessed before they were married."
Though the weight of this evidence might have been slight, we
think the evidence was competent.
4. The caveators, for the purpose of explaining the signature by
the wife to the agreement of 1887, then offered to prove by her
deposition that she had been advised by physicians, now dead, to
sign any paper that the testator wished her to sign, and that it
was the mania of the testator to be rid of her and
Page 213 U. S. 265
her property, and that the testator had said to them that he
would die if he could not get rid of both. This testimony was
excluded, and we think rightly. The motive of the wife in signing
the agreement of 1887 was entirely immaterial. She did sign it, and
it was admitted solely for the purpose of explaining the testator's
statement that he was a widower and had been divorced.
5. The facts upon which the next assignment of error is based
are very obscure. Mena M. Stevens, the nurse, was called as a
witness by the caveatees. Upon cross-examination, she testified
that in 1903 and 1904 she had received from the testator gifts of
certain stock and a deed to certain lands, whose rental value was
$21.90 per month. The deed was delivered to a person to keep for
the nurse until the testator's death. This deed was offered in
evidence by the caveators. It was dated September 12, 1904. The
testator described himself in this deed as a widower. Thereupon
caveatees put in evidence, without objection, a deed from Henry E.
Woodbury and Anna L. Woodbury, his wife, to the American Security
& Trust Company, dated November 18, 1903. Whether this deed
included the same land conveyed to Stevens we are unable to tell
from the descriptions, but we assume it did not. The purpose for
which the deed was offered does not appear. As it was admitted just
prior to the admission of the agreement of 1887, and subsequent to
the admission of the deed to Stevens, in which the testator called
himself a widower, we may fairly assume that, like the agreement of
1887, it was offered to explain the use of the word "widower."
There is nothing in the bill of exceptions to show that it was used
for any other purpose, and we treat it as limited to that
purpose.
The caveators offered, by the deposition of the wife, to prove
the same explanation of this deed as was offered for the agreement
of 1887, but the evidence was excluded. We think that the caveators
have not shown that the excluded evidence was competent, and we
therefore overrule this assignment of error.
It should be said generally of this and the preceding
assignment
Page 213 U. S. 266
of error that there is nothing to show that the instruments were
received or used as evidence that the wife regarded the testator as
of sound mind and capable of transacting business. There was
therefore no occasion to offer evidence to explain the act and
destroy the effect of the admission. The whole argument for the
admissibility of the explanatory evidence is based upon the theory
that the instruments were offered to show the wife's belief as to
his mental condition -- a theory which finds no support in the bill
of exceptions. If the instruments had been admitted and used for
that purpose, a different question would be presented.
6. Turner was called as a witness in his own behalf. On
cross-examination, he was asked if he had made certain insulting
remarks to his aunt, Sallie Woodbury. He replied that he had not.
He was then shown a paper and asked if it was in his aunt's
handwriting, and replied that it was, and was a letter addressed to
William H. Turner. He was then asked, over the objection and under
the exception of the caveators, whether the letter did not assert
that the witness had made the insulting statements. The
cross-examining counsel was then permitted to read the letter for
the purpose of examining the witness upon the statements contained
in it. This was done over objection and under exception. The letter
stated that the witness had made the insulting remarks which he had
denied making. The cross-examining counsel proceeded: "Now, do you
mean that that statement by her is untrue?" Answer: "I do not
remember making any such statement; I am not in the habit of using
any such language."
It is too clear for discussion that the use permitted to be made
of this letter was erroneous, and if the matter had stopped there,
we should be compelled to grant a new trial. The presiding judge,
however, instructed the jury in behalf of the caveators, and, it
would seem at their request, as follows:
"While the caveator was allowed by the court to be
cross-examined as to the statements contained in an undated letter,
purporting to have been written by his aunt, Sallie Woodbury,
Page 213 U. S. 267
addressed to William F. Turner, the jury are instructed that
neither the said letter nor the use thereof so allowed by the court
to be made upon the cross-examination of the caveator is to be
taken as evidence of the truth of any of the said statements in
said letter contained or allowed to be used for the purpose of
cross-examination as aforesaid."
The general rule is that the admission of incompetent evidence
is not reversible error if it subsequently is distinctly withdrawn
from the consideration of the jury.
Pennsylvania Co. v.
Roy, 102 U. S. 451,
102 U. S. 458;
Hopt v. Utah, 120 U. S. 430,
120 U. S. 438.
There are cases which emphasize the necessity of clearly and
unmistakably withdrawing the evidence from the consideration of the
jury.
Washington Gas Light Co. v. Lansden, 172
U. S. 535,
172 U. S. 554;
Throckmorton v. Holt, 180 U. S. 552,
180 U. S. 567.
But we are satisfied that this was done in this case, and that the
instruction cured the error. It directed that the letter should not
be taken as evidence of the truth of any of its statements or even
allowed to be used for the purpose of cross-examination.
7. The remaining assignments of error relate to two instructions
given to the jury and the refusal of an instruction requested by
the caveator. None of the questions raised here touches upon any
vital part of the case, and, while not waived, they were not much
insisted upon in argument. An examination of the charge satisfies
us that it contained all that the caveators were entitled to, and
that it was correct, full, and adequate to present the issues to
the jury. We will not prolong this opinion beyond what was said in
the court below on this subject, which we approve.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN did not take part in the decision of this
case.