Phillips v. Gammon

Decision Date29 October 1919
Docket Number23,310
PartiesPhillips v. Gammon et al
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

From Warrick Circuit Court; Ralph E. Roberts, Judge.

Action by Shirley Gammon and others against Willard Phillips. From a judgment for the plaintiffs, the defendant appeals.

Reversed.

Roscoe Kiper and Henry F. Fulling, for appellant.

C. J Lindsey, S. B. Hatfield, W. S. Hatfield, John R. Brill, F. H Hatfield and John W. Brady, for appellees.

OPINION

Myers, J.

Appellees brought this action to contest and set aside the last will of Payton D. Gammon, on the ground that at the time the will was executed he was: (1) a person of unsound mind; (2) that he "was under undue influence"; and (3) that the pretended will was unduly executed. The complaint was in one paragraph and a general denial thereto formed the issues submitted to a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment setting the will aside on the ground of unsoundness of mind. The trial court granted Phillips as executor permission to prosecute this appeal. In this court he assigns and relies on alleged errors of the court below: (1) In overruling his motion to make the complaint more specific; and (2) in sustaining appellees' motion to reject and strike from the files his motion for a new trial.

As to the first assignment of error it will be noticed that the first and third grounds for contest are stated in the language of the statute. The second cause is not expressly made a statutory ground for contest, but it is so authorized and not infrequently relied on by contestors. The three statements here counted upon--"unsoundness of mind," "undue execution" and "undue influence"--all have a well-known and well-recognized legal meaning when used, as in this case, to state a cause of action. However, under the allegations of unsoundness of mind and undue execution, any evidence tending to show undue influence is admissible. Clearspring Tp. v. Blough (1909), 173 Ind. 15, 24, 88 N.E. 511, 89 N.E. 369. Furthermore, this court has ruled that a motion to make more specific is unavailing when the statement of the grounds of contest is in the language of the statute. McDonald v. McDonald (1895), 142 Ind. 55, 64, 41 N.E. 336. In the instant case the pleaded facts relied on by the complainants are well within the law affirmed by the case last cited. The motion was properly overruled.

Passing to appellant's second assignment, the record shows that the jury returned its verdict on June 9, 1916. On June 22, defendants, in writing, filed what they called a motion in arrest of judgment, which was thereupon overruled, and judgment on the verdict in favor of plaintiffs. On July 1, defendants filed their motion for a new trial. On October 16, over defendants' objection and exception, the court sustained plaintiffs' motion to strike from the files and reject defendants' motion for a new trial. Of this ruling appellant complains. The correctness of this ruling depends upon the character of the motion, evidently treated by the trial court as a motion in arrest of judgment. It was so designated by the defendants and the prayer thereof was that the judgment be arrested. In this court counsel for appellant insist that the motion, in fact, was a motion for a venire de novo, and should be so construed and treated. This insistence must be sustained.

While a motion for a venire de novo and a motion in arrest of judgment must both be made before judgment, yet the province of each is entirely different. The former should precede the motion for a new trial and is confined to uncertainty, ambiguity or imperfections in the verdict or findings of the court as the case may be, while the latter affirms the verdict but challenges the pleadings upon which it rests to authorize it, and cuts off the right of the maker to subsequently file a motion for a new trial. Cincinnati etc., R. Co. v. Washburn (1865), 25 Ind. 259, 261; Boor, Admr., v. Lowrey (1885), 103 Ind. 468, 3 N.E. 151, 53 Am. St. 519; Shaw v. Merchants Nat. Bank (1877), 60 Ind. 83, 94; Kelley v. Bell (1909), 172 Ind. 590, 596, 88 N.E. 58; Bennett v. Simon (1898), 152 Ind. 490, 491, 53 N.E. 649; Potter v. McCormack (1891), 127 Ind. 439, 440, 26 N.E. 883; Smith v. State, ex rel. (1895), 140 Ind. 343, 350, 39 N.E. 1060.

It is not the name given to a pleading or motion or the prayer thereof that determines its character and effect. The name and prayer may be advisory, but neither will be allowed to control the remedy selected as shown by the facts in the pleading or motion. McClanahan v. Williams (1893), 136 Ind. 30, 35 N.E. 897; McGuffey v McClain (1892), 130 Ind. 327, 331, 30 N.E. 296; Goecker v. McOsker (1912), 177 Ind. 607, 615, 98 N.E. 724; Crawfordsville Trust Co. v. Ramsey (1912), 178 Ind. 258, 275, 98 N.E. 177. The motion in question is directed to the verdict alone, and the remedy sought thereby is unmistakably that which can only be had by a motion for a venire de novo. Bohr v. Neuenschwander (1889), 120 Ind. 449, 456, 22 N.E. 416; Mitchell v. Friedley (1891), 126 Ind....

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