Parkhurst v. Healy
Parkhurst v. Healy
Opinion of the Court
This is a petition for a new trial of the ease “In re Will of Kate Healy, Patrick J. Healy, Proponent, Nellie Parkhurst, Contestant.” The question involved in that ease was whether the instrument proposed for probate as the last will and testament of Kate Healy was her last will and testament. The probate court for the district of Bennington allowed the will as such, to which the contestant took an appeal to the county court, where the case was afterwards tried by jury, who
The petition, among other things, set forth that John T. Carroll ran a licensed saloon for the sale of intoxicating liquor at No. 122 North Street, in the village of Bennington, and during all the days and evenings of the days of said trial did sell by himself and his bartenders intoxicating liquors to divers persons in said saloon; that on one of the days during the trial of said cause, after the jury were impaneled and before verdict was rendered, three of the panel entered said saloon and ordered drinks of the petitionee, who then and there gave to each of said jurymen the same without charge and by way of treat, namely, intoxicating liquor or other drink, well knowing that they were jurymen in said cause then on trial.
The only evidence in support of these allegations was the affidavit of Joseph F. Hogan, which was as follows: “At Troy in the County of Rensselear and State of New York, comes Joseph F. Hogan of Bennington in the County of Bennington and State of Vermont and on oath says that he is a resident of said Bennington, and while the case of Patrick Healy v. Nellie Parkhurst Avas being tried in the Bennington County Court, he was in the saloon of John Carroll where Patrick Healy was employed and saw him waiting on three of the members of the jury who had been impaneled in that case. That they ordered drinks of said Patrick Healy which said Healy served to them without charge, and that the names of said jurors were Newton Cottrell, J. D. Clement and Moses Wilson.”
The affidavit standing alone, and denied in its essential ■features by the depositions of Healy, Cottrell, and Wilson, and in view of Hogan’s declarations to Graves and Gardner that he never signed the affidavit with the statement in it, that the jurors ordered drinks of Healy, who served it to them without charge, all question of the petitioner’s failure to make out the allegations in her petition, by the necessary measure of proof, is set at rest, and the petition is dismissed, with costs to the petitionee.
To be certified to the probate court.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Nellie Parkhurst v. Patrick J. Healy
- Status
- Published