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- Anaconda Standard, Butte, Montana, Sept. 5, 1891, 1
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE. 2
-
- **** ****
-
- This file, its printout, or copies of either
- are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
-
- Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
-
- The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
-
- **** ****
-
- NOTE:
- The matchless eloquence of Ingersoll! Where will one look for
- the like of it? What other man living has the faculty of blending
- wit and humor, pathos and fact and logic with such exquisite grace,
- or with such impressive force? Senator Sanders this morning begged
- the jury to beware of the oratory of Ingersoll as it transcended
- that of Greece. Sanders was not far amiss. In fierce and terrible
- invective Ingersoll is not to be compared to Demosthenes. But in no
- other respect is Demosthenes his superior. To a modern audience, at
- least, Demosthenes on the Crown would seem a pretty poor sort of
- affair by the side of Ingersoll on the Davis will. It was a great
- effort, and its chief greatness lay in its extreme simplicity.
-
- Ingersoll stepped up to the jurors as near as he could get and
- kept slowly walking up and down before them. At times he would
- single out a single juryman, stop in front of him, gaze steadily
- into his face and direct his remarks for a minute or two to that
- one man alone. Again he would turn and address himself to Senator
- Sanders, Judge Dixon or somebody else of those interested in
- establishing the will as genuine, At times the gravity of the jury
- and the audience was so completely upset that Judge McHatton had to
- rap for order, but presently the Colonel would change his mood and
- the audience would be hushed into deepest silence. If the jury
- could have retired immediately upon the conclusion of Ingersoll's
- argument, there is little doubt as to what the verdict would have
- been.
-
- If Ingersoll himself is not absolutely convinced that the will
- is a forgery, he certainly had the art of making people believe
- that he was so convinced. He said he hoped he might never win a
- case that he ought not to win as a matter of right and justice. The
- idea which he sought to convey and which he did convey was that he
- believed he was right, no matter whether he could make others
- believe as he did or not. In that lies Ingersoll'S power.
-
- Whether by accident or deign the will got torn this morning.
- A piece in the form of a triangle was torn from one end. Ingersoll
- made quite a point this afternoon by passing the pieces around
- among the jury, and asking each man of them to note that the ink at
- the torn edges had not sunk into the paper. In doing this he
- adopted a conversational tone and kept pressing the point until the
- juror he was working upon nodded his head in approval.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 1
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- Both Judge Dixon and Senator Sanders interrupted Ingersoll
- early in his speech to take exception to certain of his remarks,
- but the Colonel's dangerous repartee and delicate Art in twisting
- anything the they might say to his own advantage soon put a stop to
- the interruptions and the speaker had full sway during the rest of
- the time at his disposal. The crowd -- it was as big as
- circumstances would permit, every available inch of space in the
- room and in the court house corridors being occupied -- enjoyed
- Ingersoll's speech immensely, and only respect for the proprieties
- of the place prevented frequent bursts of applause as an
- accompliment to the frequent bursts of eloquence.
-
- Anaconda Standard, Butte, Montana, Sept. 5, 1891,
-
- **** ****
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY
- IN THE
- DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- May it please the Court and gentlemen of the jury, waiving
- congratulations, reminiscences and animadversions, I will proceed
- to the business in hand. There are two principal and important
- questions to be decided by you:
-
- First, is the will sought to be probated the will of Andrew J.
- Davis? Is it genuine? Is it honest?
-
-
- And second, did Andrew J. Davis make a will after 1866
- revoking all former wills, or were the provisions such that they
- were inconsistent with the provisions of the will of 1866?
-
- These are the questions, and as we examine them, other
- questions arise that have to be answered. The first question then
- is: Who wrote the will of 1866? Whose work is it? When, where and
- by whom was it done? And I don't want you, gentlemen, to pay any
- attention to what I say unless it appeals to your reason and to
- your good sense. Don't be afraid of me because I am a sinner.*
-
- **** ****
-
- [* NOTE: Col. Ingersoll when speaking of himself as a sinner
- in this address is referring to the remarks made by Senator
- Sanders. who in the preceding address said:
-
- "In an old book occur the words. My son if sinners entice thee
- consent thou not.' I will not apply this to you, gentlemen of the
- jury. But I will have a right to demand of you that you hold your
- minds and hearts free from all influences calculated to swerve you
- until you have heard the last words in this case." The Senator
- enjoined them not to be beguiled by the eloquence of a man who was
- famed for his eloquence over two continents and the islands of the
- sea; a man whose eloquence fittingly transcended that of Greece in
- the time of Alexander."]
-
- **** ****
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 2
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- I admit that I am. I am not like the other gentleman who thanked
- God "that he was not as other men." I have the faults and frailties
- common to the human race, but in spite of being a sinner I strive
- to be at least a good-natured one, and I am such a sinner that if
- there is any good in any other world I am willing to share it with
- all the children of men. To that extent at least I am a sinner; and
- I hope, gentlemen, that you will not be prejudiced against me on
- that account, or decide for the proponent simply upon the
- perfections of Senator Sanders. Now, I say, the question is: Who
- wrote this will? The testimony offered by the proponent is that it
- was written by Job Davis. We have heard a great deal, gentlemen, of
- the difference between fact and opinion. There is a difference
- between fact and opinion, but sometimes when we have to establish
- a fact by persons, we are hardly as certain that the fact ever
- existed as we are of the opinion, and although one swears that he
- saw a thing or heard a thing we all know that the accuracy of that
- statement must be decided by something besides his word.
-
- There is this beautiful peculiarity in nature -- a lie never
- fits a fact, never. You only fit a lie with another lie, made for
- the express purpose, because you can change a lie but you can't
- change a fact, and after a while the time comes when the last lie
- you tell has to be fitted to a fact, and right there is a bad
- joint; consequently you must test the statements of people who say
- they saw, not by what they say but by other facts, by the
- surroundings, by what are called probabilities; by the naturalness
- of the statement. If we only had to hear what witnesses say,
- jurymen would need nothing but ears. Their brains could be
- dispensed with; but after you hear what they say you call a council
- in your brain and make up your mind whether the statement, in view
- of all the circumstances, is true or false.
-
- Did Job Davis write the will? I would be willing to risk this
- entire case on that one proposition. Did job Davis write this will?
- And I propose to demonstrate to you by the evidence on both sides
- that job Davis did not write that will. Why do I say so?
-
- First: The evidence of all the parties is that Job Davis wrote
- a very good hand; that his letters were even. He wrote a good hand;
- a kind of schoolmaster, copy-book hand. Is this will written in
- that kind of hand? I ask Judge Woolworth to tell you whether that
- is written in a clerkly band; whether it was written by a man who
- wrote an even hand; whether it was written by a man who closed his
- "a's" and "o's"; whether it was written by one who made his "h's"
- and "b's" different. Job Davis was a good scholar.
-
- No good penman ever wrote the body of that will. If there were
- nothing else I would be satisfied, and, in my judgment, you would
- be, that it is not the writing of Job Davis.
-
- It is the writing of a poor penman; it is the writing of a
- careless penman, who, for that time, endeavored to write a little
- smaller than usual, and why? When people forge a will they write
- the names first on the blank paper. They will not write the body of
- the will and then forge the name to it, because if they are not
- successful in the forgery of the name they would have to write the
- whole business over again; so the first thing they would do would
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 3
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- be to write the name and the next thing that they would do would be
- to write the will so as to bring it within the space that was left,
- and here they wrote it a little shorter even than was necessary and
- quit there [indicating on the will] and made these six or seven
- marks and then turned over, and on the other side they were a
- little crowded before they got to the name of A.J. Davis.
-
- Now, the next question is, was Job Davis a good speller? Let
- us be honest about it. How delighted they would have been to show
- that he was an ignorant booby. But their witnesses and our
- witnesses both swear that he was the best speller in the
- neighborhood; and when they brought men from other communities to
- a spelling match, after all had fallen on the field, after the
- floor was covered with dead and wounded, Job Davis stood proudly
- up, not having missed a word. He was the best speller in that
- county, and not only so, but at sixteen years of age he wasn't
- simply studying arithmetic, he was in algebra; and not only so,
- after he had finished what you may call this common school
- education in Salt Creek township, he went to the Normal school of
- Iowa and prepared himself to be a teacher, and came back and taught
- a school.
-
- Now, did job Davis write this will? Senator Sanders says there
- are three or four misspelled words in this document, while the fact
- is there are twenty words in the document that are clearly and
- absolutely misspelled. And what kind of words are misspelled? Some
- of the easiest and most common in the English language. Will you
- say upon your oaths that Job Davis, having the reputation of the
- champion speller of the neighborhood -- will you, upon your oaths,
- say that when he wrote this will (probably the only document of any
- importance, if he did write it, that he ever wrote) he spelled
- shall "shal" every time it occurs in the will? Will you say that
- this champion speller spelled the word whether with two "r's," and
- made it "wherther," making two mistakes, first as to the word
- itself, and second, as to the spelling? Will you say that this
- champion speller could not spell the word dispose, but wrote it
- "depose"? And will you say the ordinary word give was spelled by
- this educated young man "guive"? And it seems that Colonel Sanders
- has ransacked the misspelled world to find somebody idiotic enough
- to twist a "u" in the word give, and even in the Century dictionary
- -- I suppose they call it the Century dictionary because they
- looked a hundred years to find that peculiarity of spelling -- even
- there, although give is spelled four ways, besides the right way,
- no "u" is there. And will you say that Job Davis did not know the
- word administrators?
-
- Now, let us be honest about this matter -- let us be fair. It
- is not a personal quarrel between lawyers. I never quarrel with
- anybody; my philosophy being that everybody does as he must, and if
- he is in bad luck and does wrong, why, let us pity him, and if we
- happen to have good luck, and take the path where roses bloom, why,
- let us be joyful. That is my doctrine; no need of fighting about
- these little things. They are all over in a little while anyway. Do
- you believe that Job Davis spelled sheet -- a sheet of paper --
- "sheat"? That is the way he spells it in this document. Now, let us
- be honor bright with each other, and do not let the lawyers on the
- other side treat you as if you were twelve imbeciles. You would
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 4
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- better be misled by a sensible sinner than by the most pious
- absurdities that ever floated out from the lips of man. Let us have
- some good, hard sense, as we would in ordinary business life. Do
- you believe that job Davis, the educated young man, the school
- teacher, the one who attended the Normal school would put periods
- in the middle of sentences and none at the end? That he would put
- a period on one side of an "n" and then fearing the "n" might get
- away, put one on the other; and then when he got the sentence done,
- be out of periods, so that he could not put one there, and put so
- many periods in the writing that it looked as if it had broken out
- with some kind of punctuation measles?
-
- Job Davis, an educated man! And you are going to tell this
- jury that that man wrote that will! I think your cheeks will get a
- little red while you are doing it. This man, when he comes to this
- little word "is" in the middle of a sentence, his desire for
- equality is so great that he wishes to put that word on a level
- with others, and starts it with a capital, so that it will not be
- ashamed to appear with longer words.
-
- And yet the will was written by Job Davis, and Sconce saw him
- write it, and Mrs. Downey saw him write it. If there were one
- million Sconces, and a million Mrs. Downeys, and they held their
- hands up high and swore that they did, I know that they did not,
- unless all the witnesses who have testified to the education of Job
- Davis have testified lies. There is where I told you a little while
- ago that when a lie comes in contact with a fact it will not fit.
- These other people in Salt Creek township that have come here and
- sworn to that, did not know whether it was spelled right or wrong.
- They did not take that into consideration.
-
- It seems to me utterly, absolutely, infinitely impossible that
- this will was written by a good speller. I know it was not. So do
- you. There is not a man on the jury that does not know it was not
- written by a good speller -- not a man. And you cannot, upon your
- oaths, say that you believe two things -- first, that job Davis was
- a good speller, and, secondly, that he wrote this will. Utterly
- impossible. There is another word here, "wordly" -- "all my wordly
- goods." "Worldly" it ought to be; but this Job Davis, this scholar,
- did not know that there was such a word as worldly, he left out the
- "l" and called it wordly, "all my wordly goods," and they want you
- to find on your oath that it was written by a good speller. There
- are twenty words misspelled in this short will, and the most common
- words, some of them, in the English language. Now, I say that these
- twenty misspelled words are twenty witnesses -- twenty witnesses
- that tell the truth without being on their oath, and that you
- cannot mix by cross-examination. Twenty witnesses! Every misspelled
- word holds up its maimed and mutilated hand and swears that Job
- Davis did not write that will -- every one. Suppose witnesses had
- sworn that Judge, Woolworth wrote this will. How many Salt Creekers
- do you think it would take to convince you that he was around
- spelling sheet "sheat"?
-
- Mr. WOOLWORTH. I have done worse than that a great many times.
-
- Mr. INGERSOLL. You have acted worse than that, but you have
- never spelled worse than that.
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 5
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- Now, this Job Davis died in 1868. Nobody has seen him write
- for twenty-three years, but everybody, their witnesses and ours,
- positively swears that he was a good speller. Now, comes another
- question: Who wrote this will? Colonel Sanders tells us that it is
- immaterial whether Job Davis wrote it or not. To me that is a very
- strange remark. If job Davis did not write it, Mr. Sconce has sworn
- falsely. If job Davis did not write it, then there was no will on
- the 20th of July, 1866, and all the Glasgows and Quigleys and
- Downeys and the rest are mistaken -- not one word of truth in their
- testimony unless Job Davis wrote that will.
-
- And yet a learned counsel, who says that his object is to
- assist you in finding a correct verdict, says it don't make any
- difference whether Job Davis wrote the will or not. I don't think
- it will in this case.
-
- Who wrote the will? I am going to tell you, and I am going to
- demonstrate it, so that you need not think anything about it -- so
- that you will know it; that is to say, it will be a moral
- certainty.
-
- Who wrote this will? I will tell you who, and I have not the
- slightest hesitation in saying it. James R. Eddy wrote this will.
- And why do I say it? Many witnesses have sworn that they were well
- acquainted With Mr. Eddy's handwriting -- many. Several of the
- witnesses here had the writing of Eddy with them. That writing was
- handed to the counsel on the other side, so that they might frame
- questions for cross-examination. Those witnesses founded their
- answers as to peculiarities upon the writings given to the other
- side, and not on the writing in this will -- just on the writings
- of letters and documents they had in their possession, and that we
- handed to the opposite counsel. Now, what do they say? Every
- witness who has testified on that subject said that Eddy had this
- peculiarity: First, that whenever a word ended with the letter "d,"
- he made that "d" separate from the rest of the word.
-
- And, gentlemen, there are twenty-eight words in this short
- will ending with the letter "d"; clearly, unequivocally, in
- twenty-seven of the words ending in "d," the "d" is separate from
- the rest of the word.
-
- I do not include the twenty-eighth, because there is a little
- doubt about it. The testimony is unvarying, except the writing that
- Eddy has done since he has been found out to be the forger of that
- will. Nobody has sworn that he had a letter from him in which that
- is not the fact, unless that letter was written since the
- institution of this suit. Twenty-seven of these words end with "d"
- and the "d" is made separate from the rest of the word. Will judge
- Woolworth please tell the jury whether any witness testified that
- Job Davis made these separate from the rest of the word? Poor Job,
- dead, and his tombstone is being ornamented with "guive," and he is
- now made to appear as an ignorant nobody.
-
- Twenty-eight words ending with "d." Now, if that were all, I
- would say that might be an accident -- a coincidence, and that we
- could not build upon that as a rock. I would say we must go
- further, we must find whether any more peculiarities exist in
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 6
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- Eddy's writing that also exist in this will. We must be honest with
- him. Now, let us see. He always had the peculiarity of terminating
- that "d" abruptly, down just above the line, or at the line,
- lifting his pen suddenly, making no mark to the right. Every one of
- the "d's" in the will is made exactly that way. Corroboration
- number two. These twenty-seven witnesses, the "d's," swear that
- Eddy is their father, that they are the children of his hand, that
- he made them.
-
- Another peculiarity: They say that Eddy always made a double
- "l" in a peculiar manner. The last "l" came down to the line of the
- up stroke, and that "l" as a rule stopped there. It did not go on
- to the right -- a peculiarity. Now, let us see. In this will there
- are nine words that end with a double "l" (and I want you to look
- at that when you go out); each one is made exactly the same way --
- each one. Nine more witnesses that take the stand and swear to the
- authorship of this will.
-
- Has any body shown that that was Job Davis's habit? Poor, dead
- dust cannot swear; nobody has said that. Another peculiarity is
- that Eddy made a "p" without making any loop to the right in the
- middle of it. Now and then he makes one with a loop, but his habit
- is to make one without. Moses Downey swore that Job Davis made a
- "p" with three loops, a loop at the top, a loop at the bottom and
- a loop in the middle. That is exactly what he swore, and he was the
- one who taught Job to write; and he said he made his letters
- carefully, he closed his "a's" at the top, he made his "o's" round,
- he made his "h's" after the orthodox pattern, he was all right on
- the "b's" -- your witness.
-
- Now, gentlemen, you remember how that "p" looks, without any
- loop; and there are twenty-one "p's" that have no loop to the right
- -- twenty-one in this will. Twenty-one more witnesses, and every
- one of them is worth a hundred Sconces, with his sheep and hogs
- floating in the air. Twenty-one witnesses that swear to the
- paternity of this will. Moses Downey, your own witness, swears that
- job made a "p" with three loops. There is not a "p" in the will
- with three loops, and there are twenty-one without any, and the
- evidence of all the witnesses on our side was that it was his habit
- to make "p's" without any loop, and they were given the papers that
- they might cross-examine every one.
-
- Now, do you see, we are getting along on the edge of
- demonstration.
-
- These things cannot conspire and happen. They may in Omaha,
- but they can't in Butte, or even in Salt Creek township. Nature is
- substantially the same everywhere and I believe her laws are
- substantially the same everywhere, from a grain of sand to the
- blazing Arcturus; everywhere the probabilities are the same. Let us
- take another step.
-
- It is also sworn by intelligent men who have the writing of
- Eddy in their possession, (writing shown to the other side) that it
- was his habit to use "a's," "o's" and "u's" indiscriminately. For
- instance, "thut" that, you all remember in the will. When you go
- out you will see it. He often uses an "o" where an "a" should be,
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 7
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- an "a" where a "u" should be, a "u" where an "a" or "o" should be;
- in other words, he uses them interchangeably or indiscriminately.
- How many cases of that occur in this will? Twenty-two -- twenty-two
- instances in this will in which one vowels is used where another
- ought to have been used.
-
- Twenty-two more witnesses that James R. Eddy wrote this will.
- Twenty-two more. They have taken the stand; they won't have to be
- sworn, because they can't lie. It would be splendid if all
- witnesses were under that disability -- that they had to tell the
- truth. That cannot be answered by log-wood ink. Eddy made "p's"
- just the same, whether he used logwood or nigrosin, and he used his
- "a's" and "o's" and "u's" indiscriminately, no matter whether he
- was writing in ink, red, blue, brown, iron, Carter's, Arnold's,
- Stafford's, or anybody else's. Another witness testified that he
- used "r" where he ought to use "s," and that he used "s" where he
- ought to use "r," or that he made his "r's" and "s's" the same.
- Many instances of that kind occur in this will, and every "r" says
- to Eddy, "you are the man" -- every one. Every "s" swears that your
- will is a poor, ignorant, impudent forgery.
-
- That is what it is -- the most ignorant forgery ever presented
- in a court of justice since the art of writing was invented. It
- comes in covered with the ear marks of fraud. And yet I am told
- that it requires audacity to say that it is a forgery. What on
- earth does it require to say that it is genuine? Audacity, in
- comparison with what is essential to say that it is genuine, is
- rank meekness and cowardice. Words lose their meaning. All swear
- that Eddy scattered his periods with a liberal hand, like a farmer
- sowing his grain. Now, we will take the twenty-third line of the
- will. "To their use (period) and (period) benefit (another period)
- forever (another period)"; twenty-fifth line: " Davis (period) and
- (another period) Job (another period) Davis (another period) of
- (another period) Davis (another period) County (another period)."
- What a spendthrift of punctuation this man was! And yet he was well
- educated. studying algebra, going to. the Normal school in Iowa,
- champion speller of the neighborhood. Every period certifies and
- swears that Job Davis did not write that will. He had studied
- grammar. Punctuation is a part of grammar and no one but the most
- arrant, blundering, stumbling ignoramus, would think of putting six
- or eight periods along in a sentence, and then leaving the end of
- that sentence naked without anything. Another peculiarity is, Mr.
- Eddy uses "b" and "h" interchangeably. He makes a "b" exactly like
- an "h," makes an "h" exactly like a "b." You can see that all
- through the will. There are several instances of it, and each one
- says that Job Davis did not write it. Downey says he did not write
- that way, and each one says that Mr. Eddy did write it, and nobody
- else.
-
- I am not through yet. The testimony is that Eddy was a poor
- speller.
-
- Now, the learned counsel, Mr. Dixon, says that in this case we
- must be governed by the probable, by the natural, by the reasonable
- -- three splendid words, and they should be in the mind of every
- juror when examining this testimony. Is it natural, is it probable,
- is it reasonable? We have shown that Eddy was the poorest speller
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 8
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- in the business. Whenever they went to a spelling match, at the
- first fire he dropped; never outlived, I think, the first volley.
- And one man by the name of Sharp distinctly recollects that they
- gave out a sentence to be spelled: "Give alms to the poor," and
- Eddy had to spell the first word, give; and he lugged in his "u"
- with both ears -- guive," and he dropped dead the first fire. The
- man remembers it because it is such a curious spelling of give; and
- if I had heard anybody spell it with a "u" when I was six years old
- it would linger in my memory still.
-
- Now, let us take Judge Dixon's test. It is a good one, well
- stated, and it is for you to decide whether the misspelled words
- were misspelled by a good speller or a poor speller. If you say Job
- Davis wrote it, then you are unnatural, unreasonable and
- improbable.
-
- Isn't it altogether more natural, more reasonable, more
- probable, to say that a bad speller misspelled the words than that
- a good speller did?
-
- Let us stick to his standard, and see if Eddy spelled give
- "guive" -- and, gentlemen, you cannot find in all the writing of
- James R. Eddy, written before he was charged with this forgery,
- where the word give appears, that it is not written with a "u" --
- I defy you to find a line in the world where "given" is "guivin."
- Now, let us go another step. Everybody admits that he was a poor
- speller, and is it not more reasonable to say that he wrote the
- will on the spelling, than that the champion speller did? We have
- some more evidence on Mr. Eddy as good as anything I have stated.
-
- Now, do not be misled because I am a sinner. Let us stick to
- the facts. William H. Davis testified to the spelling of Eddy, and
- while he testified, held in his hand a will that he had seen James
- R. Eddy write. In this will there were twenty words misspelled;
- shall, "shal" and in the James Davis will, shall "shal,." Good!
- Whether, in our will "wherther"; in the other will, "wherther" --
- just the same; sheet of paper, "sheat" in our will; "sheat" in the
- other will; in our will "guive," in that "guive." Did Job Davis
- rise from the dead and write another will? Was one copied from the
- other, and the copy so slavish that it was misspelled exactly the
- same? You cannot say it was entirely copied, for now and then a
- word, by accident, is right.
-
- Judge Dixon tells you that Eddy did not disguise his spelling.
- Good Lord! How could he disguise his spelling? He spelled as he
- thought was right. No man of his education would think of
- disguising his spelling. He knows how to spell give; he believes it
- is with a "u" still there is a prejudice against "u" since he was
- charged with forgery, and so he has dropped it; but he thinks it is
- right, nevertheless. Now, isn't it perfectly wonderful, is it not
- a miracle, that james R. Eddy made exactly the same mistakes in
- spelling and writing one will that Job Davis did in writing
- another?
-
- Isn't it wonderful beyond the circumference of belief, that a
- good speller and bad speller happened to misspell the same words?
- It won't do. There is something rotten about this will, and the
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 9
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- rotten thing about it is that James R. Eddy wrote it, and he wrote
- it about March, 1890. That is when he wrote it, and he let the
- proponent in this case have it. We will get to that shortly. So,
- gentlemen, I tell you that every misspelled word is a witness in
- our favor. There is something more. Eddy uses the character "&" in
- writing, instead of writing "and." The will is full of them; and it
- is stated that sometimes when he endeavors to write out the word
- "and" he only gets "an," and that peculiarity is in this will. "An"
- for "and"; that you will find in the seventeenth line in the last
- word of the line. Colonel Jacques swore that one of Eddy's
- misspelled words was the word "judgment"; that he put in a
- superfluous "e," and in this case here is "judgement" -- "shall
- give the annuity that in the judgement of the executors shall be
- final;" there is the superfluous "e" -- judgement. Now, there is
- another. Their witnesses swore that as a rule he turns the bottom
- of his "y's" and "g's" to the left. Now, you will find the same
- peculiarity in this will, and the amusing peculiarity that be turns
- the "g's" a little more than he does the "y's." I don't want these
- things answered by an essay on immutable justice. I want them to
- say how this is. Another thing, how he makes a "t," with a little
- pot hook at the top, and that hook has caught Mr. Eddy. You will
- find them made in the will, exactly, where the "t" commences a word
- -- where it is what we call the initial letter. And what else? When
- he makes a small "e" commencing a word, he always makes it like a
- capital "E," only smaller. That is the testimony, and that happens
- in this will and it happens in the papers and letters.
-
- Now, I say, that all these peculiarities taken together, the
- same words misspelled, the same letters used interchangeably, the
- same mistakes in punctuation, the same mistakes in the words
- themselves -- all these things amount to an absolute demonstration.
- So, I told you, he uses the capital "I" with the word "is" and that
- he does twice in this will.
-
- Here are hundreds, almost, of witnesses that take the stand
- and swear that Eddy is the author of that will. He wrote it --
- every word of it. He negotiated with John A. Davis for it, and I
- will come to that after a little. And how do they support this will
- that has in it the internal evidence that it was written by James
- R. Eddy? Why do I say it is impossible that he should have written
- it, and the will should be genuine? Because at the date of that
- will, or the date it purports to bear, Eddy was only eight years
- old. And we don't know the real date, gentlemen, of that will yet.
- My opinion is that it was dated by mistake, so that it came on a
- date that Davis was not there, or came on a day that was Sunday,
- and then they folded up that will, and scratched it and rubbed it
- until the date is absolutely illegible, and nobody can say whether
- it is June, July, or january. There was a purpose. The day may have
- been Sunday, or they may have afterward ascertained that he was not
- there. It is a suspicious circumstance that the day is left loose
- so they can have a month to play on, maybe more. Now, they say, can
- you impeach Sconce?
-
- Every misspelled word in the will impeaches Sconce, ever,
- period impeaches Sconce, every "a" that is used as "o" impeaches
- him, and "o" as "u" every "b" that is made like an "h" impeaches
- him, every "h" that is made like a "b" impeaches him.
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 10
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- In other words, every peculiarity of james R. Eddy that
- appears in that will impeaches J.C. Sconce, Sr. -- Captain Sconce.
- There is a thing about this will which, to my mind, is a
- demonstration. It may be that it is because I am a sinner, but I
- find, and so do you find it in the second initial of Sconce, in the
- letter "C." There are two punctures, and you will find that exactly
- where the punctures are there is a little spatter in the ink -- a
- disturbance of the line, in the capital first; in the small "c"
- there is another puncture and another disturbance of the line.
- Professor Elwell says that these holes were made afterwards. Let's
- see. There is a hole, and there is a splatter and a change of the
- line. There is another hole and there is another change. There is
- another hole and there is another change. What is natural? What is
- reasonable? What is probable? It is that the hole being there,
- interrupted the pen, and accounts for the diversion of the line,
- and for the spatter. That is natural, isn't it? but they take the
- unnatural side. They say that these holes were made after the
- writing. Would it not be a miracle that just three holes should
- happen to strike just the three places where there had been a
- division of the line and a little spatter of the ink ? Take up your
- table of logarithms and figure away until you are blind, and such
- an accident could not happen in as many thousand, billion,
- trillion, quintillion years as you can express by figures.
-
- Three holes by accident hitting just the three places where
- the pen was impeded and where the spatters were. Never such a thing
- in the world. It might happen once. Nobody could make me believe
- that it happened twice -- that is, a hole might happen to get where
- the pen was interrupted once; as to the second hole, I would bet
- all I have on earth, as to the third hole, I know it did not. I
- just know it did not. And yet Mr. Elwell says that these holes were
- made afterwards. and he goes still further, and says that there is
- not any trouble in the line. If anybody will look at it, even with
- the natural eye, they can see that there is; and, in a kind of
- diversion, they called Professor Hagan, when he called attention to
- it, Professor Pin-holes and pin-hole expert. He might have replied
- that that was a pin-head objection.
-
- Professor Elwell accounts for all the dirt on this will by
- perspiration, all on one side and made by the thumb, and although
- there were four fingers under it at the same time, the fingers were
- so contrary they wouldn't perspire. This left the thumb to do all
- the sweating. I need not call him a professor of perspiration, for
- that throws no light on the subject; but I say to you, gentlemen,
- that those marks, those punctures, were in that paper when Sconce
- wrote his name. Sconce says they were not -- he remembered. He has
- got a magnificent memory. I say that even that shows that he is not
- telling the facts.
-
- Now, what else? We went around among the neighbors. He was
- charged with passing counterfeit money, with stealing sheep, with
- stealing hogs, with stealing cattle and with stealing harness.
-
- Mr. WOOLWORTH. It was not proved that this man was accused of
- counterfeiting, of passing counterfeit money.
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 11
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- Mr. INGERSOLL. I tell you how I prove it. A man by the name of
- Lanman was on the stand. He swore he was acquainted with Sconce's
- reputation. Colonel Sanders asked him who he had ever heard say
- anything about it. He said Lewis Miller and Abraham Miller and a
- man by the name of Hopkins and several others. What did they say?
- I asked them afterwards, and among other things I recollect he was
- charged with passing counterfeit money, stealing hogs, stealing
- sheep, stealing harness, killing another man's heifer in the woods.
- I don't think I am mistaken, but if I am I will take counterfeit
- money back. I won't try to pass counterfeit money myself, although
- a sinner.
-
- Mr. WOOLWORTH. (Interrupting): He was not charged with killing
- a heifer.
-
- Mr. INGERSOLL. No, no; the heifer was there. I have a very
- good memory; I suppose it comes from the habit of taking no notes.
- Lanman was the man, and while we are on Sconce there is a thing
- almost too good to be passed.
-
- Mr. Jackson was on the stand, Senator Sanders asked him,
- "Whoever told you anything against him?" "Well," Jackson answered,
- "I asked Hopkins--" "Who else?' "Well," he said, "I had a private
- conversation, I don't like to tell." "You have got to tell." Mr.
- Jackson said to the Court: "Must I tell; it was a private
- conversation." "You must tell." "Well," he said, "it was with Mr.
- Carruthers, one of the counsel for proponent;" and he said that
- what Mr. Carruthers said had more influence upon him than anything
- else, because Carruthers was in a position to know.
-
- Mr. SANDERS. (Interrupting). Were those his exact words?
-
- Mr. INGERSOLL. Yes, that he was an attorney. I tell you that
- was a death-blow; that came like thunder out of a clear sky when
- you haven't seen a cloud for a month.
-
- Besides that he was impeached in open court. What else? The
- witnesses that came to the rescue of Sconce; how did they rescue
- him? They lived down there and never heard anything against him.
- All these rumors, thick in the air, the bleating of sheep following
- him wherever he went; the low of cattle and yet these people never
- heard it. Tried for stealing harness, they never heard of it. They
- were not acquainted with him. They said that they had some personal
- dealings with him and he was all right, and one man endeavored to
- draw a distinction between truth and honesty. A man could be a very
- truthful man and a very dishonest man. Just think of that
- distinction, a man of truth but dishonest. That won't do. Even
- Senator Sanders said: "Some accusations, probably a dozen," to use
- his excellent language -- what memories we have! Let me read the
- exact words: "Some accusations; probably a dozen or more, of
- stealing sheep and hogs lit on Sconce."
-
- Mr. SANPICRS: I didn't say that.
-
- Mr. INGERSOLL. I don't insist; but those are the exact words
- I remember. And don't you remember that he went into a kind of
- homily on neighborhood gossip, that hardly anybody escaped? I
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 12
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- believe a good many of this jury have escaped and a good many in
- this audience have escaped. You can pick out a great many men that
- a dozen accusations of stealing hogs and sheep and heifers have not
- lit on.
-
- Then, there is another thing about Sconce that I don't like,
- gentlemen. Sconce, in giving the history of the affair in Arkansas,
- was asked if he didn't say, "Did I say that Davis' name was on it
- when I signed it?" and right there he skulked and stated under oath
- that when he said that he alluded to the photograph. Could he by
- any possibility have alluded to the photograph when he said:
-
- Did I say that Davis's name was on it when I signed it? Did he
- ever sign the photograph? No; he never signed the photograph. Davis
- never signed the photograph, and if he ever said those words he
- said them with reference to the original will, and he knows it. And
- yet, in your presence, under oath, he pretended that when he made
- that remark he alluded to the photograph. I wish somebody would
- reply to that and tell us whether, as a matter of fact, he alluded
- to the photograph.
-
- Now, Mr. Sconce, as you know, has the most peculiar memory in
- the world. He remembers things that had nothing whatever to do with
- the subject, photographed in all details, everywhere; and yet,
- gentlemen, your knowledge of human nature is sufficient to tell you
- that that kind of memory is not the possession of any human being.
-
- Thousands of people imagine that detail in memory is evidence
- of truth. I don't think it is; if there is something in the details
- that is striking, then there is; but naturalness, and, above all,
- probability, is the test of truth. Probability is the torch that
- every juryman should hold, and by the light of that torch he should
- march to his verdict. Probability! Now, let us take that for a
- text, Probability is the test of truth. Let us follow the natural,
- let us follow the reasonable.
-
- At the time they say this will was made, Andrew J. Davis had
- removed from Iowa years before; had settled, I believe, in Gallatin
- county. His interests in Iowa were nothing compared with his
- interests in this Territory at that time. From the time he left
- Iowa he began to make money; I mean money of some account. He began
- to amass wealth. He was, I think, a sagacious man.
-
- Judge Dixon says that he was a man of great business sagacity.
- I am thankful for that admission. In a little while he became worth
- several hundreds of thousands of dollars. Afterwards he acquired
- millions. Now, during all that time, from the 20th of July, 1866,
- up to the day of his death, he never inquired after the James Davis
- will. It is a little curious he never wrote a letter to James Davis
- and said, "Where is the will, have you got it?" Not once. They have
- not shown a letter of that kind, not a word. Threw it in the
- waste-basket of forgetfulness and turned his face to Montana. Years
- rolled by, he never wrote about it, never inquired after it.
-
- They have brought no witnesses to show that A.J. Davis ever
- spoke of the will; not a word. Gentlemen, let us be controlled by
- the natural, by the reasonable, by the probable.
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 13
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- In 1868 one of the executors died -- Job Davis. I think
- Sanders said that if a man of Judge Davis's intelligence, knowing
- what a difficult thing a will is to write, should have allowed
- Mr. Knight, a Kentucky lawyer, to draw his will, who had not had
- much practice, why, he is astonished at that, and in the next
- breath tells you that Andrew J. Davis employed a twenty-two year
- old boy who could not spell "give" to draw up his will in 1866.
- Isn't it wonderful what strange things people can swallow and
- then find fault with others! Now, remember:
-
- In 1868 Job Davis died; then there was only one executor to
- that will. A.J. Davis went on piling up his money, thousands on
- thousands. Greed grew with age, as it generally does. Gold is
- spurned by the young and loved by the old. There is something
- magnificent after all about the extravagance of youth, and there
- is something pitiful about the greed of old age. But he kept
- getting money, more and more, and in '85 he had sold the
- Lexington mine. He was then a millionaire. In '85, I think. They
- say he sold that mine in '81, maybe he was then a millionaire.
- There was the will of '66 down in Salt Creek township, used as a
- model for other wills, for the purpose of teaching the neighbors
- spelling and elocution, to say nothing of punctuation. They got
- up little will soirees down there -- will parties -- and all the
- neighbors came in and Mrs. Downey read it aloud and wept when she
- thought it was the writing of her brother Job. That accounts for
- the tear drops, I suppose; the round spots on the will. 1885;
- Andrew J. Davis worth millions. Then what happened? Then James
- Davis, the other executor, died. Then there was a will floating
- around down in Salt Creek township, sometimes in a trunk,
- sometimes in a box, other times in an old envelope, other times
- in a wrapper, and when I think of the shadowy adventures of that
- document it makes me lonesome. James is dead, poor Job nothing
- but dust; a will down there with no executors at all; and A.J.
- Davis did not know in whose possession it was, and never wrote to
- find out. Let us be governed by the natural, gentlemen, by the
- probable. Never found out, never inquired, and after James Davis
- died he lived four years more. I think James Davis died on the
- 5th of December, 1885, then he lived a little more than three
- years after he knew that both executors were dead and did not
- know whether the will existed or not. Judge Dixon tells us
- perhaps if he had made a will before he died it would have been
- different from this. I think perhaps it would. What makes him
- think that it would have been different? If that will existed in
- Salt Creek township he knew it, and he knew it in 1885, 6, 7, 8,
- 9, and when death touched with his icy finger his heart he knew
- it then, and if he made that will in '66, it was his will when he
- died unless it had been revoked. He knew what he was doing.
-
- I tell you there was no will down in Salt Creek township at
- all; there wasn't any here. There have been a good many since.
- Now, where is the evidence that he ever thought of this will,
- that he ever spoke of it?
-
- What else? He appointed three executors of his will, that
- is, in '66, if he made it, and in that he provided that a like
- maintenance should be given to Thomas Jefferson, Pet Davis and
- Miss Bergett, all three of Van Buren County, State of Iowa. What
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 14
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- else did he say? That the executors should have the right of
- fixing that amount, and whatever amount in their judgment should
- be fixed should be final. What is the legal effect of that? The
- legal effect of that is that the estate could not have passed to
- John A. Davis until the last who had a life interest was dead.
- The proceeds could have been taken, every cent of them, from that
- estate and given to the three persons for life maintenance, and
- the youngest of those persons was four years old. John A. Davis
- would have had to wait seventeen years. And do you think that
- A.J. Davis ever made a will like that, putting it into the power
- of two executors to divert the entire income to certain persons
- and that there could be no division until they were all dead.
-
- Now, another improbability. Recollect, all the time. that we
- are to be governed by reason and naturalness. Now, then, it was
- claimed that Judge Davis held certain relations with a certain
- Miss Caroline Bergett. It was claimed that a daughter known as
- Pet Davis was his. It was also claimed that a boy, Thomas
- Jefferson Davis, was his son. Nobody tells the truth in this will
- although it has been alluded to and argued as well, I think, as
- could be. There is this trouble in the will that though the boy
- Jeff was never in Van Buren County until he was twelve years old
- -- was never there until six years after the will was dated, yet
- his supposed father describes him as of Van Buren County.
-
- Next, Miss Caroline Bergett had married a man by the name of
- W.V. Smith in 1853, and in 1858, W.V. Smith took his wife and
- children and moved to Texas -- eight years before this will was
- made, and yet A.J. Davis forgot her name, forgot her residence,
- forgot the residence of the boy that was imputed to him; that of
- itself is enough to show that he was not present when the will
- was made. If there is anything on earth that he would remember
- this is it, and you know it. Although Mrs. Downey could not
- remember when she was married or when her first child was born,
- she does remember the time it took her to dust the room where
- there was a clothes-press, a table and three or four chairs. She
- recollects that.
-
- Another improbability:
-
- John A. Davis, the proponent, had charge of the Davis farm
- down in Iowa and stayed there for six years after this alleged
- will was made, and although he was acquainted with the Quigleys,
- the Henshaws, the Sconces, and all the aristocracy of the
- neighborhood, he says he never heard of the existence of this
- will which so many people of that section talked about. What a
- place for keeping secrets!
-
- Senator Sanders says that the reason Judge Davis made his
- will in Salt Creek township was because in that township they
- knew about this woman or these women and these children, and he
- didn't want to go into any other community and make his will.
-
- Any need of publishing his will? Any need of reading any
- more than the attesting clause to the attesting witnesses? Any
- need to divulge a line? None. Ah, but Senator Sanders said that
- he wanted to keep the secret, That is the reason he left the will
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 15
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- upon that table and rode away in a debonair kind of style on his
- roan horse with the bobtail, leaving a congregation of Salt Creek
- loafers to read his will. He wanted to keep it secret; hoped that
- it would never get out. Imagine the scene, Job Davis writing the
- will; Mrs. Downey with a duster tucked under her arm like the
- soubrette in a theater. Well, when he was writing the will she
- was looking over his shoulder and read the will as fast as he
- wrote it. That makes me think of the fellow who was writing a
- letter and there was a man looking over his shoulder, so he said:
- "I would write more but there is a dirty dog looking over my
- shoulder," and the fellow said: "You are a liar."
-
- Everybody read it. Mrs. Downey read it; she read it as Job
- wrote it; then he read it aloud; and then he went and got Sconce
- and read it again; then in comes Glasgow and he read it. I think
- Mrs. Downey must have read this will ten or twelve times.
-
- Mr. MYERS. She said twenty-five.
-
- Mr. INGERSOLL. Oh, yes; twenty-five, because it was in job's
- handwriting; and whenever the twilight crept around the farm
- bringing a little sadness, a little pathetic feeling, she would
- light a candle and hunt the will, and read it just to think about
- Job. She would see the words "guive" and "wherther" and all that
- brought back Job, and she used to wonder "wherther" he was in
- Paradise or not.
-
- Now, John A. lived down there and knew all these people and
- never heard of that will.
-
- What do you think of that? Why is it that John never got any
- information from Sconce? Sconce, who saw the will written and who
- was one of the attesting witnesses. Why didn't he hear of it from
- old Downey? Why didn't he hear of it from the Quigleys or the
- Dotsous? Why didn't he hear of it in Salt Creek township, when it
- was seen and read and read and read again until I think many of
- them knew it by heart? And yet the only person really interested
- was walking around unconscious of his great good fortune, and
- nobody ever told him. There is another thing: For four months
- after Andrew J. Davis died nobody told John about the will.
- Nearly four months passed away; I think he died on the 11th of
- March, 1890, and this will came to John on the first day of July.
- All the neighbors knew it. Just as soon as A.J. died, they all
- said: "John is coming right into the fortune now" only nobody
- told John; and the first man we find with the will is James R.
- Eddy, and the next man we find with the will is John A. Davis,
- the proponent. When John A. Davis saw this will, leaving him four
- or five million dollars, it did not take much to convince him
- that the signature was genuine. Human nature is made that way. If
- it was leaving four or five millions to either of us, including
- the sinner who addresses you, the probability is that I would
- say, "Well, that looks pretty genuine -- pretty genuine." And
- then if I could get a few other fellows to swear that it was, I
- would feel certain, and say, "That is my money."
-
- Now, another improbability. All the evidence shows that
- Judge Davis was a business-like, quiet, methodical, careful,
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 16
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- suspicious man, secretive, keeping his business to himself,
- keeper of his own counsels; and when he did make a will it was
- sealed; it was given to one of his friends to put away, and to
- keep. It did not become the common property of the neighborhood.
- He did not mount his roan horse and ask the people of the
- community to look at it. He was a methodical, business-like man,
- and I suppose Many of you, gentlemen of the jury, knew him; and I
- shall rely somewhat on your knowledge of A.J. Davis, for you to
- say whether he made this will, whether in 1866 he left his old
- father naked to the world; whether he cared nothing for brothers
- and sisters; whether he cared nothing for the children of the
- sister that raised him. I leave it for you to say. You probably
- know something about this matter. Andrew J. Davis, when he was a
- child, when all the children were gathered around the same knee,
- the children that had been nourished at the same tender and holy
- breast, he would not have done this then. If some good fortune
- came to one, it was divided.
-
- How beautiful the generosity, the hospitality of childhood!
- But as they grow old there comes the love of gold, and the love
- of gold seems to have the same effect upon the heart that it does
- upon the country where it is found. All the roses fade, the
- beautiful green trees lose their leaves, and there is nothing in
- the heart but sage brush. And so it is with the land that holds
- within the miserly grip of rocks what we call the precious
- metals.
-
- The next question in the case is the Knight will. Was any
- such will made? And I say here to-day, knowing what I am saying,
- I never saw upon the witness stand a man who appeared to be more
- candid, more anxious and desirous of telling the exact truth than
- E.W. Knight, and from what I have heard there is not a man in
- Montana with a better reputation. He has no interest in this
- business, not one penny; and it was months and months after the
- death of Judge Davis that we knew such a will ever existed --
- that is, on our side. Either Mr. Knight was telling what he
- believed to be true, or he was perjuring himself. No ifs and ands
- about it. He is a man of intelligence and knows what he is
- saying. He swears that A.J. Davis made a will.
-
- And what else does he swear to? That there was also the
- draft of a will, which gave away the mine or provided for its
- working, and then at the end of that draft, provided that the
- rest of the property should be divided in accordance with the
- statute. Thereupon Mr. Knight told him: "Your heirs would
- interfere by injunction, and you had better bequeath your whole
- property and fix the amount to be expended in the development of
- the mine." Thereupon he made another will, and that will was
- signed.
-
- Now, Mr. Knight knows whether it was signed or not, The will
- was signed or Mr Knight Committed perjury knowingly, willfully
- and corruptly. What does he say? That it was signed. What else?
- That it was attested. Then these gentlemen came forward with Mr.
- Talbot, who says that Knight said that when Davis came to the
- bank to get the will he thought he was going to execute it. That
- is, the idea being, it was not signed.
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 17
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- What was it attested for if it was not signed? That is
- absurd to the verge of idiocy. But they say that Mr. Knight is
- not corroborated. Let us see. He says that Andrew J. Davis made a
- will. Mr. Keith swears that A.J. Davis made a will. Knight says
- that Davis went out and brought Keith in, and Keith swears that
- he lived next door and A.J. Davis did come in there and get him
- and he knows the time on account of the sickness of his child.
- Corroboration number two. Knight swears that Davis then went for
- another man. Keith says that he did go and get Caleb Irvine.
- Corroboration number three. Knight said one of the men who signed
- the will was in his working clothes. Corroboration number four.
- Knight swears that Davis read the attesting clause. Keith swears
- the same. Keith swears that Davis signed it, that he signed it,
- and then Irvine signed it. What more? He swears that Knight wrote
- it, and he was writing it when he went in. And yet they have --
- and I will use an expression of one of the learned counsel -- the
- audacity to say that Mr. Knight has not been corroborated.
-
- And they would have you believe that Knight took that will
- over to Helena and put it in the safe when it was not signed by
- A.J. Davis, and they would make you think besides that, that it
- was attested by two witnesses, and that two witnesses had to say
- that they saw A.J. Davis sign it, that he signed it in their
- presence, and that they attested his signature in his presence
- and in the presence of each other. They proved a little too much,
- gentlemen. They proved that by Talbot. They proved that by Andrew
- J. Davis, Jr., who expects to fall heir to all that is taken, and
- they proved it also by John A. Davis, the proponent,
-
- RECESS.
-
- May it please the Court and gentlemen: When we adjourned I
- was talking about the testimony of Mr. Knight, and the making of
- the Knight will. The evidence is, the way that will came to be
- made, or what started it, is, as follows: A.J. Davis borrowed of
- the First National Bank of Helena forty thousand dollars to put
- in the mines, and Governor Hauser remarked when 'he got the
- money: "Another old man going to fool with mines until he gets
- broke." And that it seems piqued A.J. Davis, touched his vanity a
- little, and then he said: "That mine shall be developed whether I
- live or die. I am satisfied that it is a good mine, and I am
- going to make a will and I am going to provide in that will for
- the mine being developed." And thereupon he talked with Mr.
- Knight. And finally Knight drew up a draft of a will, according
- to his testimony, providing for the working of that mine. And
- what did he say when he got through with it? "Now as to the
- balance of the property, let it be divided according to law. That
- makes a good will." That is what he said. Then Mr. Knight said to
- him: "If you make the will that way it may be that the heirs will
- come in and enjoin the working of the mine on the ground that it
- is a waste of money. You had better make a full will and dispose
- of all your property as you may desire, and fix the amount to be
- used in the development of that mine."
-
- Now, this is either true or false. It is true if Mr. Knight
- can be believed; and he can be believed if any gentleman can be
- trusted.
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 18
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- What more? Knight says that A.J. Davis made the memoranda
- from which to draw that will, had his manager come, and in that
- will it told how the shafts should be run, how much work should
- be done, and charged his trustees to do development work up to a
- certain amount.
-
- Is that all born of the fancy of this gentleman? And can you
- believe that a man like Mr. Knight, who has run the largest bank
- in Montana for twenty-five years -- can you believe that such a
- man, who is not in any necessity, who is not in need of money,
- comes here and swears to what he knows to be a lie, and makes
- this all out of his own head, carves it out of his imagination?
-
- The second will was made, the second will was signed, the
- second will was attested, the second will was given Mr. Knight to
- keep. They say it was not signed, and yet Mr. Knight swears he
- told one man about it. He told Mr. Kleinschmidt, so that if
- anything happened to him, Knight, he would know that Knight had
- in that vault the will of Andrew J. Davis. Do you think he would
- have done that if the will had not been signed, if it were worth
- only waste paper? And yet they are driven to that absurdity for
- the purpose of attacking the evidence of this man. It will not
- do.
-
- Judge Knowles said that in a conversation at Garrison, he
- said that in the will the mine was left to Erwin Davis, and the
- reason given for it was that Erwin Davis was a business man. Now,
- the only way that can be explained, is one of two ways. One is
- that Judge Knowles has gotten two matters mixed; the other is
- that he is absolutely mistaken.
-
- Judge Knowles, the President of the First National Bank of
- Butte -- Judge Knowles, who has been the attorney of Andrew J.
- Davis, Jr. -- Judge Knowles had this conversation, or some
- conversation, with Knight; and why would Knight have taken pains
- to tell him a deliberate falsehood?
-
- There is something more. After all this occurred, Andrew J.
- Davis, Jr. went to Mr. Knight and asked him to write out what he
- remembered about that will, and Knight dictated it on the spot
- and sent it to him.
-
- Where is that letter? Here it is. I want to read that letter
- to this jury. That was a letter written long ago. A letter
- written before this will was filed in this court. A letter
- written before Mr. Knight knew that A.J. Davis, Jr. had any will.
- A letter written before Knight imagined there could ever be a
- lawsuit on the subject. Andrew J. Davis Jr. went to him and asked
- him to write out what he knew about that will, and he turned,
- according to his own testimony, and dictated it, and sent it to
- him, like a frank, candid, honest man; and before I get through I
- will read that letter, and when it is read I want you to see how
- it harmonizes absolutely and perfectly with his testimony here on
- the stand.
-
- I will draw another distinction. Mr. Knight gave two
- depositions in this case. These depositions have not been
- suppressed like the deposition taken of Sconce. Not suppressed.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 19
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- Why? Because we are willing that the jury should read the two
- depositions and hear his testimony besides, and there is not the
- slightest contradiction in the depositions themselves, or between
- the depositions or either one of them and his evidence that he
- gave here -- except two that they claim; and think what immense
- contradictions they are.
-
- In one deposition he says that A.J. Davis left some bequests
- to some aunts. Mr. Knight swears on the stand that he never said
- aunts, he said sisters, but if he did say aunts he meant sisters,
- because he never heard of his having any aunts, and yet that is
- held up as a contradiction, and to such an extent that you are to
- throw away the testimony of this man.
-
- Now, here is the letter. This will was filed July 24, 1890,
- and when he wrote this letter he did not know that A.J. Davis Jr.
- knew of a will, or that John A. Davis knew of a will. And this is
- what he writes:
-
- Helena, Montana, July 22, 1890.
-
- I beg to say that some time in 1877 or 1878, I made a draft
- of a will for your uncle Andrew J. Davis, which he duly executed,
- and left the same on file with me, as a special deposit for two
- or three years, when the same was canceled and destroyed; when I
- was led to believe and to conclude that he had made and executed
- a will to supersede and take the place of that.
-
- That explains Talbot's testimony. Instead of saying to
- Talbot that A.J. Davis came there, as he thought, to execute the
- will, and destroyed that will, it not being signed, what he said
- was that he destroyed the will, but from the way he acted he
- thought he was going to make another, that he was going to
- execute a will; and this is exactly what Mr. Talbot said. To
- execute a will, and it took a re-direct examination to swap the
- "a" for "the".
-
- I cannot satisfactorily recall the considerations and
- provisions of said will drawn by me, but the main burden and
- desire was that the work on the mine known as the Lexington,
- should be continued to a certain amount of development, and that
- the mill should be carried on under a certain management, and
- after providing for the payment of his just debts, he made
- certain bequests naming certain nephews and nieces, running from
- ten thousand to fifteen thousand dollars each, and you are
- especially named for the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, and
- if the estate exceeded in value the net sum of five hundred
- thousand dollars, then those bequests where to be increased; and
- if in excess of one million dollars, the further increase was
- named and specified.
-
- That is the letter he wrote before he ever knew there would
- be this suit; before he knew of the existence of this will.
-
- A certain boy named Jefferson -- claimed to be his son --
- was given the sum of twenty thousand dollars to be paid to him in
- yearly sums of five thousand dollars for four years, and the same
- provision as to a certain girl, claimed to be his child.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 20
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- Is that not exactly what he swore to on this stand?
-
- Certain executors named E.W. Knight, S.T. Hauser, and W.W.
- Dixon, each to receive the sum of ten thousand dollars for
- services.
-
- Yours truly,
-
- E.W. KNIGHT.
-
- Now, gentlemen, they were informed of the existence of that
- will and of its destruction, and were so informed before John A.
- Davis filed this will. And when we pleaded this will, John A.
- Davis pleaded that it had bean republished, and yet no evidence
- was given in of any republication. They knew that under the
- statute of Montana, when a man makes will number one, and
- afterwards makes will number two, and afterwards destroys will
- number two, that will number one is not revived; that the making
- of the second will kills the first, and the destruction of the
- second kills that, and leaves the man intestate and without any
- will. Now, there is the letter of Mr. Knight -- full, free,
- frank, candid, honorable, like the man himself. He says there
- that he does not remember all the provisions, but he does
- remember that he provided for some nephews and nieces, and
- provided for Andrew J. Davis, Jr., twenty-five thousand dollars,
- for one Jefferson twenty thousand, for the girl about the same,
- and that he provided also for the executors of the will, and
- appointed Knight, Hauser, and Dixon as his executors. That is
- exactly what he says here.
-
- Now, was that will made? Have they impeached Mr. Keith? I
- tell them now that they cannot impeach him. He has sworn to the
- making of that will, apart and separate from Mr. Knight. Oh, they
- say, why didn't they bring Knight in, and prove by him that he
- then recollected Mr. Keith? What has that to do with it? Mr.
- Keith recollected Mr. Knight, swore that he wrote the will, and
- that he was writing it when he came in, and swore that he
- attested it, that Davis signed it, and Irvine also signed it.
- What more do we want on that will? I say, gentlemen, that the
- will of 1880 ends this case. There is not ingenuity enough in the
- world to get around it, and there was and never will be enough
- brains crammed into one head to dodge it. That will was made, and
- every man on the jury knows it. That will was executed by Andrew
- J. Davis, every man of you knows it, and the will was afterwards
- destroyed.
-
- Now, the question is, did that second will revoke the first
- will? Had it a revoking clause in it? E.W. Knight swears it had,
- and he swears that he copied it from a will made by an uncle of
- his named John Knight, and he had that will in his possession
- here and in that will there are two revocation clauses, and
- Knight swears that he copied those clauses, and right here it may
- be well enough to make another remark. When he read the will to
- A.J. Davis, and the passage "hereby revoking all wills," Davis
- said: "There is no need of putting that in. I never made any
- other will. This is the first." Knight said to him, "Well, that
- is the way, that is the form, and I think it is safer to have it
- that way." And Davis said: "All right; let it go."
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 21
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- How do you fix that? There is no way out of it, that the
- will was made in 1880, revoking all former wills. What else? The
- conditions of the will of 1880, with regard to working the mine,
- with regard to bequests to nephews, with regard to bequests to
- others, with regard to the twenty thousand dollars given to Jeff
- Davis, and the twenty thousand dollars given to the girl; these
- provisions are absolutely inconsistent with the provisions of
- this will of 1866. So on both grounds the will of 1880 destroys,
- cancels, and forever renders null and void the will of 1866, even
- if it had been the genuine will of A.J. Davis, and the Court will
- instruct you to that effect.
-
- And after Mr. Keith had testified, the proponents in this
- case subpoenaed Mr. Knight, and if they thought that Knight would
- swear that Keith was not the man, why did they not put him on the
- stand? They ran no risk. He is an honest man. He would tell the
- truth. I never had the slightest fear in bringing an honest man
- on the stand. Never. I want facts, and I hope as long as I live
- that I shall never win a case that I ought not to win on the
- facts. No man should wish or endeavor to win a case that he knows
- is wrong.
-
- I say there is not a man on this jury but believes in his
- heart and soul this minute that this will was made. You have to
- throw aside the testimony of a perfectly good man, and no matter
- whether what he said about Erwin Davis to Judge Knowles was true
- or not -- and I must say that I never saw a witness on the stand
- in my life more eager to tell his story than Judge Knowles was.
- Never. He was bound to get it in or die. He answered questions
- over objections before the Court was allowed to pass upon the
- objections. Why? Because he is the President of the First
- National Bank. Now, without saying that he was dishonest about
- it, I say he was mistaken. Knight never said one word of that
- kind to him.
-
- It was impossible that he could have said it. So is Mr.
- Talbot mistaken. So is Andrew J. Davis, Jr. mistaken, and so is
- John A. Davis mistaken. Think of the idiotic idea that a will,
- not signed, was given to Knight to keep, attested by two
- witnesses, and not signed by the testator. Idiotic! Now, as I
- understand it, gentlemen, you will have to find that that will
- was made. Now, what is the next great question in this case, and
- the question that will be argued at some length, probably, by the
- other side? And why? Because it is the first and only point, so
- far as facts are concerned, that they have won in this case, just
- one. And what is that? Our experts said that they thought that
- the ink was nigrosin ink, and the fact that they wanted a test
- proves that they were sincere. Their witnesses said they did not
- think it was nigrosin ink. Mr. Hodges said it had too much
- lustre, but that there was only one way in which it could be
- absolutely determined and that was by a chemical test. But, say
- these gentlemen, or rather said Judge Dixon, "the moment that ink
- turned red the whole case of the contestants was wrecked." Let us
- see.
-
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 22
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- If there had been no logwood ink in existence -- not a
- particle -- after the 20th day of July, 1866; if, on the night of
- the 20th of July, 1866, all the logwood ink on earth had been
- destroyed and then this ink had turned out to be logwood, why, of
- course, it would have been a demonstration that this paper was
- written as far back as the 20th of July, 1866. If it had turned
- out that it was written in nigrosin ink and that that had only
- been invented in 1878, it would have been a demonstration that
- the will was a forgery. But you must recollect the fact that it
- is written in logwood ink is not only consistent with its
- genuineness, but consistent with its being a forgery. Why? There
- was logwood ink in existence in 1890, plenty of it, and if Mr.
- Eddy wrote this will in 1890, he could have written it in logwood
- ink; and the fact that it is written in logwood ink does not show
- that it was written in 1866. Why? Because there was logwood ink
- in existence every year since 1866, till now.
-
- Suppose I said that the paper was only ten years old and it
- turned out that it was forty, is that a demonstration in favor of
- the other side? If it turned out to be ten, it is a demonstration
- on our side.
-
- But if it turned out to be forty, is not that consistent
- with the genuineness of the instrument, and also with the
- spuriousness of the same instrument? You can see that. Nobody is
- smart enough to fool you on that. Nobody. Take the whole question
- of ink out and the question is still whether Eddy wrote it or
- not. Take the ink all out and it is still the question whether
- Job Davis wrote it or not. Absolutely, and all the test proved
- was, that our experts -- some of them -- were mistaken about its
- being nigrosin ink. Mr. Tolman stated that it was impossible to
- tell without a chemical test; that it looked like nigrosin ink
- and from the manner in which it seemed to run he thought it was
- nigrosin ink, but that it was impossible to tell without a test.
- Mr. Hodges, their expert, said it looked to him like logwood ink;
- that it had too much lustre for nigrosin, but he added that it
- was impossible to tell without a chemical test. That is what he
- said. Mr. Ames said the same thing, and I appeal to you,
- gentlemen, if Mr. Ames did not have the appearance of an honest,
- of a candid, and of a fair man. Professor Hagan said that it was
- nigrosin ink, but he admitted that the only way to know was to
- test it. And what else? Their own expert, Mr. Hodges, said that
- logwood ink penetrates the paper. If this ink has been on here
- twenty-five, years it penetrates the paper.
-
- Sometimes an accident happens in our favor; a piece of that
- will was torn off this morning. You see the edge there torn off
- slanting. You see that "o-f"; how much that ink has sunk into
- that paper. Not the millionth part of a hair. It lies dead upon
- the top. Just see how the ink went in there -- not a particle. It
- lies right on top. I would call that "float." There is the other
- edge. There is where the ink stops. It has not entered a
- particle. And when You go to your room I want you to look at it.
- That ink has not penetrated a particle. And let us see what this
- witness Hodges says: "Logwood ink penetrates the paper." There it
- is, "to determine the nature of the ink, use hydrochloric acid."
- What else?
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 23
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- "I think this will was written with Reimal's ink, and that
- was made in Germany in the neighborhood of 1840. Reimal's ink
- penetrates the paper." And then they say that we endeavored to
- draw a distinction between modern and ancient. This is what Mr.
- Hodges says about it.
-
- On the addition of hydrochloric acid to logwood ink it will
- turn to a bright red. The old-fashioned ink was manufactured by
- mixing a decoction of logwood with chromide of potash and formed
- a blue black solution. Logwood inks as made to-day differ from
- those, in that the modern logwood inks contain another sort of
- chrome than chromide of potash; they contain chromium in the form
- of an acetate or a chlorine.
-
- Hodges was the man that talked about ancient and modern
- logwood inks; and he, before the test was made, said that the old
- logwood ink would turn a bright red, modern logwood not so
- bright. And after the evidence was all in, Professor Elwell came
- smilingly to the post and said, "they have got it exactly wrong
- end to; the older the duller and the newer the brighter." And
- after a moment said, "This was kind of dull." Before the test was
- made, Mr. Tolman swore, "I agree with Professor Hodges that if it
- is an old logwood ink it will turn a bright, scarlet red. In the
- case of modern logwood inks I don't agree with him, but to that
- extent I think his tests are good," and he drew that distinction
- before the test was made.
-
- Gentlemen, you saw this will. I want to call your attention
- to it again. You see that "j" in Sconce's name, that is pretty
- red. Not so awfully scarlet, though, that it would affect a
- turkey gobbler. You see it in "Job"; you see it in "James Davis,"
- but there it is brown, and not red, and not scarlet, and no flame
- in it, and Professor Hodges himself said that although both were
- logwood inks, he would not swear that Job Davis and James Davis
- were written with the same ink. Do you see the red in that "Job"?
- Now find the red on that "s" of "James." He said he would not
- swear that they were written in the same ink, but both in logwood
- ink, that is to say, they might have been different inks. While I
- would not swear that they were the same inks, I would swear that
- both inks contained logwood. And that is all he swore to, and I
- must say that I believe he was a perfectly honest, fair
- gentleman.
-
- Now, all that the ink test proves on earth is that it is
- logwood instead of nigrosin, and that doer, not prove that Eddy
- did not write the will, because there was plenty of logwood ink
- when he did write it. That is the kind of ink he used. And it has
- no more bearing -- the fact that it turned out to be logwood --
- to show that it is a genuine will than though it had turned out
- to be iron ink. Suppose the experts had been wrong on both sides,
- and it had turned out to be iron ink, what would have happened
- then? Is it a genuine will? Nothing can be more absurd than to
- argue that that test settled the genuineness of this will.
-
- Hodges says another thing; that perhaps the pen went to the
- bottom of the ink bottle and got a little of the settlings of the
- ink on it, when he wrote "James Davis," and consequently that has
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 24
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- a different color. Well, if the pen had gotten some of this
- sediment on it, the more sediment the more logwood, and the more
- logwood the brighter the color, Instead of that, it is dull.
-
- There is another trouble: With regard to the experts, while
- undoubtedly there are some men who do not swear to the exact
- truth, whether paid or not, undoubtedly some men swear truthfully
- who are paid. I do not believe that you doubt the testimony of
- Hodges simply because you paid him so much a day. I don't. And
- certainly we have found no men philanthropic enough to go around
- the country swearing for nothing. I judge of the man's oath, not
- by what he is paid, but by the manner in which he gives his
- testimony -- by the reason there is behind it. That is the way I
- judge and yet Senator Sanders judges otherwise, as he told you in
- a burst of Montana zeal.
-
- I like Montana, too, and I believe the Montana people are
- big enough and broad enough not to have prejudice against a man
- because he comes from another State. Every State in this Union is
- represented in Montana, and the people who left the old settled
- States and came out to the new Territories, dropped their
- prejudices on the way -- and sometimes I have thought that that
- is what killed the grass. I like a good, brave, free, candid,
- chivalric people. I don't care where you come from -- I don't
- care where you were born. We are all men, and we all have our
- rights; and as long as the old flag floats over me, I have just
- as many rights in Montana as I have in New York. And when you
- come to New York I will see that you have as many rights, if you
- are in my neighborhood, as you have in Montana. That is the kind
- of nationality I believe in. I hate this little, provincial
- prejudice; and yet Senator Sanders invoked that prejudice. That
- insults you. We did not insult you when we asked you when you
- went on the jury, if you cared whether the money stayed in Butte
- or not, or whether you were interested or not, or related or not.
- These were the questions asked every juror, and we relied
- absolutely on your answers when you said that you were
- unprejudiced, and that you would give us a fair trial; and we
- believe you will.
-
- Now, then, with regard to these experts, you have got to
- judge each one by his testimony; and it is foolish it seems to
- me, to call them vipers and pirates, as Senator Sanders did. A
- very strong expression -- "vipers, pirates" living off, he said,
- the substance of others; and yet he had an expert on the stand,
- Mr. Dickinson; he had another, Mr. Elwell; he had another, Mr.
- Hodges; and after that he rises up before this jury and calls
- them "three vipers" and "three pirates." I never will do that. If
- I ask a man to swear for me, and he does the best he can, I will
- leave the "pirate" out.
-
- I will drop the "viper," and I will stand by him, if I think
- he is telling the truth; and if he is not I won't say much about
- him; I don't want to hurt his feelings. But I want to call your
- attention again to the fact that every expert on our side swore,
- knowing that they had three experts on the other side, and that
- if we made a mistake they could catch us in it; and we did make a
- mistake in that ink; and the test showed that we made a mistake,
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 25
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- and that is all the test did show; but it did not show that the
- will is genuine any more than if it had turned out to be carbon
- ink; then both sides would have been mistaken. And yet after all
- it did turn out to be modern logwood ink, and it did turn out not
- to be Reimal's logwood ink, made of the chromate of potassium;
- did turn out not to be that, and I say on this will that there is
- an absolute, decided and distinct difference between the color on
- the name Job Davis and the name James Davis. And right here, I
- might as well say that that man Jackson, who came here from
- Butler, Mo. -- and when I said Butler was a pretty tough place,
- rose up in his wrath and said it was as good as New York any day
- -- that man says that when he saw the will he does not remember
- of seeing the names of James Davis and Sconce in it, but he did
- remember of seeing the name of Job Davis. I don't think he saw
- any of it. Now, there is another question here -- because I have
- said enough about ink, at least enough to give you an inkling of
- my views.
-
- There is another question. Why didn't John A. Davis take the
- stand? That is a serious question. john A. Davis had sworn, on
- the 13th of March, 1890, that his brother died without a will.
- John A. Davis, on the 24th day of July, 1890, filed a will in
- which he was the legatee. That will came into his possession
- under suspicious circumstances. What would a perfectly frank and
- candid man have done? What would you have done? You would not
- have allowed yourself to remain under suspicion one moment. You
- would have said, "I got that will so and so." You would have let
- in the light, "I obtained it in such a place, it is an honest,
- genuine will, and here it is, and here are the witnesses to that
- will." But instead of that, John A. Davis never opened his mouth,
- except to file a petition swearing that it came into his
- possession the first day of July. He knew that he was suspect,
- didn't he? He knew that the men in whose veins his blood flowed
- believed that the will was a forgery -- knew that good men and
- women believed that he was a robber, and that he was endeavoring
- to steal their portion. He knew that, and any man that loves his
- own reputation and any man that ever felt the glow of honor in
- his heart one moment, would not have been willing to rest under
- such a suspicion or under such an imputation. He would have said:
- "Here is its history, here is where I got it, it is not a forged
- will. It is genuine. Here are the witnesses that know all about
- it. Here is how I came into possession of it."
-
- No, sir. Not a word. Speechless -- tongueless. And he comes
- into this court and comes on to this stand to be a witness, and
- is asked about a conversation he had with Burchett, and then we
- asked him, "How did you come into the possession of that will?
- "All his lawyers leaped between him and the answer to that
- question. They objected. If he came by that will honestly he
- would have said, "I am going to tell the whole story." He wants
- you to believe that he came by it honestly, doesn't he? He wants
- you to believe it. He not only wants you to believe it,
- gentlemen, but he asks twelve men -- you -- to swear that he came
- by it honestly, doesn't he? If you give your verdict that that is
- a genuine will, then you give your oath that John A. Davis came
- by it honestly; and he wants you twelve men to swear it. And yet
- he dare not swear it himself. He wants you to do his swearing. He
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 26
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- is afraid to stand in your presence and tell the history of that
- will. He is afraid to tell the name of the man from whom he
- received it. He is afraid to tell how much he gave for it; afraid
- to tell how much he promised. He is afraid to tell how they
- obtained witnesses to substantiate it in the way they have. Well,
- now, ought not you to let him tell his own story, ought not you,
- gentlemen, to be clever enough to let him do his own swearing?
-
- Now, I will ask you again if he came by that will honestly,
- fairly, above board, would he not be glad to tell you the story?
- Would he not be glad to make it plain to you? If that was a
- perfectly honest will and came to him through perfectly pure
- channels, would he not want you to know it? Would he not want
- every man and woman in this city to knowit? Would he not want all
- his neighbors to know it? And yet, he is willing, when this case
- is being tried, and when he is on the stand, and asked how he got
- the will -- he is willing to close his mouth -- willing to admit
- that he is afraid to tell; and I tell you to-day, gentlemen, that
- the silence of John A. Davis is a confession of guilt, and he
- knows it, and his attorneys know it. A client afraid to swear
- that he did not forge a will, or have it forged, and then want to
- hire a man to defend him and call him honest! Well, he would have
- to hire him; he would not get anybody for nothing. And yet he is
- asking you to do it. If John A. Davis came properly by it, let
- him say so under oath. Don't you swear to it for him, not one of
- you.
-
- Now, there is another question. Why did not James R. Eddy
- take the stand? We charged him with forging the will. We made an
- affidavit setting forth that he did forge the will, and in this
- very court Mr. Dixon arose and said he was glad that the charge
- had been fixed, and the man had been designated. Judge Dixon said
- here, before this jury, when this case was opened, "the man who
- was charged with forging this will will be here. He will stand
- before this jury face to face; and he will explain his
- connections with the will to your satisfaction." That is what
- Judge Dixon said. Where is your witness? Where is James R. Eddy?
- Why did you not bring him forward? I know he is here now --
- delighted with the notoriety that this charge of forgery gives
- him -- with a moral nature that is an abyss of shallowness, --
- delighted to be charged with it, and he will probably be my
- friend as long as he lives, because I have added to his notoriety
- by saying he is a forger. Why did they not bring him on the
- stand? Mr. Dixon gives one reason. Because the jury would not
- believe him. And that is the man who is first found in possession
- of this will. That is the man in whose hands it is, and it is
- from that man that John A. Davis received it. And the reason that
- he is not put on the stand is that it is the deliberate opinion
- of the learned counsel in this case that no jury would believe
- him.
-
- How does that work with you? James R. Eddy here -- his
- deposition here -- and they could not read his deposition because
- he was here and they had him here and kept him here, so that we
- could not read his deposition. They were bound that he should not
- go on the stand. Why? Because the moment he got there he could be
- asked, Where did you find the will? Who was present when you
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 27
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- found it? When did you first tell anybody about it? When did you
- first show it to John A. Davis? How much did he agree to give yon
- for it? What witnesses have you talked to in this case? What
- witnesses have you written to in this case? What work have you
- done in this case? What affidavits have you made in this case?
- And what have you done with the other three wills that you have
- in this case ?
-
- Such questions might be asked him, and they were afraid to
- put him on the stand. Every letter that he had written would have
- been identified by him if he had been put on the stand. Maybe he
- would have been compelled to write in the presence of the jury,
- to see whether he would spell words correctly.
-
- They knew that the moment he went on the stand their case
- was as dead as Julius Caesar. They knew it and kept him off.
-
- Now, there is only one way for them to win this case. And
- that is to keep out the evidence. Only one way to win the case --
- suppress John A. Davis. Keep your mouth closed or defeat will
- leap out of it. Eddy, keep still. Don't let anything be seen that
- will throw any light upon this. I ask you, gentlemen of the jury,
- to take cognizance of what has been done in this case. Who is it
- that has tried to get the light? Who is it that has tried to get
- the evidence? Who is it that has objected? Who is it that wants
- you to try this case in the dark? Who is it that wants you to
- guess on your oaths? The failure of Eddy to testify is a
- confession of guilt. They dare not put him on the stand -- dare
- not.
-
- Now, gentlemen, there is a little more evidence in this case
- to which I am going to call your attention. Something has been
- said about a conversation in March, 1891. Sconce had his
- deposition taken in Bloomfield, Iowa. That deposition has been
- suppressed. John A. Davis was there at the time it was taken.
- John A. Davis and Sconce went into the passage leading up to the
- office of Carruthers. Mr. Burchett, sheriff of the county, a man
- having no possible earthly or heavenly interest in this business,
- happened to stop at the corner to read his paper -- looked at it
- as he opened it -- and he then and there heard John A. Davis say,
- "Stick to that story and I will see that you get all the money
- you have been promised," and thereupon Sconce replied, "All right
- I'll do it." Sconce denies it, and that denial is not worth the
- breath that he wasted in forming the denial. John A. Davis denies
- it. Of course he denies it. But he dare not tell where he got
- that will. He dare not do it. He wants you to do that for him. He
- wants you to lift him out of the gutter and wash the mud off him.
- He is afraid to do it himself.
-
- I want to call your attention to that conversation, and that
- of itself is enough to impeach Sconce. That is enough of itself
- to show that John A. Davis was entering into a conspiracy or
- rather had entered into one with Mr. Sconce. Now, gentlemen,
- there is another thing, and we must not forget it. Curious people
- down in Salt Creek township, on the other side; of course there
- are plenty of good men there or the township could not exist, and
- we had a good many of them here -- good, straight, honest,
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 28
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- intelligent looking men. But the other side had some -- all in
- the family -- all of them.
-
- Swaim, he was not in the family, but he is a clerk in
- Tremble's bank, where Wallace is the cashier, where they suppress
- depositions; say they are not finished when they are signed by
- the person who swears to them.
-
- John C. Sconce, the only living witness, whose "ancient but
- ignoble blood has crept through rascals ever since the flood,"
- cousin to James Davis, cousin to Job Davis, cousin to Mrs.
- Downey, cousin to Eddy, cousin to Dr. Downey by marriage, brother
- to T.J. Sconce, Jr., brother-in-law to Abe Wilkinson, cousin to
- Tom Glasgow and Sam, cousin to Moses Davis, cousin to Alex.
- Davis, uncle to Henshaw's daughter, and father-in-law of George
- Quigley. Every one of them united. Blood is thicker than water.
- Eddy stuck to his family.
-
- James R. Eddy -- cousin to Sconce, son of Mrs. Downey, (Mrs.
- Downey, the duster lady, who remembers that Davis asked her to
- remain, but didn't ask her advice, didn't have her sign the will,
- didn't give her any bequest, but there she was with her duster),
- grandson of James Davis, nephew of Job Davis, and related by
- blood or marriage to both the Glasgows, Moses and Alexander
- Davis, to T.J. Sconce and J.C. Sconce, Jr., Abe Wilkinson, George
- Quigley, S.M. Henshaw, (the celebrated lawyer). J.L. Hughes, and
- Eli Dye, brother-in-law to C.O. Hughes, and foster brother to
- John Lisle, and Mrs. A.S. Bishop. And it is just lovely about
- John Lisle.
-
- John Lisle is one of the fellows that saw this will. "How
- did you come to see it, John?" "James Davis," he says, "was my
- guardian and he had to give a bond, and so one day when James
- Davis was away from home, I thought I would go and see the bond."
-
- Of course he thought James Davis kept the bond that he gave
- to somebody else -- to the county judge; but Mr. Lisle pretends
- that he thought the bond would be in the possession of the man
- who gave it. And so he sneaked in to look among the papers. Now,
- do you believe such a story -- that he thought that man had the
- bond? Didn't he know that the bond was given to somebody else?
- Foolish! Bishop swears the same thing; James Davis was guardian
- for his wife, and he was looking to see if James had the bond;
- and another fellow by the name of Sconce, was looking for a note,
- and when he opened this double sheet of paper folded four times
- and happened to see Sconce's name he said: "Here it is -- a
- promissory note."
-
- Mary Ann Davis -- that is to say, Mrs. Eddy, that is to say,
- Mrs. Downey, is the mother of J.P, Eddy, daughter of James Davis,
- sister to Job, second cousin to Sconce, wife of Downey, and
- related by blood or marriage to Tom and Sam Glasgow, Moses and
- Alexander Davis, Abe Wilkinson, S.M. Henshavy, J,O, Sconce, Jr.,
- T.J. Sconce, George Quigley and C.O. Hughes. All right in there,
- woven together.
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 29
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- E.H. Downey -- son-in-law of James Davis, brother-in-law of
- Job, husband of Mary Ann Davis-Eddy-Downey, and step-father of
- Mr. Eddy.
-
- S.C. Sconce. Jr. -- cousin to Eddy, nephew of J.C. Sconce,
- Sr., cousin to Mrs. Downey, cousin of E.H. Downey, son-in-law of
- Henshaw, cousin to George Quigley, related to Tom and Sam
- Glasgow, Abe Wflkffison and Moses and Alex Davis.
-
- George Quigley -- son-in-law of Sconce.
-
- Sam Glasgow -- cousin of Sconce, son-in-law of Dye, brother
- to Tom Glasgow, brother-in-law to Moses and Alex. Davis, cousin
- to Abe Wilkinson, and related by marriage to J.R. Eddy. Here they
- are, same blood. All have the same kind of memory; runs in the
- blood.
-
- Henshaw -- father-in-law to J.C. Sconce, Jr. Lisle --
- adopted son of James Davis, and his ward, and foster brother to
- Eddy. A.S. Bishop -- married to Allie Lisle, ward of James Davis,
- foster sister of James R. Eddy.
-
- T.J. Sconce -- Eddy's cousin, J.R. Sconce's brother,
- brother-in-law and cousin to the Glasgows, cousin to Alex. and
- Moses Davis, brother-in-law to Abe Wilkinson and uncle to J.C.
- Sconce, Jr.
-
- Moses Davis -- cousin of Sconce, brother-in-law to the
- Glasgows, cousin to Abe Wilkinson, brother of Alex. Davis, and
- related to Eddy and Arthur Quigley.
-
- Alexander Davis -- cousin to Sconce, brother of Moses Davis,
- brother-in-law to the Glasgows, cousin to Wilkinson and related
- by marriage to Arthur Quigley.
-
- Abe Wilkinson -- brother-in-law to Sconce, cousin to Alex.
- and Moses Davis, and cousin to the Glasgows.
-
- Tom Glasgow -- cousin to Sconce, and Abe Wilkinson, and a
- brother-in-law of Moses Davis, and a brother to Sam Glasgow, and
- related by marriage to Eddy.
-
- Arthur Quigley -- brother-in-law to Alex. Davis, and brother
- to George Quigley, who is a son-in-law of Sconce. John L. Hughes
- -- his nephew married Eddy's wife's sister. Eli Dye -- father-in-
- law of Sam Glasgow.
-
- There they are, all of them related except Swaim and
- Duckworth and Taylor; and Duckworth, he is in the tie business
- along with Eddy. There is the family tree. All. growing on the
- same tree, and there is a wonderful likeness in the fruit. Why,
- that Glasgow has as good a memory as Sconce. He remembers that
- this is the same will he saw -- paper like that, and he swears --
- I think it is Sam Glasgow -- that he did not read the contents or
- see a signature. And yet he comes here, twenty-five years
- afterwards, and swears it is the same paper. And then the paper
- was clean and now it is covered with all kinds and sorts of
- stains.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 30
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- Now, gentlemen, take the signature of A.J. Davis, and I want
- you all to look at it. I say it is made of pieces. I say it is a
- patchwork. It is a dead signature. It has no personality -- no
- vitality in it, and I want you to look at it, and look at it
- carefully. I say it is made of pieces. Of course every
- counterfeit that is worth anything, looks like the original, and
- the nearer it looks like the original the better the counterfeit.
- All the witnesses on the side of the proponent who have sworn
- that it is his signature, also swear that he wrote a rapid, firm
- hand -- nervous, bold, free, and that he scarcely ever took his
- pen from the paper from the time he commenced his name until he
- finished; and I want you to look at that name. I will risk your
- sense; I will risk your judgment -- honest, fair and free --
- whether that is a made signature, or whether it is the honest
- signature of any human being.
-
- And now, gentlemen, one word more. I contend, first, that
- the evidence shows beyond all doubt that Job Davis did not write
- this -- will. Second, that it is shown beyond all doubt, that
- James R. Eddy did write this will, and that that evidence amounts
- to a demonstration. I claim that the will of 1880 was made
- precisely as E.W. Knight and Mr. Keith swear; that that will was
- utterly inconsistent with the will of 1866, even if that had been
- genuine; that it revokes that will, that its provisions were
- inconsistent, and that afterwards that will was destroyed, and
- that there is not one particle of evidence beneath the canopy of
- heaven to show that it was not made and to show that it was not
- destroyed. And the Court will instruct you that the will of 1866,
- even if genuine, is not revived.
-
- This is the end of the case. So I claim that the
- probabilities, the reason, the naturalness, are all on the side
- of the contestants in this case -- all. And I tell you, that if
- the evidence can be depended on at all, A.J. Davis went to his
- grave with the idea that the law made a will good enough for him.
- Do you believe, if he were here, if he had a voice, that he would
- take this property and give it to John A. Davis; that he would
- leave out the children of the very woman who raised him; that he
- would leave out his other sisters, that he would leave out the
- children of his sisters and brothers? Do you believe it? I know
- that not one man on that jury believes it.
-
- This case is in your hands. That property is in your hands.
- All the millions, however many there may be, are in your hands;
- they are to be disposed of by you under instructions from the
- Court as to the law. You are to do, it. And, do you know, there
- is no prouder position in the world, there is no more splendid
- thing, than to be in a place where you can do justice. Above
- everybody and above everything should be the idea of justice; and
- whenever a man happens to sit on a jury in a case like this, or
- in any other important case, he ought to congratulate himself
- that he has the opportunity of showing, first, that he is a man,
- and second, of doing what in his judgment ought to be done, and
- there will never be a prouder recollection come to you hereafter
- than that you did your honest duty in this case. Say to this
- proponent: "If you wanted to show us that you got this will
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 31
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- honestly, why didn't you swear it; if you wanted us to believe it
- was a genuine will, why didn't you have the nerve to take your
- oath that it is a genuine will?"
-
- Now, you have the opportunity, gentlemen, of doing what is
- right. Your prejudice has been appealed to, but I say that you
- have the manhood, that you have the intelligence, and that you
- have the honesty to do exactly what you believe to be right; and
- whether you agree with me or not, I shall not call in question
- your integrity or your manhood, I am generous enough to allow for
- differences of opinion. But when you come to make up your
- verdict, I implore you to demand of yourselves the reasons; to be
- guided by what is natural; to be guided by what is reasonable. I
- want you to find that this will was found in the possession of
- Eddy in April or March, next in the hands of John A. Davis; and
- that John A. Davis dare not tell how he came in possession of it.
- John A. Davis, on the edge of the grave -- for this world but a
- few days, and according to the law without that will he could
- have had an income of over fifty thousand a year. He was not
- satisfied with that. He wanted to take from his own brothers and
- sisters, wanted to leave his own blood in beggary.
-
- He never saw the time in his life that he could earn five
- thousand a year -- never. And he was not satisfied with fifty
- thousand -- he wanted four and a half millions for himself.
-
- Gentlemen, I want you to do justice between all these heirs.
- I want you to show to the United States that you have the
- manhood, that you are free from prejudice, that you are
- influenced only by the facts, only by the evidence, and that
- being so influenced, you give a perfectly fair verdict -- a
- verdict that you will be proud of as long as you live. How would
- you feel, to find a verdict here that this is a good will, and
- afterwards have it turn out to be what it is -- an impudent,
- ignorant forgery?
-
- Now, all I ask of you is to take this evidence into
- consideration. Don't be misled even by a Christian, or by a
- sinner, for that matter. Let us be absolutely honest with each
- other. We have been together for several weeks. We have gotten
- tolerably well acquainted. I have tried to treat everybody fairly
- and kindly, and I have tried to do so in this address.
-
- I have had hard work to keep within certain limits. There
- would words get into my mouth and insist on coming out, but I
- said: "go away; go away." I don't want to hurt people's feelings
- if I can help it. I don't want anyone unnecessarily humiliated,
- but I say whatever stands between you and justice must give way;
- and if you have to walk over reputations -- and if they become
- pavement you cannot help it. You must do exactly what is right,
- and let those who have done wrong bear the consequences.
-
- Now, gentlemen, I have confidence in you. I have confidence
- in this verdict. I think I know what it will be. It will be that
- the will is spurious, and that the will of 1880 revoked it,
- whether spurious or not. That is my judgment, and I don't think
- there is any man in the world smart enough or ingenious enough to
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 32
-
- ADDRESS TO THE JURY IN THE DAVIS WILL CASE.
-
- get any other verdict from you as long as John A. Davis was
- afraid to swear that it was an honest will; as long as James R.
- Eddy, the forger, dare not take the stand; and they will never
- get a verdict in this world without taking the stand, and if they
- do take it, that is the end. There is where they are.
-
- Now, all I ask in the world, as I said, is a fair, honest,
- impartial verdict at your hands. That I expect, More than that I
- do not ask. And now, gentlemen, I may never see you again after
- this trial is over -- separated we may be for-ever -- but I want
- to thank you from the bottom of my heart for the attention you
- have paid to the evidence in this case and for the patient
- hearing you have given me.
-
- NOTE: The Jury disagreed and the case was compromised.
-
-
-
- **** ****
-
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
-
- The Bank of Wisdom Inc. is a collection of the most
- thoughtful, scholarly and factual books. These computer books are
- reprints of suppressed books and will cover American and world
- history; the Biographies and writings of famous persons, and
- especially of our nations Founding Fathers. They will include
- philosophy and religion. all these subjects, and more, will be
- made available to the public in electronic form, easily copied
- and distributed, so that America can again become what its
- Founders intended --
-
- The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
-
- The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
- hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
- and information for today. If you have such books please contact
- us, we need to give them back to America.
-
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-
-
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- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 33