The justice at Special Term sustained a demurrer to the complaint in this action, which was brought to avoid two deeds and to set aside the probate of a will. It was held that two causes of action- were improperly United; but it is distinctly alleged in the complaint that both the deeds and the will were obtained by undue influence, and in furtherance of a "design to secure to the defendant, Dora M. Thomas, the property of the plaintiff’s father, and in effect to induce him to disinherit his children. Upon the allegations of the complaint there is but a single scheme set forth, namely, a fraudulent puiqrose to secure property, in furtherance of which scheme the execution of the deeds and of the will was procured. That a considerable interval of time elapsed between the first and the last steps in the perpetration of this alleged fraud does not affect its inherent quality or the entirety of the cause of action. If the fraud existed, every step taken to consummate it was part and parcel of it.
. It is urged further by the respondent that the suit, cannot be maintained to set aside the will and its probate, upon the well-recognized principle that courts of equity will not take jurisdiction *489merely to set .aside a will at the instance of an heir at law, for the reason that prohate of a will as to real estate being binding on an heir at law presumptively only, his proper remedy is to test the validity of the will by an action in ejectment. But this rule has exceptions as is pointed out in Anderson v. Anderson (112 N. Y. 104) and in Brady v. McCosker (1 id. 214). We think the case at bar furnishes one of the exceptions to the rule invoked by the respondent. The suit is brought by an heir at law, substantially charging that he has been defrauded of his inheritance, and that there are instruments valid on their face, the execution of which has been fraudulently obtained. That a court of equity has jurisdiction to nullify the deeds is not disputed. The deeds and the will refer to the same property and to the same title. Having jurisdiction of the .action to set aside the deeds, the plaintiff brings into the action another instrument which it becomes necessary to have set aside if he is to obtain any benefit of a decree, to make which the court, it is admitted, has ample authority, and this additionally impeached instrument was one procured to fortify the title made by the deeds. The jurisdiction attaching for one purpose connected with the fraud, it may attach for all and bring the whole subject of the one fraud, with all its incidents, before the court so that the rights of the parties may be settled in one suit without multiplicity of actions and that a complete remedy may be afforded. But, even if this consideration is not conclusive, we are .of opinion that, under the Code of Civil Procedure, the plaintiff has a right to maintain, this suit as he has framed it. An action to set aside the probate of a will is authorized by section 2653a of the Code referred to. It enacts that within a certain time any person interested in a will or codicil' admitted to probate in this State may cause the validity of the probate thereof to be determined in an action in the Supreme Court. The precise point as to the interpretation of the words “ any person interested in a will,” as they are used in the statute, was considered in the case of Snow v. Hamilton (90 Hun, 161), and it was held that they did not relate exclusively to a person named in the will, but included heirs at law and next of kin, and that any other construction would confine the remedy provided by the statute to beneficiaries under the will, and that such a construction is altogether too *490narrow. We "think the views expressed in the case cited contain a correct interpretation of the statute.
The judgment and order appealed from should he reversed, with costs, with leave to the defendants to answer within twenty days on payment of costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and Williams, JJ., concurred.'
Judgment and order reversed, with costs, with leave to the defendants to answer within twenty days on payment of costs.