Considering the amount involved, which does not, I think, exceed $18,000, this has been one of the most protracted, and sharply and ably contested cases which it has fallen to my lot to witness. The questions as to the admissibility of certain evidence, lying as they do at the threshold of, and in a large measure dominating, . the case, have been elaborately considered and presented by counsel. I think no case bearing upon these questions has escaped their vigilance. I have endeavored to deduce from them such rule for this case, and for future guidance in like cases, as the authorities cited and the ends of justice seem to warrant.
The will of 1877 was prepared for an old lady of eighty-two years, somewhat shaken in mind and body by her advanced age, by her attorney, who is a legatee named therein, and also an executor. The execution of it is formally proved, with no evidence of conversation or con*373duct, attending it, furnishing any clue to the mental capacity of the testatrix. This at once suggests suspicion, and the necessity of a careful scrutiny into the matter. Doubtless, impressed with this aspect of the case, the proponent procured the release of the legacy by Henry D. Loder, and then offered his evidence. It will be seen, therefore, that three questions at once arise, on offering this witness: 1st, being named as executor in the will, was he a party, who is excluded from, testifying by § 823 of the Code; 2d, if competent as executor, but incompetent by reason of the legacy, could he release it so as to render him competent; 3d, was he rendered incompetent by § 835 of the Code, which declares that an attorney shall not be permitted to disclose the communications made to him by a client.
As to the first point; if Henry D. Loder, as executor simply, had propounded the will, he would have been competent to testify as to its execution (Children’s Aid Society v. Loveridge, 70 N. Y., 387). The section has not been so changed since that case arose, as to materially affect the question; hence his testimony as to the factum must stand; but he was not a proponent, nor is he in any way a party to the record.
As to the seco?id question,—did his release render him competent generally? At common laxv a person who, not a party, had any pecuniary interest in the result of an action, could assign, or release such interest, and thus be rendered competent. I know of no statute changing this rule, except that § 829 will not permit an assignor to testify, in certain cases, in favor of an assignee. Here the legatee releases the estate to the executor, etc. He does not release to the residuary legatees, nor assign to them. *374The effect may be to send his legacy to his relatives, but they cannot, therefore, be regarded as his assignees, or ay persons taking under him. Surrogate Bradford held:, in Meehan v. Rourke (2 Bradf., 385), that a legatee, on releasing his legacy, became a competent witness; but he also held, in Sherwood v. Judd (3 Bradf., 267), that a party to the record, after the case had been partly tried, would not, in general, on assigning his interest to become a witness, be received as such, and thus relieve himself from liability for costs. In Reeve v. Crosby (3 Redf., 74), Surrogate Calvin held that a release, given by a lawyer who drew the will, of a legacy to him, and who was named as executor therein,- rendered him competent-to testify to the execution of it. It did not seem necessary in that case to go further, and determine whether it rendered him generally competent. In Burritt v. Silliman (13 N. Y., 93), the executor renounced as such. He did not propound the will for probate; held, a competent witness. The case arose in 1850, before parties were permitted to testify. In Coffin v. Coffin (23 N. Y, 9), an executor, who was one of the proponents and a legatee, renounced as executor and released his legacy, and became a witness generally in the case, no objection being made. On the whole, I have no doubt that the release removed all objections to his competency on the ground of interest.
As to the third, question,—could he, as the attorney of the deceased, be permitted to testify under § 835,- the contestants objecting. It is true that the courts have long held that, the client being dead, the right to object survives to his representative. Were that not so settled,—were, it now open, I should be inclined to hold that the act, being in derogation of the common law, must be strictly fol*375lowed, and that the right to object died with the client. But, as the decisions stand, the representative, and no one else, may raise the objection. Here, however, the executor is the representative. Jacob, in his Law Die. (title 1 ‘ Representation”), says an executor represents the person of the testator. In Schoonmaker v. Wolford (20 Hun, 166), the court says, the executor’s official character having been sufficiently established by the formal proof of the will, he must be regarded as the personal representative of the deceased, and as such, competent to waive the statutory exclusion of both the physicians and the attorney. Hence, Cyrus W. Loder was the only party competent to raise or to waive the question, and he expressly waived it by calling the attorney to testify.
But I think the testimony is admissible on a broader ground than any depending upon the construction of the statute (the provision in the R. S. and that in the Code being almost identical). Wharton, in his Law of Evidence, § 591, says: “The privilege, it should be remembered, is meant to protect the living in their business relations, and cannot be invoked when the question arises as to the intention of a deceased person, in respect to the disposition of his estate.” This doctrine is quoted approvingly in the case of Staunton v. Parker (19 Hun, 55). The same reasoning will apply as to the admissibility of the testimony of attending physicians. Surrogate Bradford, as long ago as 1850, held, in the case of Allen v. Public Administrator (1 Bradf., 221), that the statute prohibiting physicians to testify was not applicable to probate proceedings, on the ground that ‘there was no one competent to assert the privilege in exclusion of the testimony. I cannot find that this dictum has ever been *376distinctly disapproved. In many prominent cases the rule has been adopted without question, eminently in the celebrated Parish Will case. There, attending physicians were examined very fully, and without a suggestion of a doubt, by the very eminent counsel engaged, as to their competency. In the recent case of the Matter of Chapman (27 Hun, 573 [decided in 1882]), the court held that the attorney was not privileged from testifying for the contestants, under the objection of the executor, as to facts and communications with the deceased, where fraud or mistake is alleged.
I feel myself constrained, therefore, to receive and consider the evidence of Henry D. Loder as properly given in the case, and to overrule the objections taken thereto by the contestants. It follows that the evidence of the attending physicians must also be regarded as competent, and the same disposition is made of the objections interposed to it. The cases of Edington v. Mut. Life Ins. Co. (67 N. Y., 185); Same v. Ætna Life Ins. Co. (77 id., 564); Grattan v. Met. Life Ins. Co. (80 id., 281); Bacon v. Frisbee (id., 394); Root v. Wright (84 id., 72); Dilleber v. Home Life Ins. Co. (87 id., 79), cited by contestants, I do not regard as in point, none of them relating to a probate proceeding, and, in all of them, the objection being taken by the representative of the deceased. The case of Brush v. Holland (3 Bradf., 240), decided in 1855, also cited by contestants, to show that executors propounding a will are parties to a probate proceeding, may be conceded without, as I conceive, in any way affecting this case. We come now to the question of the admissibility of the evidence of Cyrus W. Loder, executor, and the proponent of the will of 1877.
*377It has been repeatedly decided that a mere executor propounding a will is not a party in interest; that his prospective commissions do not have that effect, not even where he is bequeathed a legacy in payment of his services to be rendered. He cannot, therefore, be regarded, under § 829, as a party examined in his own behalf or interest, against a person deriving his title or interest from, through, or under a deceased person, by assignment or otherwise. I think the word “behalf” is here used in the sense of “advantage” or “profit,” and that Cyrus W. Loder is a party without interest, through whom, by the law, others seek their interests; nor do I think the contestants are persons “deriving their title or interest ” from the deceased, by assignment or otherwise, within the meaning of the section. The execution of the will had been proved when he was called, and the contestants were seeking to establish an interest in the estate, by its rejection. But I regard the case of the Childrens’ Aid Society v. Loveridge (supra), citing with approbation Dieterich’s Estate (1 Tucker, 129), not only as settling the question as to him, but also as to Henry D. Loder, on this point, by determining the competency of an executor to testify not only in regard to the execution of the will but also as to other transactions and communications with the deceased. I, therefore, overrule the objection made, and receive the evidence. I have looked into the numerous authorities on these points, to which I have been referred by contestants, but find nothing to alter the conclusions reached.
Without here giving any special consideration to the question of the competency of the Babbitt legatees, to testify to transactions and communications with the de*378ceased, I shall disregard so much of it as may be fairly regarded as covered by such an objection. But the testimony of Louisa M. Hoyt, the sister of the deceased, whose interest, if any, is antagonistic to the will, and who was called by the proponent, was clearly competent.
Having disposed of these questions, I propose to consider next that of undue influence or fraud, and, in that connection, the condition of mind and disposition of the deceased, as rendering her a fit subject for their exercise. In doing this, I do not propose to go largely into the facts, which are spread over some fifteen hundred pages of testimony, nor to state at any length the rules of law established to guide and govern those who have occasion to pass along the well-beaten track, I will only refer to what Lord Cranworth says, in Boyse v. Rossborough (6 H. L. Cas., 2). “In order to set aside the will of a person of sound mind, it is not sufficient to show that the circumstances attending the execution are consistent with the hypothesis of its having been obtained by undue influence. It must be shown that they are inconsistent with a contrary hypothesis.” As a preliminary to such consideration, it becomes necessary to determine whether the .paper called “mem. of my will,” is the work of the testatrix herself, for if it be, it becomes an important element in the solution of these problems, as well as of that of her' testamentary capacity hereafter to be briefly considered. Considerable testimony of experts was taken in regard to the genuineness of the document, one expert declaring it to be wholly simulated, including the signature, and another pronouncing it to be wholly genuine. .We are all, in certain degrees, experts on handwriting, and I have never yet found it safe to subordinate my own *379judgment to that of an expert. The paper bears upon its face evidence to satisfy me that it was the work of the deceased herself, and this is fortified by testimony showing that she was engaged in her room writing her will, and shortly afterward sent for Henry D. Loder, and personally delivered the paper to him, with a request that he would formulate it as her will. This paper is of very great consequence, as tending to free Henry D. Loder, as her legal adviser, legatee and executor, from the suspicion of having wielded an influence naturally springing from his relation to her. His testimony satisfies the condition required in Drake’s Appeal (1 Amer. Probate Rep., 227). He drew a will for her in 1874, submitting it to Mr. Hitchings before execution, which was strikingly like this, in that it failed to provide for any of her next of kin except the Whelpleys, and placed even them among the very last of the recipients of her bounty, and gave the bulk of her property, after the death of her son, to nearly the same persons to whom she bequeathed it by the will of 1877. By the former will, Mr. Hitchings’ legacy was $5,000, while by the latter it is reduced to $1,000. This reduction is explained in a note to him, found among her papers after her death, in which she states that the larger sum had been given in the expectation that he would watch over her son’s welfare, and that, he being dead, that expectation had ceased to exist. The bequest to Henry D. Loder was reduced from $2,100 in the former, to $1,000 in the latter, she having given him in cash, in the interval, $1,000, thus adeeming the larger amount to that extent. By the prior will she bequeathed sums aggregating $12,200, and by the latter, $10,600, the chief difference between the two aggregates being the *380amount of the reduction of H. D. Loder’s legacy. There can be no just ground, under these circumstances, for coming to the conclusion that he fraudulently procured this will to be made. She, for aught that appears, acted entirely of her free will; he wished her to employ some other counsel to draw the will, which she declined to do; his legacy, as compared with that of the prior will, is reduced in amount; it bears no remarkable disproportion to the amount of the estate; nor to the amounts of the legacies to others standing in a somewhat similar relation to the deceased. There is no rule of law which would prevent him from taking a legacy under a will because he drew it. The testimony of the attorney, and other circumstances, and especially the fact that, some weeks afterward, she communicated the substance of the will to Cyrus W. Loder, furnish that preponderance of evidence which destroys any ground of suspicion suggested by the facts that he was her confidential adviser, and was made a legatee and an executor. I- have given my. best consideration to the subject, and fail to find anything which induces' me to give any great weight, as against the justness of the transaction, to anything attending the preparation of the will. As to any other evidence of fraud, or undue influence practiced upon the deceased, I find absolutely none. That the Loders were kind to her, that they humored her, that they visited her and were attentive to her, is to their credit. Because they conducted themselves in this manner toward an old lady, who was or had been rather remarkable for her intellectual culture, is, assuredly, no evidence of fraud. Otherwise, anyone might be restrained in manifesting friendship for an aged and enfeebled person having property, *381lest he should be charged with sinister designs. They had a right to do it, and the effect of their kindness is natural and in no way renders them obnoxious to the grave charge of fraud. It is true, the old lady bad attained to a great age, and had the feebleness of body incidental thereto, but she read much, conversed intelligently upon the topics of the day, and had decided views of affairs. I do not think, on the whole, she was a person who could be easily influenced, and I find no evidence of any attempt to do it in the direction of testamentary dispositions. There are evidences of instances of eccentricities, scattered here and there over a period of ten years, which, when grouped together, seem somewhat formidable, but I apprehend there are few of us who may be now conceded to have abundant testamentary capacity, who, if our lives were rigidly scrutinized, during the same period of time, would not furnish as many. But it is useless to pursue the subject farther, since I find no attempt made to exercise any influence upon her in regárd to her will, whatever her condition, in this respect, may have been.
I am also satisfied that, at the time the wills of 1874 and 1877 were executed, she possessed sufficient testamentary capacity. The very fact that she made the “mem. of my will,” for the latter will, which was drawn in strict accordance therewith, is the strongest evidence of that fact. It shows that she carried in her mind the provisions of the next prior one, together with the important intermediary acts, and also the condition of her pecuniary matters: That she omitted the Whelpley children from' its provisions, cannot be regarded as remarkable when it is shown that, for some cause, whether *382just or not, she had no particular regard, for them. Being of sound mind, her will stands as the reason for the act. The testimony of her attending physicians shows her competency. I agree with Surrogate Bradford, as to what he says, in Allen v. The Public Administrator (supra), in regard to the importance of such testimony. They saw, conversed with and observed her, and they give the facts and conclusions derived from them. It is, to my mind, much more satisfactory than the testimony of experts, based solely upon hypothetical questions. About three years subsequent to making the will of 1877, the old lady became palpably insane, laboring under very marked delusions, and it was not until she reached this stage, that the expert, Dr. Schmid, saw her. Able and skillful as he is, I am unwilling, from his inferences, as against the testimony of the attending physicians, to reach the conclusion that she was mentally unsound three years before. Dr. Nichols, the distinguished Superintendent of the Bloomingdale Asylum, to whose enlightened testimony I listened with great interest and pleasure, because of his thorough candor, large experience and perfect mastery of the subject, never saw the deceased. This witness failed, likewise, to impress my mind with a conviction of the mental incompetency of the testatrix in 1877. Had he been her attending physician at that time, and subsequently to the period of the manifestation of positive delusions, and had he then testified to her mental unsoundness throughout, giving the facts and the reasons, I should have felt bound to be guided by his mature judgment. As it is, I find that she was competent to make the will, and that it must be admitted to probate.
*383The proponent’s counsel, at the close of his argument, insisted that Mr. Hitchings had not propounded the will of 1874 in good faith, and was not, therefore, under the provisions of subd. 3 of § 2558 of the Code, entitled to costs. Without-entering upon the consideration of that question, I think he is not entitled to costs, on the simple ground that he is his own counsel. I have so held in a number of cases. He, as well as the other contestants, however, are entitled, under that section, as amended in 1881, to an allowance for what they have paid to the stenographer for a copy of his minutes of testimony; and. the proponent alone is entitled to his costs to be taxed.
Decreed accordingly.