Dissenting Opinion by
Me. Justice Roberts:The original of the will sought to be probated in this case was executed by Mrs. Luigina Ervien on March 26, 1956. Neither party to this litigation disputes the fact that the will was in her possession on that date. No witness thereafter saw the will, and it was not found among Mrs. Ervien’s effects after her death. Under this state of facts, as the orphans’ court recognized, there was a presumption that Mrs. Ervien destroyed her will animo revocandi. Murray Will, 404 Pa. 120, 129, 171 A. 2d 171, 176 (1961); Bates’s Estate, 286 Pa. 583, 134 Atl. 513 (1926). This presump* tion could be overcome only by the presentation of evidence which was “positive, clear and satisfactory”, Murray Will, supra at 129, 171 A. 2d at 176; Dalbey’s Estate, 326 Pa. 285, 288, 192 Atl. 129, 130 (1937).
*67The evidence in fact relied upon by the orphans’ court to overcome the presumption of revocation may be summarized as follows: Mrs. Ervien’s husband Clarence died in 1956. By virtue of his will she received his share of a family business, the remainder of which belonged and still belongs to his brother Edward. Mrs. Ervien’s estate consists almost entirely of the share of family business she inherited from her husband. Both Clarence’s will and the will of Mrs. Ervien sought to be probated were executed on March 26, 1956. Each will contained virtually identical provisions disposing of the estate to appellees, Edward’s daughter and grandson, if testator were the surviving spouse.
Subsequent to her husband’s death, Mrs. Ervien came to rely heavily on Edward’s guidance and help in many affairs. In particular, Edward handled for her the sale of her house in 1964. Before moving from the house to the Benson Apartments, she went through her personal papers and a great deal of trash was thrown out by her. At that time Mrs. Ervien was in poor health and her eyesight was extremely weak. She was also extremely careless about her personal effects. After Mrs. Ervien’s death the unsigned copy of the will was found in an envelope which also contained an unsigned copy of Clarence’s will, her apartment lease and some printed material apparently given by her landlord to each new tenant. The envelope was addressed to Edward and was postmarked February 18, 1964. The envelope was found in a desk drawer upon which Edward had placed a lock for Mrs. Ervien to help her preserve her things from her carelessness.
From the fact that no less than a year before her death Mrs. Ervien placed the unsigned copy of her' will in the same envelope with a copy of her husband’s will and with her lease, the orphans’ court concluded that she deemed it of great value at that time. Then *68the court proceeded to reason that Mrs. Ervien could hardly have considered the copy of her will to be of value if she had destroyed the original animo renocandi. In addition, the opinion of the court seems to suggest that Mrs. Ervien’s poor eyesight, carelessness and moving explain the absence of the will from her effects and that the source of her property, the situation in which she made her will and her relationship to Edward make it unlikely she would have deliberately acted to prevent her estate from passing to Edward’s descendants.
All the above inferences are certainly reasonable ones. But none of them, flows so compellingly from the facts as to qualify under the “clear” and “positive” elements of the applicable test. The correctness of this latter observation may be appreciated by the following quotation from Dalbey’s Estate, supra at 288, 192 Atl. at 130, where we held the proponent of a lost will had failed to present sufficient evidence to overcome the presumption of revocation: “The strongest evidence to support the continued existence of his will was certain declarations made by decedent to friends that he had left everything to his wife except two or three dollars. These statements were made at least three days before he died. In the interval decedent and his wife were alone in the house; he was mentally and physically able of availing himself of the opportunity afforded to revoke the will. Under such circumstances the presumption of revocation remains as a bar to probate of the alleged will.”
The stringency of the rule is similarly illustrated by Bates’s Estate, supra, where even the fact that the will was executed one day before the death of the alleged testator was held insufficient to overcome the presumption.*
*69Surely, if direct evidence of positive testamentary declarations within a few days of death is insufficient to overcome the presumption, totally circumstantial evidence — none of it pointing specifically to the decedent’s state of mind within even a year of her death— is also insufficient. Thus the majority is in error in concluding that the orphans’ court correctly probated the copy of Mrs. Ervien’s will.
Accordingly, I dissent.
Mr. Justice Jones joins in this dissenting opinion.Compare Foster’s Appeal, 87 Pa. 67 (1878); Glockner v. Glockner, 263 Pa. 393, 106 Atl. 731 (1919).