This was an appeal by the contestants from a decree of the probate court allowing and establishing a certain written instrument as the last will and testament of Nancy Esterbrook, late of Brattleboro. In county court a trial by jury was had. The verdict was in accordance with the contention of the proponents, and judgment on the verdict was rendered. The will was contested on the grounds of lack of testamentary capacity, undue influence and want of due execution. Mrs. Esterbrook left sixteen nephews and nieces and they were her next of kin. Don H. Miller, one of the nephews, was the principal beneficiary under the will, and another nephew, William Miller, had bequeathed to him a substantial legacy. To the other nephews and nieces sums merely nominal were given. During the trial the contestants took various exceptions all of which relate to the admission or exclusion of evidence.
*234Lilly Vinton, one of the attesting witnesses, was called by the proponents. She testified that she lived across the street from Mrs. Esterbrook, was acquainted with her, and occasionally called upon her and visited with her. After narrating the circumstances attending the execution of the will she was permitted, under objection and exception, to state that on the occasion of the execution of the will she noticed no peculiarities in the talk or actions of Mrs. Esterbrook. But in connection with her other testimony the statement that she observed nothing peculiar in the witness, that is, nothing strange, unusual or unnatural was admissible. Fairchild v. Bascomb, 35 Vt. 398, 417.
Hilma Anderson, another attesting witness, was called by the proponents. She testified as to the circumstances attending the execution of the will, as to remarks of Mrs. Esterbrook in respect to the will and other matters, and gave an apparently full account of what occurred on the occasion in question. Without objection she gave an opinion, based on what she had testified to, that on that occasion Mrs. Esterbrook was of sound mind. Under objection and exception she stated that she did not notice anything peculiar in the talk or actions of the testatrix. This testimony, like that of Lilly Vinton, was, however, admissible. The official transcript is referred to for what it shows in respect to the testimony of the two witnesses, already referred to, and we have considered that in connection with the recitals in the bill of exceptions.
William H. Vinton, a witness for the proponents, testified to two interviews with Mrs. Esterbrook and that in the second interview she expressed a wish that he should settle her late husband’s estate. The witness testified that he told her that he could not. Under objection and exception he further testified that he told her something about who to get to settle it; that she asked him who he thought would be a good person for that business; that he told her he hardly knew; that if she wished he would speak to Mr. Brackett; that as a result of the interview he communicated with Mr. Brackett. about going up to Mrs. Esterbrook’s. It appeared that immediately thereafter Brackett, at Vinton’s request, called on Mrs. Esterbrook and at her request summoned A. F. Schwenk, Esq., an attorney, who responded to the summons and drew the will in question. A part of the evidence as to the interview just referred to bore upon the *235mental condition of the testatrix, and the rest of it bore upon the question of undue influence, for it threw some light upon the circumstances leading up to and surrounding the execution of the will.
The same witness testified that he had known the testatrix for a number of years, that she had lived across the street from him eighteen or nineteen, and that he had seen her on quite a number of occasions before the two interviews referred to. Having so testified he was, under objection and exception, permitted to say that so far as he could see there was no marked difference between her mental condition at the times referred to and her mental condition during his previous acquaintance with her. It is urged that there was no basis for the comparison inasmuch as the exceptions do not show that the witness had said anything about her mental condition in earlier years. But without such testimony the evidence objected to tended to show that her mind was not in any marked degree affected by increasing age, and so was admissible. Sargent v. Burton, 74 Vt. 24, 28; Fairchild v. Bascomb, 35 Vt. 398, 417.
Leonora E. Smith was a witness called by the proponents. She testified that she frequently called upon and talked with Mrs. Esterbrook and that the latter’s mental condition was sound and all right. This testimony she gave without objection. Under objection and exception she was then asked if she ever saw the testatrix do or say anything that was not consistent with a sound mind. She said she never did. The question was so amended as to limit the time of the inquiry to the period since the death of Mrs. Esterbrook’s daughter Julia. The answer was in substance repeated. This question, either with or without the amendment, was not strictly within the rule which requires a lay witness to base an opinion of a person’s sanity upon things testified to by the witness, although such a question is held proper in Massachusetts. McCoy v. Jordan, 184 Mass. 575, 69 N. E. 358. But the witness had already testified that the testatrix was mentally sound and all right and, so far as the exceptions show, had been permitted to do this without restriction, and the matter received under objection and exception added nothing to the testimony the witness had already given and so if improper was harmless.
*236William Miller, one of the beneficiaries referred to, was a witness. In the course of his cross-examination he testified that when he visited Brattleboro he did not visit any of his relatives except Mrs. Esterbrook and a Mrs. Smith; that he had some reason for not doing so, and that Mrs. Esterbrook did not know the reason. Thereupon in re-direct examination, under objection and exception, counsel for proponents were permitted to show that the reason did not exist until after the death of Mrs. Esterbrook, and to ask what the reason was. The witness said, “I was told not to call on her.” It was material to show that the reason referred to in cross-examination did not exist until after the death of the testatrix, and while the statement of the witness as to what the reason was was immaterial, it was brought out in re-direct examination upon a matter introduced into the case by the contestants in cross-examination, and it was proper for the proponents to show that the reason was immaterial.
Sometime prior to her death the testatrix had a fall. Kate Cressy, a witness for the proponents, testified to a conversation with the testatrix, had about a month after the execution of the will, in which the latter explained how she fell. Under objection and exception she stated that Mrs. Esterbrook’s explanation was that she went upstairs to see the dog — that he was hurt — and that in coming down she fell, that she thought she had got to the last stair, thought she had got down, and stepped off and fell. This explanation of Mrs. Esterbrook was properly received since the character of the statements indicated something as to her mental condition at a time very near the time of the execution of the will and so bore upon the question of her mental condition at the latter time. In re Jane Mason’s Will, 82 Vt. 160; Chickering v. Brooks, 61 Vt. 554, 562; Crocker v. Chase, 57 Vt. 413.
The case last cited is somewhat relied upon by the contestants, but their claim is not supported by that case, the doctrine of which is clearly explained in the Mason Will case first above cited.
Don IT. Miller, the nephew who was the principal legatee, was a witness and was permitted, under objection and exception, to testify as to his financial condition and his income. This testimony was made admissible by evidence in the case which tended to show that Mrs. Esterbrook was conversant with his *237financial condition. Crocker v. Chase, 57 Vt. 413, 421; Fairchild v. Bascomb, 35 Vt. 398, 417.
He also testified as to the straightened circumstances in her life time of his mother, long since deceased, and as to the relation which existed between his mother and her sister, the testatrix. The contestants argue that this evidence was clearly inadmissible; but it was received without objection, and this fact dispenses us from considering its admissibility.
Shortly after the execution of the will, Don H. Miller brought a petition to the probate court asking that a guardian be appointed for Mrs. Esterbrook on the ground that she was physically and mentally incapable of taking care of herself and property. A hearing was had upon this petition and a guardian was appointed. In Miller’s cross-examination he was asked this question: “When there was a hearing involving the question of your aunt ’s' sanity, upon your request, and a petition signed by you, stating that she was of unsound mind, did you testify as a witness in support of that petition?” This question was objected to on the ground that it contained an unwarranted assumption. But the question was insisted upon and the form of it defended as intended to elicit the understanding of the witness as to the character of the hearing upon the petition. The court excluded the question and properly did so. The question to which the witness was obviously expected to say yes or no was whether he testified as a witness in the proceedings for the appointment of a guardian. He could not well give a proper answer to that question, and in the same answer express his understanding of the character of the hearing. The question did in fact contain an unwarranted assumption. P. S. 3159; Cowdry’s Will, 77 Vt. 359.
This same witness was, however, cross-examined, for the purpose of impeachment, as to his testimony on the guardianship hearing. Yarious questions and answers taken from his testimony therein were read to him and he was required to say whether or not he so testified. Thereafter in redirect examination he was asked the following question: “Up to the time you were forbidden entrance,” reference being had to a visit to Mrs. Esterbrook’s home. The question wás answered, but it does not appear from the bill of exceptions what the answer was nor the significance of this elliptical question, and the *238transcript is not referred to on this point. He was asked if upon a repetition of the question he did not answer, “I haven’t been there since a week ago last Thursday. ’ ’ He was also asked if this question was put to him, “and her mind appeared as clear as ever?” and if his answer was, “yes it did.” The witness replied that he thought he so testified. All this was subject to objection and exception but it is to be inferred that it was related to that part of his former testimony about which he had been inquired of by way of impeachment on cross-examination and that so it was admissible.
Rollin S. Childs, one of the contestants, was a son-in-law of Mrs. Esterbrook. The contestant’s evidence tended to show that he had always been dutiful in that relation and had endeavored to the best of his ability to carry out every wish of his mother-in-law, and that her dislike for him, which there was evidence tending to show, was unnatural and the result of an unbalanced mental condition on her part. A. P. Carpenter, Esq., was a witness in behalf of the contestants, and it appearing that he was present at the guardianship hearing and, the proponents’ evidence tending to show that it was the expressed desire of Mrs. Esterbrook to have Lucius Richardson appointed as her guardian, the proponents, under objection and exception, undertook to show that at that hearing Childs made' objection to the appointment of Richardson. The apparent object of the inquiries in this behalf was to meet the claim that Childs was solicitous to carry out the wishes óf Mrs. Esterbrook. Nothing material was elicited, for the witness could not say whether Childs did or did not object to the appointment of Richardson. There was not much relevancy in the inquiries, since Childs might have thought that Mrs. Esterbrook’s desire to have Richardson as her guardian was not her real wish but that it too resulted from an unbalanced mental condition; but as nothing came of the inquiries, and as they may be thought to have a remote relevancy, we find no error.
It appeared that Mr. Carpenter was counsel for Mr. Childs in several matters, and, under objection and exception, the proponents in cross-examination brought out the fact that the witness wrote, for a Brattleboro paper, a communication with regard to the guardianship and Don H. Miller, and that this communication was published. The witness said he could not *239tell whether he signed the article by his own name simply or as attorney for Eollin Childs, but that he .was attorney for Mr. Childs at that time and may have said so in the article, though he couldn’t recall whether or not he did say so. The witness said that he published the article of his own motion and had some interest in the matter as counsel for Mr. Childs but not otherwise so far as he could say. The examination above referred to, and more to the same effect, was proper in cross-examination, for the obvious purpose of it was to show the interest of the witness and his zeal in behalf of one of the contestants.
Mr. Carpenter was inquired of in further cross-examination as to the affair of a certain tin box the nature of which does not appear from the exceptions. He said that at the request of Mr. Childs he wrote a letter to Mr. Miller in regard to the box. This evidence was received under objection and exception, but these were general. If any question'of privilege was involved, it was not raised. The cross-examination in the matter of the tin box, and the doings of the witness in reference thereto, were within the rule permitting cross inquiries for the purpose of showing the feelings and attitude of a witness and his relations to the parties and to the case.
Z. H. Albee, the Probate Judge who sat in the hearing of the petition for the appointment of a guardian, testified in behalf - of the contestants that on June 1, 1908, he called upon Mrs. Esterbrook, that he found her lying on a bed apparently in a dazed condition, that he asked her about the matter of a guardian several times, that she did not appear to comprehend his questions and did not appear to know that he was there, and he gave his opinion as to her mental condition, based upon his observations as testified to by him, that it was such that she did not realize that he was there or what he was there for. In croás-examination he was asked if anything occurred to him at the time of the visit as to the care Mrs. Esterbrook was receiving. He said he thought not, from observation. This inquiry and answer were not objected to and could not well be, for it was material to know whether the condition in which the judge found Mrs. Esterbrook was primarily due to mental weakness, or whether it might have been temporarily brought on by lack of care, nursing and nourishment. Having given the answer stated, the witness was asked if he recalled a conversation in *240Mr. Fitts’ office immediately after the visit to Mrs. Esterbrook. His reply was in the affirmative, tie was then asked if in that conversation he didn’t say that there should be somebody-there to care for her, a trained nurse. Here an objection was interposed, and two or three questions and answers were put and given under objection and exception on the ground that the inquiries were not proper cross-examination. But these inquiries were calculated to refresh the recollection of the witness as to what he observed on the occasion of his visit to Mrs. Esterbrook and were proper in view of the previous testimony of the witness.
Colonel Haskins, a witness for the contestants, gave in evidence his acquaintance with Mrs. Esterbrook, his observation of her, and his opinion, based on the matters testified to by him, that she was not of sound mind. He was further asked to give his opinion of her testamentary capacity at a certain time before the making of the will, basing his opinion upon his observations of her at that time as testified to by him. The answer expected, as stated by counsel, was that she was not at that time of sufficient mental capacity to make a will. The answer was not received, and in its exclusion there was no error. Fairchild v. Bascomb, 35 Vt. 398; Chickering v. Brooks, 61 Vt. 554, 563; In re Blood’s Will, 62 Vt. 359.
It appeared that Colonel Haskins is a lawyer, but that fact was immaterial. The law as to testamentary capacity must be given by the court and applied by the jury.
Mrs. Daniel Doyle, a witness for the contestants, gave evidence that she, as a nurse, took care of Mrs. Esterbrook for some time prior to her death. The witness testified as to Mrs. Esterbrook’s mental and physical condition during that time and as to conversations between the witness and the testatrix. On cross-examination she said that Rollin Childs told Mrs. Esterbrook about Don Miller’s being drunk, and that Don’s associates were low, that he belonged to the Red Men, and that the Red Men were the scum of the earth. This testimony.on cross-examination was received against a general objection, and an exception was taken. As has already been stated it appears from the exceptions that Mrs. Esterbrook had a dislike for Mr. Childs, and that the contestants claimed that this dislike was without foundation and evidence of an ill-balanced mind. But if Childs talked to Mrs. Esterbrook about her nephew Don, her *241principal legatee, in the fashion narrated by Mrs. Doyle, in the hearing of one not of the family, his talk indicated that there was a natural ground for the dislike mentioned. It is argued for the contestants that the talk testified to by Mrs. Doyle had a natural tendency to excite in the minds of the jury sympathy for Don Miller and prejudice against Rollin Childs. But if so, much more is it probable that such talk had a like natural effect upon the mind of Mrs. Esterbrook. One of the issues made by the contestants was undue influence, and it was proper for the proponents to show who had the ear of the testatrix, and who if any one endeavored to instil prejudices into her mind.
These remarks to Mrs. Esterbrook stand as did the letters in Foster’s Exrs. v. Dickerson, 64 Vt. 233, 250, which were received in evidence on proof of facts tending to show that the testatrix there must have read them, and since the views therein expressed were such that they might well be thought to have influenced her. !
The question of whether this testimony was related to the direct examination of Mrs. Doyle is not raised by the general objection and exception. No error appears.
A few exceptions, not noticed, were taken, but these were on hearing expressly waived.
In a will case, where lack of testamentary capacity on the part of one not before the tribunal and undue influence exerted upon such a one are the grounds of contest, there are a few and but a few artificial rules to be applied. The great problem of whether or not the instrument offered for probate is the product of a disposing mind acting freely in view of all the affection, sympathy, confidence, indifference and distrust, likes and dislikes, memories, purposes and anticipations engendered, it may be throughout a lifetime, demands solution through an investigation befittingly untrammeled, and the inquiries must for the most part be carried on in accordance with liberal rules of procedure.
So far as the exceptions show the will here in question was allowed and established as the result of carefully conducted inquiries governed by such rules of law as were applicable, and the result is that
The judgment is affirmed and ordered to be certified to the probate court.