Martin v. Thayer

English, Judge :

On the 21st day of Xovcmber, 1887, David Findlay, who for many years had been a resident of the city of Parkers-burg, Wood county, W. Va., executed a paper purporting to be his last will and testament, which paper was witnessed by F. E. Saunders and J. B. Jackson. On the 29th day of Xovember, 1887, said .David Findlay departed this life, at the age of eighty two years ; and on .the 3d day of December’, 1887, said paper was admitted to probate in said county' as the last will and testament of said David Findlay. At the time of the execution of said paper the said Findlay was under the impression that a paper he had executed on the 21st day of May, 1884, as and for his last will and testament, had been abstracted from a certain trunk or box, in which he usually kept his valuable papers; and he as*41signed that as a reason why he wished to execute the said paper dated the 21st day of November, 1887, stating to the scrivener who prepared said last-named paper that he suspected his granddaughter, Lizzie Martin, who had resided with him, of having taken said paper, and for that reason he did not intend to provide for her in his will. Subsequent to his death, said paper executed by him on the 21st day of May, 1884, was found by his executors inclosed in a deed among the papers belonging to him in said trunk or box.

On the first Monday in October, 1891, a bill was filed in the Circuit Court of Wood county by William Martin, Jesse Martin Shay, Jane Austin, Elizabeth. White and Ella Martin, who sued by her next friend I). G. White against Campbell Thayer, David Mair, Walter Mair, and Jennie Mair, and David and Walter Thayer, executors of the estate of David Findlay, deceased.

The plaintiffs in said bill allege that said David Findlay was the father of three children — Campbell Findlay, who married John Thayer, Jane Findlay, who married Alexander Mair, and Elizabeth Findlay, the mother of complainants, and that at the time of his death the only daughter surviving him was Mrs. Campbell Thayer; that his deceased daughter, Mrs. Mair, left three children, who survived the said David Findlay — namely, Jennie Mair, David Mair, and Walter Mair.

They also allege that on the 1st day of' May, 1884, he made his last will and testament, and that by it he divided his property among his daughter Mrs. Thayer.and his children ábove named, and at the time of making this.will, in 1884, he was advanced in years, but of usual health, and of disposing mind and memory; that by this will he gave to complainants the sum of four thousand dollars and afterwards, on the 18th day of September, 1886, he added a codicil giving to plaintiffs, in addition to said four thousand dollars a farm in Slate district in Wood county, consisting of about one hundred and five acres, described in a deed from A. E. Wardner to him ; that this will and codicil were both executed according to the laws of West Virginia, and duly attested by two witnesses, and were in all respects valid *42and complete, expressing his deliberate and thoughtful purpose and disposition of this property. By item six thereof he provided that any property not disposed of thereby should be divided per stirpes among his living daughter and the children of his daughters who were dead. A copy of said paper was tiled as an exhibit with said bill.

They also allege that the said will of May 21, 1884, and codicil are the only true and valid last will and testament of the said David Findlay, and that they are the children of Elizabeth Findlay Martin, mentioned and intended therein, and entitled to the benefits of the provisions therein made in their favor.

They also allege that more than three years after he had made his will in 1884 he was, in the fall of 1887, taken with an extreme illness, and was afflicted with Bright’s disease, which not only exhausted his waning strength, but greatly enfeebled and beclouded his mind, affecting his brain and his will; that he was confined to his 'bed over two weeks before he died, on the 29th day of iSTovember, 1887, at the age of eighty two years; that frequently after making his will in 1884, and up to within nine days of his death, he expressed satisfaction, and was satisfied, with the 'will and the codicil thereto attached; that he conceived the notion shortly before his death that said will of 1884 had been lost or destroyed or taken away, and he expressed great regret that it was, as he supposed, gone, and nine days'before his death he stated that his said will of 1884 had been carefully made by him, and that as it could not be found he desired another to be made, just like it, containing the same provisions that the will of 1884 contained.

They then allege the execution of the paper on 21st day of jSTovembrr, 1887, purporting to be his will, and state that the same was admitted to probate on the 3rd day of December, 1887, in said county, and exhibit a copy thereof.

They also state that said paper was written, and, if executed at all, was executed about seven days before said Findlay’s death, and they charge that said Findlay was not at the time of making the same of sound or disposing mind and memory ; that he was then borne down with age and decrepitude, on the verge of dissolution, and by reason of *43bis disease, and the medicines administered, his intellect and will were almost powerless, and that he had not testamentary capacity, and was not competent to make a will, and that, from the best information they could get, he was under influences hostile to the rights and interests of complainants, none of whom had access to him in his last illness, and that undue influences were exerted, and were effectual, to induce and procure a paper which cut off complainants, except said Ella, with nothing, and gave to her less than his will had provided; and they charged that said paper executed on the 21st of November, 1887, was not, nor was any part thereof, the will of said David Find-lay.

They also állege the finding of said will of 1884 among the papers of said Findlay, but that the same was not probated, and that great injustice will be done them if said will of 1887 is not canceled and annulled, and the true will, of 1884, established.

They further allege that said will of 1884 is in the hands of David Mail- and Walter Thayer, who qualified as executors under said will of 1887, and pray that they be required to produce the same, and that such proceedings may be had that the paper writing of November 21, 1887, purporting to be the will of David Findlay, may be set aside, annulled, cancelled, and declared void, in whole and in every part.

On the 27th day of November, 1891, the defendants demurred to plaintiffs’ bill, and also answered the same, denying that the will of 1884 was the true last will and testament of said David Findlay, and averred and charged that the will of 1884 was expressly revoked by the will of 1887, and they put in issue every material allegation of the plaintiffs’ bill; and said executors allege in said answer that they proceeded to administer said estate under the provisions of said will, and in so doing they paid several amounts of money to D. G. White as guardian for Ella Martin, to D. G. White, attorney in fact for Jane Austin, and to D. G. White for his wife, Lizzie Martin White, and to William Martin and to Jesse Martin Shay; that they received said sums, and acquiesced in said administration, and were thereby estopped from controverting said will, and that they are further es-*44topped by the fact that tbe defendants in this cause in 1888 filed a bill against complainants, and obtained a decree for tbe sale of a certain lot which was omitted from said will, and which was conveyed to said Findlay by S. C. Shaw, which, said bill charged, passed to the heirs at law of said Findlay. Said bill also averred that said will of 1887 was the last will of said David Findlay, and that said lot had been omitted from said will, and that, with full knowledge of these facts, they accepted their distributive shares of the proceeds of said sale of said lot; that complainants, prior to the institution of this suit, had in their possession a copy of said will of 1884, which they now seek to setup, in which it appears that said lot, sold as aforesaid, had been devised to the defendant Campbell Thayer ; and a copy of said bill and proceedings was exhibited, and made a part of said answer.

The complainants joined in said demurrer, the same was set down for argument; they replied generally to said answer; on the same day it was decreed that an issue be made up to be tried at the bar of the court, before a jury, to ascertain whether any, and, if any, how 'much, of the paper writing bearing date on the 21st day of November, 1887, in the bill and proceedings mentioned and admitted to probate as the last will and testament of David Find-lay, deceased, be the will of David Findlay, deceased, and on the trial of said issue said Campbell Thayer, David Mair, Walter Mair, and Jennie Mair were given the affirmative.

Said issue was submitted to a jury on the 21sfc day of December, 1891, which resulted in a verdict, on the 24th day of the same month, which found that the paper writing-bearing date on the 21st day of November, 1887, in the bill and proceedings mentioned, and admitted to probate as the last will and testament of David Findlay, deceased, is not, nor is any part thereof, the will of David Findlay, deceased; and thereupon the said Campbell Thayer and others moved the court to set aside the verdict aforesaid on the ground that the same was contrary to the law and the evidence, and not supported by the evidence, which motion was sustained, and the said verdict was set aside, and a new trial *45of Raid issue was granted, to which opinion óf the court the said William Martin and others excepted; and thereupon the complainants moved the court to enter a decree according to the verdict of the jury, which motion was overruled, and to the opinion and ruling of the court in setting aside 'verdict and awarding a new trial the complainants, at the time of such ruling, excepted, and the complainants further excepted to the'opinion and ruling of the court in refusing 'to enter a decree in comformity with the verdict aforesaid and tendered a bill of exceptions setting forth'the evidence, which was sigiied and saved to them ; and from the opinion and ruling of the court in setting aside said verdict, and refusing to enter judgment in conformity therewith, the plaintiffs William Martin and others applied for and obtained this appeal.

The first error suggested by the appellants is that the court erred in setting aside the verdict and awarding the defendants a.new trial. In the consideration of this question our attention is called to the recent statute (section 9 of chapter 131 of the Code of 1891) which provides :

“In the trial of a case at law, in which a writ of error or supersedeas lies to the court of appeals, a party may except to any action or opinion of the court, and tender a bill of exceptions; and if the action or opinion of the court he upon any question involving the evidence, or any part thereof, either upon a motion for a new trial or otherwise, the com’t shall certify all the evidence touching such question, and the judge shall sign any such bill of exceptions, if the truth of the case be fairly stated therein, and it shall be made part of the record in the case, and the whole of the evidence so certified shall be considered by the court of appeals, both upon the application for and hearing of the writ of error or supersedeas.”

This section would apparently change the rule which has been established by numerous decisions of this Coui’t, to wit, that the appellate court will not consider the parol evidence of the objector'to the verdict, so far as it is conflicting with that of the appellee, and when the evidence, thus viewed, does not show that the verdict was contrary thereto, or was not authorized thereby, the judgment should notberevers-*46ed. See Newlin v. Beard, 6 W. Va. 110, seventh point of syllabus; Miller v. Insurance Co., 12 W. Va. 116; v. City of Huntington, 16 W. Va. 307; Dower v. Church, 21 W. Va. 23, etc.

In determining this case, however, it is not necessary to interpret said statute, or pass upon its meaning or effect with reference to the former rulings of this Court upon the manner of considering the eviclen.ee certified upon a motion to set' aside a verdict and award a new trial, for'the reason that if we consider all of the evidence certified in this case including that of the exceptor, which would be giving to the statute all that could be claimed for it by the exceptor, and reading the whole evidence so certified in the light of the decisions of this and other states settling the rules in regard to granting or refusing now trials, we can not say the court below committed an error insetting aside the verdict and awarding a new trial in the case under consideration.

Haymond, J., in delivering the opinion of the court in the case of Miller v. Insurance Co., 12 W. Va. 128, says:

“When a party has obtained a writ of error or siqoersedeas from this Court to the order of an inferior court granting a new trial, this Court must consider and dispose of it according to the principles of law governing an appellate court in such cases. From the authorities cited bearing upon this ease, and upon principle, it seems to me that generally, where the evidence in the-cause is materially conflicting as to a material point or points involved in the issue, and the Circuit Court sets aside the verdict of the jury and grants a new trial, an appellate court should not reverse the order granting such new trial. And also, where there is apparently no conflicting evidence, and the inferior court grants a new trial upon the ground that the verdict is contrary to the evidence or is not authorized by the evidence, or for any other cause, where all the facts proven are not stated in the bill of exceptions, the appellate court should not reverse the order of the court below, granting a new trial, unless it manifestly and clearly appears that that the court erred in granting the new trial. And also it seems to me, from the authorities and upon sound principle, that, generally, a stronger case should be made to justify the disturb-*47anee of an order granting a new trial than where one has been refused, because in the former case the only legitimate result is another trial of the cause, at which it is to he presumed justice will be done, as near as may be; and in the latter, if the refusal be affirmed, generally the defendant is left without remedy for relief, no matter how great the injustice done him.”

Also, in the case of Reynolds v. Tompkins, 23 W. Va. 229 (sections 4 and 5 of syllabus) this Court held :

“1. Thecourt may grant a new trial when the evidence is contradictory and the verdict is against the weight of evidence, but in such a ease the power of the court to grant a new trial should he cautiously exercised; and when, in such case, the court grants a new trial, its opinion is entitled to peculiar respect, and the appellate court will not reverse such order unless it is plainly wrong.”

“5. A stronger case should be made to justify an appellate court in reversing an order granting, than one refusing, a new trial.”

ISTow, in discussing the question as to whether the court below- acted properly in setting aside the verdict of the jury, and granting a new trial, I call attention, first, to the fact that, although undue influence is alleged in the bill, no witness in the case, so far as I have been able to discover, intimates in the slightest manner that any influence was exercised by any person to induce the testator, David Dindlay, to make an alteration in his will to the prejudice of the plaintiffs, or for any other purpose but, on the contrary, Gov. Jackson states that at the time he was preparing the will he said to Mr. Findlay: “‘Ton don’t know that this childhas taken that will. It’s a suspicion ofyours, and you may be doing her a great injustice in acting upon that suspicion, and not fnaking some provision for her.’ And he very plainly intimated to me that he did not want any advice upon that question.” So that, so far as the evidence discloses, the only inflence attempted to be used was in behalf of the plaintiffs, and not to their prejudice.

When we look to the question as to whether want of testamentary capacity was established at the time the will of November 21, 1887, was executed, our attention must be *48directed to bis mental condition at the time the will was written and executed. • The question submitted to the jury was whether he at that time made a will; and the determination of that question, as a matter of course, involves the question of his mental capacity at that time to dispose of his property to such persons as he might designate. The jury were not sworn to inquire what motive prompted him to alter his former will, or whether such action was induced by some unfortunate mistake, and resulted in hardship or injustice towards one or more who had been made objects of his bounty by the will of 1884. Whatever sympathetic feelings those after-discovered facts may have created in the minds of the jury, they had nothing whatever to do with the question they were sworn to try. If David Findlay on the 21st day of .November, 1887, had testamentary capacity, and exercised the same in disposing of his property on that day by making his will, it was none the less his will, although he may have been influenced to exclude parties from sharing in 'his bounty, under a mistaken apprehension of facts, who otherwise would not have been excluded.

In the case of Couch v. Eastham, 29 W. Va. 784 (3 S. E. Rep. 23) SnydeR, J., delivering the opinion of the court, said :

“When a testator has the legal capacity to make a will,, he has the legal right to make an unequal, unjust, or unreasonable will. Voluntas stat pro ratione. Boylan v. Meeker, 28 N. J. Law. 274. The courts may construe and enforce a will, but they can neither make nor change one. That is the province of the testator alone.”

And again, in the case of Couch v. Eastham, 27 W. Va. 805, Johnson, J., delivering the opinion of the Court, said:

“The mistake which will avail to set aside a will is'a mistake, as to what it contains, or as to the paper itself, not a mistake either of law or fact in the mind of the testator as to the effect of what he actually and intentionally did.”

The alteration made in the will of 1884, so as to exclude his granddaughter from participating in his estate was induced by. the fact, no doubt, that David Findlay had searched for said will where he usually kept it, and, failing to find it there, he suspected his granddaughter of taking it. In this he was no doubt mistaken, but it was not the *49kind of mistake which, would invalidate his will, if at the time he executed it, in November, 1887, his mind and memory were sufficiently sound to enable him to know and understand the business in which he was engaged when he executed said will. It was none the less his will, although he acted under a mistaken apprehension of the facts, and was prompted thereby .to make the alteration to the prejudice of his grándchild.

For the purpose of applying this test we refer to the testimony of those who were present at the time he executed it. J. B. Jackson, who prepared the instrument, in answer to the question, “What do you know of his last will and testament — what had you to do with its preparation?” stated that “on the day the will bears date, I was at my residence, in this city, when Mr. Thomas Saunders called upon me, stating that he was sent by Mr. Findlay for me to go to his house to prepare his will — to write his will; and iu pursuance of that request I went with Mr. Saunders to the house in which Mr. Findlay then lived, for that purpose.”

When asked how he found him, and where, answered: “I went to the house, was admitted, and went up stairs to Mr. Findlay’s room, Mr. Saunders going with me. When I got into the room I found Mr. Findlay in bed. I spoke to him, and he said that he wanted me to write a will for him ; that he sent for mo for that purpose; and I told him that L came there with that understanding, and was ready to proceed with the business, if he desired it.”

After detailing the preparation made for writing, he further says : “He then commenced dictating his will, saying that he had made a will some time ago, and that he had desired to make an alteration in it; that he had looked for it in the place where he had deposited it, amongst his private papers and deeds, and he was unable to find that paper, and did not know what had become of it — was afraid that it had probably been taken away — and, as he wanted to make an alteration in it, and as that could not be found, that he would have to have a new one written, altogether. He commenced giving me directions as to which portions of his property were to be given to the persons represented by *50Mm as those he desired to make devises to. He "tiam.ed them over, ahd named the property. Hot being familiar with'the various pieces of property, after he would announce a piece of property that he desired to give to some one, I would ask him a question as to the description, so that I might be able to put it down more definitely than what he had given it. Mr. Saunders, who was in the room during the whole time, would sometimes speak up, and direct my attention as to which corner or -which street it was on, so that I might be able to describe it more particularly. ' The old man seemed to be suffering somewhat — some pain. He appeared to -be right restless. I am positive that at one, and I think, perhaps, two or three times, during the time I was writing the will, he would get up and sit on the side of the bed, rest himself awhile, and then lie down. After having dictated to me to whom he desired to give the various pieces of property and his bank stocks, how they were to be divided, and putting it dowu, I asked him if that was all, and he indicated that was all. I then told him, if lie would give me his attention, I would read it over to him — just how I had worded it — and he told me to do so. I read it over very carefully and slowly, só that he might comprehend the language I' had used, and after I had gotten through he told me that was all right. I asked him then if he desired to sign it, and he said he did. I then handed him the paper, and Mr. Saunders and I got up and stood beside him, and he (my recollection is) threw his limbs out over the side of the bed, and sat there, and wrote his name on his lap in our presence, we seeing him sign it; and we .then, immediately attested it in his presence, after I had asked him if that was his will, and if that was the disposition ■he desired to make of his property.”

When asked as to his capacity at the time,he answered: “I haven’t the shadow of a doubt hut that he was of sound •mind and disposing memory. I had known him, as I stated, a good many years, and transacted business with Mm. His directions wore clear and explicit to me, except the sim■ple fact that he appeared to he suffering considerable pain, and made complaint of his suffering, and I saw nothing in his actions and conversation that indicated to me but what he was of perfectly sound mind.”

*51"When asked in regard to any one in bis presence using undue influence to get him to make any of the provisions or devises in said will, he answered: “I can say this : nobody suggested to me anything to go i uto that will, except Mr. David Findlay, further than the fact that when he directed, perhaps, one or two pieces of property to go to some one of the devisees, Mr. Saunders would speak .up and give some description of the property that was more definite than I had, so that 1 might identify it.”

The other subscribing witness to said will, while he appears to have forgotten nearly all of the details connected with the execution of said will, states that the answers made by said Findlay to questions asked him by G.ov. Jackson, were intelligent, and, when asked if said Findlay knew for what purpose he had brought Gov. Jackson there, answered : “I suppose he did. He sent me after him” — and, when asked, “Well, all the conversation that the old gentleman had there with you and Gov. Jackson, and all the answers he made, were rational and intelligent, so far as you remember?” answered, “Yes, sir. He was a little slow in answering questions ; but then, give him time, and he would do it” — and, when asked if he knew the business he was engaged in that morning, answered, “I think so.”' He further states that he saw said Findlay write his name to said will that was made that day, and, when shown his signature asa witness there, recognized it as his own, and, when his attention, 'was called to the signature of Findlay to said will, he answered: “Well, that is about his way of writing, although he generally wrote a little better hand than that. This must have been written while he was sick” — and afterwards stated he did not know that was the will when it was handed to him, and when informed that the paper handed him was the will, and asked if that was the usual and ordinary way in which he wrote his name, answered : “Oh, no. The general outline of it is a good deal’his handwriting. He was like myself: he did not write the best of hands.”

Dr. Williamson, his attending physician, when asked, “Tell the jury, doctor, from your knowledge of his condition and his intelligence and will power, whether, in your judg*52ment, lie had sufficient capacity to make a will, up to within a week or ten days of his death,” answered:

“Well, he would bo capable of making a will part of that time. I do not think his mind was very clear do ring part of that time — not as clear as though he had not been sick. It is a disease -with a good deal of nervous trouble attending it — a good deal of brain trouble. A man don’t feel very much like doing.business, as much as be would when < he was well.”

When asked, “As his attending physician, do you remember of his being out of his mind at any time during the first two weeks of his.illness ?” answered, “ISTo, sir. I can not say that I do. I have a bad recollection of his condition, and gave it as I can recollect it. I did not suppose I would be called up, and had no more thought about it, but I do not recollect of his being out of his mind. But in the latter few days he was entirely out of his mind” — and aftei'-wards, in answer to a question, stated that “for about three or four days he was entirely in that condition” — and again,' when asked, “Towards the latter end of Mr. Findlay’s life, and during his last illness, was he not at the time unconscious and in a torpor?” answmred : “Well, the latter few days ho was, I do not recollect previous to that. I do not know anything about the time. 1 could not fix any particular time, but he was gradually going down; but he i'e-tained his mental faculties very well up to the latter part of his sickness.”

■STow, those are the witnesses whose testimony tends to show the mental condition o.f the testator at the time the will was executed; and this Court held in the ease of Kerr v. Lunsford, 31 W. Va. 661 (8 S. E. Rep. 493) 18th point of syllabus : “The time to be looked to by the jury in determining the capacity of the testator to make a will is the time when the will was executed.” The only persons present were the witnesses -Jackson and Saunders, and, while the memory of the latter appears to be somewhat vague and uncei’tain as to what did occur at the time, yet he states that David Findlay knew what J. B. Jackson was there for; that he sent him after him. He admits that “a heap of things occurred that he did not recollectthat Findlay *53knew what lie was doing that morning- — -knew the business lie was engaged in that morning — and that he had no recollection of anything said Findlay did not understand when the will was read to him; and that he knew it was his will when he signed it.

J. 11. Jackson states that he had not the shadow of a doubt but that he was of sound mind and disposing memory. “He had known him for years, and had transacted business with him, and his directions were' clear and explicit to him.” Jackson was there as his attorney, for the purpose of drawing his will. In order to do so it was necessary that he should elicit from Findlay the requisite information, and in this way his attention was directly called to his mental condition. Again, J. B. Jackson was a subscribing witness to the will, and we- find that Scbouler, in his valuable work on Wills, at section 178, says: “Great weight is attached to what these subscribing witnesses may have to say concerning the testator’s apparent mental condition, and all the circumstances surrounding the execution of the will.”

The same author, at section 102, says : “No person, says Chancellor Walworth on this point, in clear and emphatic language, is justified in putting his name as a subscribing witness to a will unless he knows, from the testator himself, that he understands what he is doing. The witness should also be satisfied, from his own knowledge of the state of the testator’s mental capacity, that he is of sound and disposing mind and memory. By placing his name to the instrument the witness, in effect, certifies to his know!-. edge of the mental, capacity of the testator, and that the will was executed by him freely and understand!ngly, with a full knowledge of its contents. Such is the legal effect of the signature of the witness when he is dead, or is out of the jurisdiction of the court.” See, also, section 198 of the same work on the same subject.

In the case of Webb v. Dye, 18 W. Va. 376, this Court held : “The question ofthe due execution of a will is to be determined, like any other, in view of the legitimate evidence in the case, and no controlling effect is to be given to the testimony of the subscribing witnesses. Their di*54rect participation in the transaction must, of course, under ordinary circumstances, give great weight to their testimony ; but it is liable tó be rebutted by other evidence, either direct or circumstantial.”

In the case under consideration the subscribing witnesses were the only persons present at the time the will was executed. They detail what was said and done at the time the paper was executed, and their evidence is in no way rebutted. It occurs to me that the best evidence of said testator’s mental' capacity to execute a will on the day this one bears date is derived from the fact that he sent for an attorney to prepare his will,’and upon his arrival, whatever he might have said to Mr. Saunders at a former time in regard to being satisfied with the will of 1884, he then informed said attorney that he wished to make an alteration in said former will, and proceeded to dictate the terms and provisions of his will, which was prepared under his directions, designating the different parcels 'of property he wished to dispose of, and naming the parties he desired to share in his bounty; and it appears from the face of the will that the property so disposed of consisted of several lots in the city of Parkersburg, two tracts' of land in the county of Wood, and shares of stock in three different national banks, which were directed to be distributed among- different parties, and one tract of land was devised to his executors to be sold for the benefit of his church ; and while it is true that he omitted to dispose of one lot in said city, and, Mr. Saunders thinks, probably anote on one of the Rectors, yet we can not say whether this property was omitted by reason of want of memory on the part of the.testator, or by design, as he directed his just debts and a pecuniary legacy to be paid out of his estate by his executors. .

The witness Saunders also says that lie failed to remember the name of Lizzie, one of his grandchildren, and he had.to go to another room to inquire. Row, it is well known that the failure to remember names is an incident of old age; and, while he could not call the name, he remembered the person, and the disposition he wished to make in his will i n regard to her.

*55Tu the ease of Nicholas v. Kershner, 20 W. Va. 251, this Court held : “The testamentary capacity is sufficient if the testator understands the nature of the business in which he is engaged, has a recollection of the property ■ which he means to dispose of, the objects of his bounty, and the manner in which be wishes to distribute it among them;” *. * * “Wherethere is a free exercise of legal capacity, it is enough. The will in such case can not be impeached, however unreasonable or unaccountable it may seem to the jury or others.” * * * “Testator need not name all liis children, or give all a portion. Tie may give all to strangers. It will not be invalid because of resentment to some, and attachment to others, he gives all his property to some of his children, and none to others,” etc.

Now, both of the witnesses who were present when the will was executed agree that he understood the nature of the business he was engaged in; that he recollected the property he disposed of, the objects of his bounty, and designated the manner in which he wished to distribute his property; and, although he may have failed to remember the name of Lizzie,’he was very decided i.n his determination not to make any provision for her, and, when remonstrated with by Gov. Jackson, he “very plainly intimated to him-that he did not -want any .advice upon-that question.” ■ ■

What he said and did on the day the will was executed is the best evidence of what he was capable of doing at that time. Without referring to or commenting upon the testimony of William Campbell and wife, who were neighbors aud intimate friends of said Findlay, and.who. testify to his competency up ton few days before his death, T am of.opinion that the evidence of those who were with him and conversed with him when the will was executed was sufficient to warrant the Court below' in setting the verdict .aside.

Following the ruling of this Court in the case of Reynolds v. Tompkins, supra, “the court below, with all the witnesses before it, with the opportunity of seeing the witnesses and hearing them testify, having granted a new trial, its opinion in so doing is entitled to peculiar respect, and we should not reverse such order unless it is plainly wi’ong;” *56aud my conclusion being, upon a review of the entire ease, that the'court below was warranted in setting aside said verdict, the order complained of must be affirmed, with costs and damages.

The appellants assign as error the refusal of the Circuit Court to allow Lizzie Martin White and Ella Martin to testify in the case before the jury, and while we can not regard this action of the court as material upon the question before us,"upon appeal, as to the propriety of the ruling of the court below in granting a new trial, the verdict of the jury having given plaintiffs all they claimed, see Ruffner v. Hill, 31 W. Va. 431 (7 S. E. Rep. 13) yet, as the case must be remanded, in order that another trial may bo had, we will say that said witnesses should have been allowed to testify as to any matter pertaining to the issue, other than personal transactions or communications had with David Findlay, deceased.