Tbe caveator, in bis brief, says: “Tbe trial judge erred in refusing tbe motion of tbe caveator, made at tbe close of tbe propounder’s evidence and all of tbe evidence, to dismiss tbe action and proceedings and for judgment as of nonsuit against tbe propounder, and to tbis error of tbe judge tbis argument will be principally directed. Tbe trial judge likewise erred in overruling motion of caveator to set aside tbe verdict, wbicb error will be included in tbis argument.”
“Exceptions in tbe record not set out in tbe appellant’s brief, or in support of wbicb no reason or argument is stated or authority cited, will be taken as abandoned by bim.” Eules of Practice in tbe Supreme Court, 185 N. C., p. 798 — part of rule.
Tbe caveator introduced no evidence. Tbe record fails to sbow tbat be prayed any special instructions. Tbe charge of tbe court below is not in tbe record.
In Indemnity Co. v. Tanning Co., 187 N. C., p. 196, it was said: “Tbe presumption of law from tbe record is tbat tbe court below charged tbe law correctly bearing on tbe evidence as testified to by tbe witness at tbe trial.”
So, tbe only thing for us to consider, on all tbe evidence of tbe propounder, is — should tbe proceeding be dismissed or judgment as of nonsuit rendered against tbe propounder and tbe verdict and judgment be set aside?
Tbe propounder contends tbat, on tbe record, no judgment of nonsuit could have been properly entered or tbe case dismissed, tbat tbe proceeding is in rem.
In Collins v. Collins, 125 N. C., p. 104, Faircloth, C. J., said: “Tbis is a proceeding in rem and tbe statute confers jurisdiction on tbe clerk of tbe court. There are no parties, strictly speaking, certainly none who can withdraw or take a nonsuit, and thus put tbe matter where it was at tbe start, as in actions between individuals. A nonsuit in tbe latter case affects no one but tbe litigants; in tbe former, creditors, legatees and distributees are interested and they are stayed until tbe question of testacy or intestacy is determined. Tbe court having jurisdiction, public policy and our statutes require tbat tbis preliminary question should be detérmined as soon as practicable, and require tbe court to do it, regardless of objecting persons. Hutson v. Sawyer, 104 N. C., 1.” In re Hinton’s Will, 180 N. C., p. 214.
Tbe question of setting aside tbe verdict and granting a new trial is a matter within tbe sound discretion of tbe court below. 15 Enc. Digest of N. C. Eep., p. 112, and cases cited.
Tbe contention of propounder is sustained by authorities in tbis jurisdiction, but we will consider tbe evidence in tbe record in tbe light most *706favorable to caveator. On the whole record, should the verdict and judgment be disturbed — as contended by caveator? We think not.
The testimony of Jenny Fleetwood Westfeldt, the propounder, and other witnesses, to establish the validity of the paper-writings as the will of Jenny Westfeldt, is undisputed. Dr. H. M. Fletcher, a physician, testified: “I was born and reared in Fletcher and knew the late Miss Jenny Westfeldt all my life. I knew her very well as a neighbor and friend and knew her after I began practicing medicine as being her physician for a time. In my opinion, in 1914 and 1915, and up to and including the time that I last saw her, on 24 December, 1919, she had mind and intelligence sufficient to enable her to have a reasonable judgment of the kind and value of the property she proposed to will and to whom she was willing to will it. I would say that she had a strong mind and strong will. I was not related to her by blood or marriage.”
The paper-writings found were not witnessed, but propounded as a holograph will. C. 8., 4144, sec. 2, is as follows:
“In case of a holograph will, on the oath of at least three credible witnesses, who state that they. verily believe such will and every part thereof is in the handwriting of the person whose will it purports to be, and whose name must be subscribed thereto, or inserted in some part thereof. It must further appear on the oath of some one of the witnesses, or some other credible person,-that such will was found among the valuable papers and effects of the decedent, or was lodged in the hands of some person for safe-keeping.
More than three witnesses — the jury found credible — testified that the paper-writings (propounder’s Exhibits 1, 2 and 3) were in the handwriting of Jenny Westfeldt. They were familiar with her handwriting and had often seen her write. One witness, Jenny Fleetwood Westfeldt, under the paper-writings was a legatee and devisee. Her evidence was competent.
“At common law one who had a direct legal interest in the event of the suit was thereby disqualified as a witness on the side of his interest, but the Revisal, secs. 1628, 1629 (C. S., 1792, 1793), removes such disqualification, and now no person offered as a witness shall be excluded by reason of his interest in the event of the action. By Revisal, sec. 3120 (C. S., 4138), devisees and legatees may be attesting witnesses to wills, but their devisees and legatees, and any devises and legacies left to their husbands and wives or to any one claiming under such devisees or legatees, are void. But the section only applies to attesting witnesses, and devisees and legatees may be witnesses to prove holograph wills without losing their devises and legacies.” Lockhart’s Handbook on Evidence, sec. 39, McEwan v. Brown, 176 N. C., p. 252.
*707There was no evidence that these paper-writings were “lodged in the hands of some person for safe-keeping,” so the question involved here is — were these paper-writings “found among the valuable papers and effects of the decedent.”
Jenny Westfeldt was the owner of “Rugby Grange,” a home in Henderson County, where she died on 8 June, 1921, at the age of 76 years. Ella Prince ( colored) for about 25 years was employed as her maid. She testified that Jenny Westfeldt kept her valuable papers in a desk drawer in her bedroom. She had a waste basket that was beside her desk that she put old papers and letters and things in she did not want and had them thrown away. She remained a few days after the death of Jenny Westfeldt, her employer. She testified, in part: “Miss Jenny Fleetwood Westfeldt gave me instructions about packing Miss Westfeldt’s property.
“A. I first taken all papers, books and letters from Miss Jenny Westfeldt’s drawer and put them in the tray of the trunk,.and then I got all her wearing clothes and packed what I could in the trunk and the other parts of her clothes I put somewhere else.
“Q. Did you or did you not remove all the contents of the desk? Answer: ‘Yes, I removed all.’
“Q. Where did you put all the things that you took out of Miss Jenny Westfeldt’s desk? Answer: ‘Into Miss Jenny Westfeldt’s trunk.’
“Q. Where did you put the papers from Miss Westfeldt’s desk? Answer: ‘Into Miss Westfeldt’s trunk.’
“Q. Where was the trunk ? Answer: ‘In the upstairs hall.’
“Q. Did you know who had the key to the trunk? Answer: ‘I gave it to Miss Jenny Fleetwood Westfeldt.’
“Q. Did you lock the trunk before you gave it to her? Answer: ‘Yes.’
“Q. When you took Miss Westfeldt’s things out of the desk, where did you put this book ? Answer: ‘I put it in the trunk.’ ”
When she put the papers in the trunk, she testified, there was a little bundle of papers in the trunk, one package of papers tied up with a string, and some clothing.
Jenny Fleetwood Westfeldt testified, in part: “I found those papers, introduced as propounder’s Exhibits 1, 2 and 3, among my aunt’s valuable papers in her trunk with which she had traveled about three weeks before she died, and in which all papers from her desk had been put. The papers were put from her desk into the trunk by her maid, Ella Prince. I gave Ella Prince directions about them. My aunt, Jenny Westfeldt, kept her valuable papers in her desk in her bed room at Rugby Grange. The desk was a flat-top desk with five drawers, two on each side and one in the middle. She kept in this desk her canceled *708checks and receipted bills and business letters and statements of account from "Westfeldt Brothers of New Orleans. . . . Lulie Westfeldt, my cousin, and Thomas Dugan Westfeldt and I went through her trunk to divide my aunt’s wearing apparel. . . . After we got through dividing the things, I said, 'Let’s wait, that we could look at those papers some other time. We could do that at any time, and we will put all of those papers back in the trunk’; and my cousin, Tom Westfeldt, said, 'Oh! no, it won’t take long, let’s do it now.’ And we sat down around the trunk and went through the papers and were discarding papers and tearing papers up that were not any longer valuable, and my cousin Lulie found one of these papers, and I think Tom Westfeldt found the other two. I don’t think I found any. I refer to 'propounder’s Exhibits 1, 2 and 3.’ That same night I found statements of account of Westfeldt Brothers and canceled checks. We found statements of account between my aunt and Westfeldt Brothers in my aunt’s trunk at the same time we found the Exhibits 1, 2 and 3. . . . Yes, five bank stub books came from my aunt’s trunk, likewise a contract for a telephone, likewise an account of Westfeldt Brothers and I think a farm account, and likewise a statement to the stockholders from the Trust Company of Norfolk, Va., dated 1 July, 1919, and likewise a box of paid checks. There also came from the trunk at this time a paper signed by the president of the Trust Company in Norfolk, dated 21 July, 1920.”
Valuable papers and effects mean more than papers that have a pecuniary or money value. Papers that have a sentimental and personal value are sometimes more precious and valuable to men and women than stocks and bonds. Sometimes these letters and mementoes of the past are most tenderly kept, frequently in trunks, according to the particular person’s condition, business and habits of preserving papers. In the trunk was found the diary of Jenny Westfeldt’s mother from the year 1863, and a package labeled “My precious treasures.” Lulie Westfeldt testified, in part: “Tom Westfeldt sat down on the floor and started untying the parcels. The papers were in packages tied up with elastics, and Jenny Fleetwood Westfeldt and I sat down and did the same thing, untied packages or papers and examined them and those packages or papers contained personal lett.ers, receipts, canceled checks, business letters, and there was a diary. One of the packages was labeled in my aunt’s handwriting. . . .
“Q. What was the label on the package? Answer: 'My precious treasures.’.” •
Among these papers in the trunk were found the paper-writings Exhibits 1, 2 and 3.
*709“Valuable papers consist of such as are regarded by a decedent as worthy of preservation, and therefore in his estimation, of some value; depending much upon the condition and business and habits of the decedent in respect to keeping his valuable papers.” Winstead v. Bowman, 68 N. C., 170.
“What is meant by valuable papers? No better definition perhaps, can be given, than that they consist of such as are regarded by the testator as worthy of preservation, and, therefore, in his estimation, of some value. It is not confined to deeds for land or slaves, obligations for money, or certificates of stock. Any others which are kept and considered worthy of being taken care of by the particular person, must be regarded as embraced in that description. This requirement is only intended as an indication on the part of the writer, that it is his intention to preserve and perpetuate the paper in question as a disposition of his property; that he regards it as valuable.” Marr v. Marr, 39 Tenn., 306.
The charge of the court not appearing in the record, it is to be presumed that the court below charged the law in accordance with the evidence. Under the evidence, the jury were warranted in finding that at the death of Jenny Westfeldt, the paper-writings were among her valuable papers and effects in her desk, and after her death put in her trunk by her maid, Ella Prince. If paper-writings, Exhibits 1, 2 and 3, were not in the desk and put in the trunk, under the evidence, the jury were warranted in finding that the paper-writings found in her trunk were found among other valuable papers and effects of deceased.
Ashe, J., in Brown v. Eaton, 91 N. C., p. 30, said: “Where a person has two or more depositories of his valuable papers and effects, the finding in either will suffice. It is not necessary it should be found in that which contains the most valuable papers and effects. Winstead v. Bowman, 68 N. C., 170.” Hill v. Bell, 61 N. C., p. 122; Hughes v. Smith, 64 N. C., 493; Cornelius v. Brawley, 109 N. C., 542; In re Sheppard’s Will, 128 N. C., 54; Harper v. Harper, 148 N. C., 453.
It is contended by caveator that Jenny Westfeldt did not have "animus testandiThis contention might well be resolved against the caveator, on the face of the paper-writings, but if not, the presumption by the record is that this aspect was submitted to the jury.
In the case of In re Harrison, 183 N. C., 459, Stacy, J., says: “The animus testandi of Mrs. Harrison being doubtful, or, at least, ambiguous, as appears’ from the face of the instrument, we think his Honor was justified in submitting the question to the jury for determination. ‘It is essential that it should appear from the character of the instrument and the circumstances under which it was made that the testator *710intended it should operate as bis will, or as a codicil to it.’ In re Bennett, 180 N. C., 5.” In re Southerland, ante, 325.
It was contended by caveator that the three paper-writings were not in harmony so that they may be upheld as one will — uncertain as to date, inconsistent "and mutually destructive of each other, nothing on the face of the papers to prove which is the latest expression of the intent of the deceased. That they were “found in separate packages. There were more than a dozen packages in the tray of the trunk, consisting of old letters, canceled checks, etc., and among such papers was one referred to by Lulie Westfeldt as the fourth paper and which read as follows: ‘Take care of Lulie, comfort Lulie if anything happens to me ’17’; while on the other side was written four names: ‘Pink, Jenny, George, Alice.’ The paper was in an envelope.”
A fresh will, with no clause expressly revoking the old will, may impliedly revoke it by dispositions so inconsistent with those in the old will that they could not have been intended to stand together-.
The general principle is that “The mere fact of making a subsequent testamentary paper does not work a total revocation of a prior one, unless., the latter expressly or in effect revoke the former, or the two be incapable of standing together: for though it be a maxim, as Swinburne says above, that ‘no man can die with two testaments,’ yet any number of instruments, whatever be their relative date, or in whatever form they may be (so as they be all clearly testamentary), may be admitted to probate as together containing the last will of the deceased. And if a subsequent testamentary paper, whether in form a will or a codicil, be partially inconsistent with one of an earlier date, then such latter instrument will revoke the former as to those parts only where they are inconsistent.” Williams on Executors (Vol. 1) 7 Amer. Ed., p. 212.
“If, from the absence of date and of every other kind of evidence, it is impossible to ascertain the relative chronological position of two conflicting wills, both are necessarily held to be void, and the heir as to the realty, and the next of kin as to the personalty, are let in; but this unsatisfactory expedient is never resorted to until all attempts to educe from the several papers a scheme of disposition consistent with both, have been tried in vain. And even where the times of the actual execution of the respective papers are known, so that if they are inconsistent, there can- be no difficulty in determining which is to be preferred, the courts will, if possible, adopt such a construction as will give effect to both, sacrificing the earlier so far only as it is clearly irreconcilable with the latter paper; supposing, of course, that such latter paper contains no express clause of revocation, or other clear indication of a contrary intention.” Jarman on Wills (Vol. 1) 6 Ed., p. 172. Hyatt v. Hyatt, 187 N. C., p. 113.
*711We said in Kidder v. Bailey, 187 N. C., p. 508: “Where the language is clear as to the intent of the testator and there is no latent ambiguity, there can be no extrinsic proof. In McDaniel v. King, 90 N. C., 602, Merrimon, C. J. said: ‘If a will is sufficiently distinct and plain in its meaning as to enable the court to say that a particular person is to take, and that a particular thing passes, that is sufficient, and it must be construed upon its face without resorting to extraneous methods of explanation to give it point. Any other rule would place it practically within the power of interested persons to malee a testator’s will, so as to meet the convenience and wishes of those who might claim to take under it.’ Williams v. Bailey, 178 N. C., 632.”
We cannot agree with the contentions of caveator. We think the paper-writings on the face (except one word we do not think material) are not inconsistent and mutually destructive of each other. All the papers can be reconciled and harmonized, showing a clear intent of testatrix. The setting surrounding the testatrix when the paper-writings were signed, the home conditions and family relationship, when shown, as was proper and done on the trial below, makes it clear as to the disposition of the property — the persons taking and the things taken. The exact dates are immaterial from the facts here. The paper-writing 4th is no will, but a loving request to care for one whom, the record shows, had lost her mother a few days after her birth and had been from her infancy a tender care of the testatrix. She was lame from early childhood. On account of this sorrow and affliction, no doubt, the heart of the old aunt who took a mother’s place, went out especially to Lulie West-feldt, as shown in this request and the special provision made for her in the paper-writings in controversy.
From a critical examination of the entire record, we can find, ^
No error.