delivered the opinion oe the court.
Wm. F. Fuller died on the 27th day of February, .1881, leaving the appellant, Jane Fuller, as his ■widow, and the appellee, Thomas S. Fuller, whose .mother was a former wife, as his only child. On -January 12, 1881, and during his last illness, he .executed a paper in due form, purporting to be his will, and under which his widow would take his -entire estate of about fifteen thousand dollars. The Campbell County Court, after hearing the testimony, .probated it. The appellee, Thomas S. Fuller, appealed from its judgment, and upon a trial before a .jury in the Campbell Circuit Court, it was rejected. The attack upon it is based upon the alleged testamentary incapacity of Wm. F. Fuller, as well as the claim that it was procured by undue influence.
It is unnecessary to review the testimony in the uáse, and sufficient to say that it is quite conflicting. Under the existing law, the verdict of a jury in a will case is entitled to the same effect as a verdict .in any other civil case, and unless palpably against the testimony, it will not be disturbed. Such a state •of case is not exhibited by the record, and it only remains for us to determine whether the lower court has committed any error as to the law of the case, by which the appellant’s substantial rights have been .prejudiced.
The propounder proved the due execution of the *348paper, and then rested. The contestant then offered his testimony, and the appellant, Jane Fuller, then' offered to testify in chief. This was refused by the court, and she then testified at length in rebuttal., It is not necessary to decide whether the evidence,, which the propounder of a will offers after the contestant has introduced his testimony, is to be regarded as merely contra, or as in chief; nor whether, after introducing other testimony in his behalf to prove-due execution of the paper as a will, he can, in a, proceeding of this character, testify for himself in-chief, under subsection 4 of section 606 of the Civil Code, which provides: “No person shall testify for himself in chief, in an ordinary action, after introducing other testimony for himself in chief.” This, question is not now presented, and hence it would not be proper to decide whether said section is applicable to a special proceeding of -this character. There was no avowal of what the appellant would state if introduced in chief, nor does it appear that she did not, in fact, testify all that she knew. •
In fact a portion of her testimony was not in rebuttal, but in chief; so that it seems she was. only nominally prohibited from testifying in chief, and when she did testify, there was no offer to-prove any thing by her further than what was stated by her, or any avowal or any showing in any way that she could have testified to anything else.
The instruction asked by the appellant was properly refused, as it singled out and attempted to instruct the jury upon the isolated fact that by the-paper in contest the maker had disinherited his. *349;sou; nor is the second instruction that was given by the court liable to the objection that it assumes that flattery or threats will necessarily create undue influence.
The first instruction that was given to the jury required them to believe from the testimony that the witnesses to the will were credible persons. This was not proper. It is true that section 5 of chapter 113 of the General Statutes requires that a will, if not wholly written by the testator, to be valid, must be acknowledged by him in the presence of and attested in his presence by “at least two credible witnesses.” The statute of 1797 (2 M. & B., page 1537) used the word “ competent/” and this seems to have been the language of the law until the adoption of the Revised Statutes in 1852, when the word “competent” was changed to the word “ credible.”
Prior to the change, however, the word “ credible” had been construed in similar statutes, in both England and many of the States of this country, to mean “competent.”
The English statute as to the execution of wills prior to 1838 used the word, “credible/” and in 1 Jarman on Wills, page 124, it is said, in speaking -of it:
“The statute, it will be observed, required the witnesses to be ‘credible,’ and which was held to mean ¡such persons as were not disqualified by mental imbecility, interest or crime from giving testimony in a 'Court of justice.”
This rule has been followed by the decisions, of *350the courts in the States of Massachusetts, Connecticut, Mississippi, South Carolina, and several others-where a similar statute existed. (Hawes v. Humphrey, 9 Pick., 350; Cornwell v. Isham, 1 Day, 35; Taylor v. Taylor, 1 Rich., 531; Rucker v. Lambdin, 12 S. & M., 230.)
We conclude that the law-making power had this-construction and meaning in view when the word “credible” was introduced into the statute. No-other construction of it • is reasonable or free from, absurdity.
Suppose a court or a jury have no doubt but what the testator in fact executed the paper, and. that the attesting witnesses have testified truthfully;: but yet it be shown that they are not credible persons. Is the will to be rejected?
Or suppose that the witnesses to a will were credible when it was executed; but when it is offered for probate, years after the execution of it, have become of bad. character; now, assuming that the-word “credible” does not relate to the date of attestation, is the will, therefore, to be rejected?
Or suppose the witnesses deliberately testify that' they did not witness it, when, in fact, they did, but are of such bad character that they do not scruple at perjury — would not the propounder be allowed to prove their want of credibility, and that they, in fact, did attest it, and have it probated? It seems-to us that further illustration is unnecessary.
In this case, however, there is nothing even tending to show that the witnesses to the will were not credible. No attack, either direct or indirect, was-*351made upon them; and it is evident from the entire record that the appellant was not prejudiced by the' portion of the instruction which we have just reviewed.
The letters from Wm. F. Fuller to his son were-competent testimony for the latter, because they not only showed the affectionate relation existing-between them, but also stated what the former intended to do with his property.
There are several other alleged errors assigned but, in our opinion, they are either not in fact, such, or, if so, they were not of a character to-prejudice the substantial rights of the appellant. For instance, it was competent for the appellee to-ask the appellant’s witness whether the deceased wat mentally and physically competent to “take charge of a large business” in order to see to what extent, the witness would go. It was immaterial, however,, how the appellee was received by the appellant when-, he attended his father’s funeral, and the court properly refused to let the witness Hodge answer the-question: “State some persons whom you' consider-hard drinkers, and the effect upon them?” Nor do-we think that the appellant could have been substantially prejudiced by the testimony relating to-the deceased visiting the Fallis family, or the appellee’s statement that when he lived at his father’s, before his majority, his step-mother’s treatment of. him “was ho more than a persecution; she always: tried to provoke me to do something ill-natured;”- or by the rejection of the letters offered by the-appellant from the appellee- to his wife, and from. *352the latter to her husband, and from Wm. F. Fuller to his wife, the appellant. We do not think the latter were incompetent upon the score of ‘•iconfi•dential communicationsbut none of .them were material, save the one dated August 4, 1880. It is • true that it states that the wife had never said anything to him as to his son, but it also uses language not fatherly, and of a violent character as to the . son, while the record discloses that soon after that time he was writing to him in the most endearing terms, and it seems to us that the letter would have been more prejudicial than beneficial to the appellant.. In any event, upon a view of the entire record, it is apparent that its rejection did not prejudice her ¡•substantial rights.
Judgment affirmed.