delivered the opinion of the Court:
A preliminary question must first be considered. This question arises upon a motion to dismiss the appeal because Patrick Bowe, one of the parties mentioned in the petition below, has not been made a party here, and that there has been no summons and severance as to him. This motion must be denied.
The record shows that, while Bowe was arrayed as a party whose interests were adverse to appellant, his interests in fact were adverse to the interests of appellee. In other words, having been an heir at law, had this will been set aside he would have taken part of the estate by descent, where as under the *537will lie received nothing. That he was arrayed differently in the pleading does not affect the situation, since a court of equity always looks to the true relations of the parties to ascertain their status. The will having been sustained, the failure of Bowe to join in this appeal eliminated him from the proceeding. Upon his failure to appeal, the judgment became final as to him. The judgment was in fact as much against him as against appellant. Therefore, under the amendment to rule 10 of this court, he not being a necessary party to the appeal, summons and severance were not required.
In Taylor v. Leesnitzer, 31 App. D. C. 92, decided before the amendment to rule 10, above referred to, the degree appealed from was in favor of two parties, and, being inseparable, it was held that the failure of the appellant to include both parties in his appeal was a fatal omission. In that case it is apparent that the party omitted from the appeal was a necessary party.
We come now to the merits. The learned trial justice, as appears from that part of his charge which forms the basis of the only exception taken, felt bound by the language of the Supreme Court of the United States in Beyer v. Le Fevre, 186 U. S. 114, 46 L. ed. 1080, 22 Sup. Ct. Rep. 765. It therefore becomes necessary to review briefly the facts and rulings of the court in that case, in so far as they relate to the point under consideration. In that case the testatrix, on a Sunday, executed a will in which she devised all her property to Lewis Beyer, Jr., her adopted son. After the execution of the will the scrivener discovered the omission of the word “heirs.” This mistake he made known to the testatrix, and presented to her for execution a new will properly drawn. Thereupon the testatrix said that, inasmuch as a new will had to be executed, she would like to have her niece, a Mrs. Johnson who lived with her, included with Lewis Beyer, Jr. On the Tuesday following, a will was executed in accordance with the final decision of the testatrix, and that was the will before the Supreme Court. The jury had found that the testatrix was of sound mind, but that the will had been obtained through the undue influence of Beyer and Mrs. Johnson. After reviewing the evidence *538the Supreme Court found that there was no evidence whatever tending to show undue influence on the part of Beyer. The court then said: “With this must also be remembered that the will which was first drawn, the one executed on Sunday, made him the sole devisee, and that it was intended by the testatrix to vest the property absolutely in him, so as to deprive the appellee and other of her relatives of any interest in the property. That it did not have that effect was owing to a mistake of the scrivener in omitting the word ‘heirs/ a mistake which, when discovered by him, he proceeded promptly to correct, and only when the corrected will was presented to her did she authorize a change so as to include Mrs. Johnson. Suppose it were true that' Mrs. Johnson did, after the first will, by her importunity persuade the testatrix to include her as a devisee, the change wrought no prejudice to the interests of the appellee. It took away nothing from her. It only added a new devisee, — and that not the appellee, — another one to share in the property. * * * if before, plainly it had no effect upon the testatrix, for she made a will giving the property to her adopted son, and leaving Mrs. Johnson out altogether. If after, while it may have had the effect of causing the insertion of Mrs. Johnson’s name in the second, such change wrought no injury to the rights'of the appellee. If the testatrix had made up her mind to give her property to an adopted child, with a precatory trust in behalf of her husband, then any change made in the devisees, as the result of whatever importunity, was a change which wrought no prejudice to the parties who were not named in either will.”
It is, we think, apparent that the court, in using the language which the learned trial justice felt constrained to follow in the present case, was commenting upon the peculiar circumstances of the case then before the court, without intending to give expression to a new and general rule for the determination of will contests, — -a rule fraught with great dangers in that it would at once plunge the jury into the realm of conjecture, and sometimes permit the establishment of an instrument, procured by undue influence or fraud, as the will of the person *539executing it, when in fact it was not a will at all. In the Beyer Case the jury had found testamentary capacity. Therefore, even assuming that one of the beneficiaries under the second will had procured the execution of that will by improper influence, the first will, being entirely free from such a taint, would have been established, and the contestants would have received nothing in any event. Moreover, the court found, as a matter of fact, that there was no undue influence practised by anyone in respect to the second will.
As we read this opinion it is not authority for the proposition that even though there is evidence, before the jury, of fraud or undue influence, the contestants are not entitled to be heard, because the jury may find that the testator, if he had not made the particular will in controversy, would have made another will naming persons other than the contestants as beneficiaries. The issue in such a case is not as to what the testator might have done, but as to what actually was done. It is an issue of fact, and not of conjecture.
In the present.ease the testimony upon which the learned trial justice based that part of his charge previously quoted had some bearing upon the issue of undue influence, and hence was properly before the jury. But we are clearly of the opinion that it was error to permit the jury to conjecture from that testimony whether the testatrix, if uninfluenced, would nevertheless have made another will by which appellant would have received nothing. If the instrument before the jury was procured by undue influence, it was in law not a will at all, and it was the duty of the jury to so declare, irrespective of any surmise as to whether the testatrix, if uninfluenced, would or would not have made a will leaving her property to persons other than the appellant. Where an heir has reason to believe that an instrument propounded as a will was procured by undue influence or fraud, or both, the law permits that heir to prosecute a contest, and he is not to be denied a hearing upon any such theory as that advanced in this case.
It no doubt frequently happens that contests are ill-advised and instituted upon insufficient evidence, but in all such cases *540courts will see to it that justice prevails, and that the will of the testator is executed.
Owing to the state of the record before us, we are unable to find that appellant suffered no prejudice from the error committed, and therefore we are constrained to reverse the judgment, with costs, and grant a new trial. Reversed.