— In a suit in the Jackson Circuit Court the issue was the statutory one, devisavit vel non. All parties take under the will. The controversy has birth in that fruitful womb of litigation, to-wit, two marriages, two sets of children and a partial will largely in favor of the widow and last set, made late in life and disposing of a great estate. Plaintiff is a son of testator’s deceased daughter by a first marriage, Mrs. Turner. Defendants are the widow of testator by a second marriage, two sons born of that marriage, a daughter by the first marriage, Mrs. Harvey, and a minor brother of contestant. The will has a provision cutting off any devisee or legatee contesting it. The widow and children of the second marriage are the only defendants who appeal. They contend, with reason, too, that their codefendants, Mrs. Harvey and Reid S. Turner, a minor, did not join as plaintiffs because of the forfeiture provision in the will, but cast an anchor to the windward and are friendly to the contest, though nominal contestees. Both propositions may be allowed as true.
(Note: Hereinafter when we refer to “contestees” we should be takén as meaning the appealing defendants, and when to “contestant” as using the term as a composite unit inclusive of the surviving children by the first marriage and the descendants of those dead.)
*8The grounds of contest were undue influence and testamentary incapacity. The issue of undue influence was taken from the jury in accordance with a ruling made when this cause was here before on appeal. [236 Mo. 523.] The case went to the jury on the issue of testamentary incapacity. The jury broke the will on that issue, as the former one did on the other. From a judgment following that verdict the widow and her two sons alone appeal.
Appellants asked and were refused a peremptory instruction coercing a verdict in favor of the will as a matter of law. The only error assigned by them is the refusal of that instruction. If, then, there was substantial evidence tending to show testamentary incapacity the instruction was bad. Otherwise, otherwise. Such is the main question in the case. Counsel argue two subsidiary ones, vis.: first, whether the decision in the former case was res adjudicata; second, whether contestees made a prima-facie case in the .first instance.
The opinion rendered when the case was here before should be read with this, and the statement there made and that just made are a sufficient preliminary for appellate purposes.
We shall go deeper into the facts on the main question, the demurrer to the evidence, and sufficient of the record on the others will appear in due course.
I. Of res adjudicata.
On the first appeal contestees came up on a record showing that the trial court had taken the issue of testamentary incapacity from the jury, but had submitted the issue of 'undue influence, and the jury broke the will, as said. We were then of opinion there was no substantial evidence, direct or indirect, of undue influence. The whole of the evidence was here and properly here on the mental condition of testator. The four judges of Division One were satisfied that contestant was entitled to go to the jury on the issue of *9testamentary incapacity. Contestant bad won his case and, however much be was aggrieved by tbe action of the trial court in taking that issue from tbe jury, be was not ‘ ‘ aggrieved ’ ’ by tbe final judgment. Therefore be took no appeal. The question confronting us then was: In reversing tbe judgment (as we were obliged to do) what directions should we give? Should we by our own affirmative- order compel tbe solemn pro-bate of tbe will and thereby put tbe seal of our approval on tbe action of tbe lower court in taking away from tbe triers of fact tbe issue of testamentary capacity, or should we order a rehearing on both issues ?
(1) It is argued that we bad “no jurisdiction” to do anything except order tbe will solemnly probated, because, counsel say, tbe other issue- was. forever foreclosed as a matter of law, however much we might believe it was not a question of law but was a question of fact for tbe jury. Contestees ’ counsel in tbe former case took that view of it, ore tenus and in briefs. Contestant’s counsel took tbe counter view. We were unanimously of opinion that we bad jurisdiction to. open tbe whole case on reversal and order a new trial generally in a will contest, and that it was our duty to do so when justice cried out for it. Accordingly, we so decided and gave tbe reasons for our decision on a construction of section 2083, Eevised Statutes 1909, readr ingin part: “Tbe Supreme Court . . . shall examine tbe record and award a new trial, reverse or affirm tbe judgment or decision of tbe circuit court, or give such judgment as such court ought to have given, or as to them shall seem agreeable to law.”
I am instructed to say for a majority of this court In -Banc that those reasons and that decision on tbe question of our jurisdiction, our duty and power in a will contest remain satisfactory, hence foreclose them as tbe law of this ease.
*10(2) But counsel for contestant now go a step further. They argue that having once held there was substantial evidence of testamentary incapacity and that having opened the case to have that issue threshed out, such holding is res adjudicata on an equivalent or stronger record, as here. Learned counsel on the other side raise no serious question but that the same or equivalent facts are here, but they do not agree to the view that res adjudicata applies to the issue in hand. Their contention, in brief, as we grasp it, is that on the former appeal at the very most the question whether there was substantial evidence of testamentary incapacity was only incidental to the main question involved; that while they briefed and argued our right to consider it, they did not brief the question itself because of the fact that contestant took no appeal and therefore could not complain of that error, if error it was. Hence they say the question is now legitimately here for the first time for full hearing and the doctrine of res adjudicata is inapplicable on the reason of the thing.
It was said by a profoundly learned writer on the philosophy of the law, Dr. von Ihering: “For the law is Saturn devouring her own children.” Whether that grim figure of speech was intended to apply to the lawmaker or to the judge we need not stop to inquire. Courts as a rule do not feed on their own children — allowing their ‘ ‘ opinions ’ ’ that name. Certainly it is true that in order to close litigation that would otherwise be endless, courts have invented the theories of stare decisis and res adjudicata — legal instruments bright with use, though venerable with age. The administration of justice being a practical affair, adjusting itself to work out the right in every concrete case, and not an exact science in a technical sense, those useful doctrines are of constant application as a wise device. On the other hand, as appellate courts exist for the correction (and not the perpetuation) of error, *11they have reserved to themselves the natural human right to change their views and have frequently exercised that right even on the second appeal in the same case under guarded circumstances. The matter has been so lately agitated and held in solution in this court that new exposition would be unprofitable. The student of jurisprudence curious in that behalf may find its learning and philosophy considered in Mangold v. Bacon, 237 Mo. 496. We can add nothing of value to what was said in that case (q. v.).
We shall not in this case apply in contestant’® favor the strict doctrine of res adjudicatev. Counsel for contestees are not without some justification in refusing on the former appeal to brief the question of testamentary capacity although challenged thereto by opposing briefs.- Under circumstances outlined they appeal for a reconsideration after this uncommonly persuasive fashion:
“We come to this court ashing for a hearing free from all prepossession, from all prejudice, as if it approached the issue now for the first time. We ash this as a thing" of common right, and we believe this court is big enough, fair enough, strong enough and serene enough to accord it to us; and in this belief we do not except the learned judge who wrote the opinion on the former appeal, and whom we certainly hold in the highest respect and esteem.”
What counsel ash shall be granted them to the uttermost verge of the law, not unmindful of an ancient oath I remember to have read, tahen by the judges who administered “breast law” to the simple fishermen of the Isle of Man, running this way: “By this Booh and the contents thereof, and by the wonderful worhs that God hath miraculously wrought in the' heavens above and the earth beneath in six days and six nights, I do swear that I will, without respect of favor or friendship, loss or gain, consanguinity -or affinity, envy or malice, execute the laws of this isle justly *12between party and party as indifferently as tbe herring backbone doth lie in the midst of the fish. So help me God and the contents of-this Book.” That oath carries judicial promises well worth while.
But in making that ruling and in refusing to treat the demurrer as foreclosed, we cannot very well treat as without a particle of significance the following facts, namely, (a) that the unanimous opinion of Division One at one time was that the issue of testamentary incapacity was for the jury; (b) that at a retrial a mass of evidence went in on that head and the jury (on instructions in unchallenged form) found the issue against contestees; and (c) that the trial judge, who admitted the evidence, heard it all and saw the witnesses, refused to meddle with the verdict although he had power to set it aside as against the weight of the testimony — a power denied to us. [Dutcher v. Railroad, 241 Mo. l. c. 167 et seq.]
While we are not bound by those facts on the one hand, yet we are not justified on the other in allowing them no significance at all. They stand to be reckoned with and assigned (not a controlling, but) some weight.
II. Of a prima-facie case of testamentary capacity.
It is argued for contestant, as we gather, that the judgment stands for affirmance because contestees as proponents of the will failed to make out a case of testamentary capacity in the first instance. The argument seems to take root in the testimony of the subscribing witnesses to the will, Dr. Twyman, now dead, and Mr. Clements. Let us attend to that. Dr. Twyman was the family physician of testator. Mr. Clements was testator’s personal attorney, drafted the will, and is now the personal attorney of testator’s widow, and the attorney of the administrator pendente lite. The argument in support of the contention seems *13somewhat elusive, the facts relied on are somewhat overpressed, and the position we think is unsound, because :
Testator was born in 1836. When sixty years old, to-wit, in 1896, he was found by his wife unconscious in bed in the middle of the night. From that time on he was troubled at intervals with "spells ’ ’ and convulsions. At the outset they seemed a nervous affection of an obscure kind and were thought to be referable to stomach trouble, but later they became less obscure and were diagnosed as epilepsy. In 1899, testator became the patient of Dr. Hughes of St. Louis, an alienist of celebrity, that is, a specialist in mental diseases. Testator made his first will in 1900.' Three years later he added a codicil, and in March, 1905, made the will in suit, dying nine months or so later. Mr. Clements drew both wills and the codicil to the first. He knew something of those spells, knew that his client was in charge of a specialist in mental diseases. His testimony leaves us under the impression that he did not consider him "in good mental condition,” but it is clear that he did consider him of sound mind and testamentary capacity and'so testified. It leaves us under the impression that the family lawyer selected the family physician as the other witness to the will for the very reason that the question of testamentary capacity was in his mind, and might become an issue when testator died. Thus forewarned he deemed it best to be forearmed against coming events even then, in his mind’s eye, casting their shadows before. We copy some portions of Mr. Clements’ testimony abstracted in contesfees’ brief. Being asked why he wanted a doctor as a witness to this second will, he replied: "I knew of these attacks, these epileptic attacks, and I say I had that matter in mind in advising Dr. Twyman be asked to witness the will.” Further on the witness testified, referring tp the first will: "That Mr. Anderson was in sound mind, but not in *14good mental condition.” Having explained that he meant by “not in good mental condition” that testator was distressed over leaving for Europe on account of his health and that he was also anxious about the health of his daughter, Mrs. Turner, then on her deathbed, the witness went on to say that he knew testator was in the care of a man whose business it was to treat mental diseases and finally testified as- follows (we copy, as said, from contestees’ brief):
“I knew at the time I wrote this last will that Mr. Anderson had been under the care of a specialist for mental diseases for over five years, and I knew that he still had these spells. This may have had something to do with my getting Dr. Twyman. I don’t know. I wanted some one whose testimony would be worth something. A man of character, and I wanted some one who would know something about his condition. Doubtless these are some of the things that influenced me in getting Dr. Twyman. I thought Dr. Twyman would know more about whether his mind was all right, probably, than I would know. I believed that he was all right, and I thought Dr. Twyman believed it.”
It appears Dr. Twyman signed as a witness in his own office and that Mr. Clements and testator came there to get him as a witness. The doctor was not a specialist in mental diseases, but had had experience with epilepsy and insanity. He made no investigation at the time with reference to testator’s soundness of mind, but knew he had been in charge of an alienist for some years and knew -of his affliction. His testimony is very brief as to what happened. He remembers that testator spoke of his own mental condition, saying: “I am all fight.” The doctor testified, in effect, that testator had a sound mind at the time. On such testimony we cannot hold as a matter of law that contestees did not make out a prima-faeie case. Indeed, it is not clear that counsel for contestant ask *15us to go as far as that, but whether they do or not we shall not take that step.
In Cadwallader v. West, 48 Mo. l. c. 495, it was spoken of arguendo as of some significance that there was an investigation into Cadwallader’s mental state prior to the execution of, and for the purpose of fortifying, the deed assailed. In Mowry v. Norman, 204 Mo. l. c. 192, (a will contest) our Brother Graves comments on the caution of writing into a will the phrase, “and free from all undue influences,” and thereby proclaiming that fact to the world. In the drama the queen’s son said to her: “Madam, how like you the play ? ’ ’ and the queen mother replied:" The lady doth protest too much, methinks.” [Hamlet, Act 3, Cc. 2.] But all such comments smack of argument and doubtless were made to the jury, if thought worth while.
We shall not hold as a matter of law. that a family lawyer or a family physician may not witness a will, nor that the testimony of these witnesses had no probative efficacy, nor that the remark of testator that he was “all right” is conclusive against his being of sound mind. There is no question here of the integrity of these witnesses or of their intelligence. Their relations with testator, their opportunities of observing him and their. knowledge of his condition, their candor and go.od faith, undoubted so far as we can see, went to their credibility and were for the jury to weigh and stamp with a proper per cent of value.
May not an attorney make and try to sustain the same will? Even if it be better to have a witness to the will not interested in sustaining his own handiwork, yet may not an attorney serve as one, handicapped with professional interest as he is — his interest being for the jury? If an attorney would first make and then try to break the same will we would have another case before us. As sourly put by distinguished counsel in another case, a professional sign would read badly with this legend emblazoned thereon: “Blank and Blank, *16Attorneys — Wills Made and Broken — No Objection to Making and Breaking the Same Will.”
The point is disallowed to contestant.
III. Of testamentary incapacity (and herein of the demurrer to the evidence).
At the close of the case contestees were refused an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence and coercing the solemn probate of the will. There is no question here on the other instructions and none on the pleadings or the admission or exclusion of testimony. The sole remaining question, then, has come to be this: Did that demurrer lie? Ought we to say as a matter of law there was no substantial evidence tending to show testamentary incapacity?
(a) Before disposing of that main question there are some general observations in point, thus:
(1) There seems to be an idea abroad that in a will contest an appellate court approaches the proof from the standpoint of a chancellor, and will weigh the evidence and decide the case as if in equity. But that view is a heresy. A statutory will contest is a lawsuit pure and simple and has the characteristics of its kind. True it is sui generis. It has its peculiarities in burden of proof, in order o'f proof, in opening and closing, in the absence of a right of dismissal without a solemn, probate or rejection of the will and in its freedom from cost bonds. But none of these peculiarities in anywise affect the proposition that a will contest is treated by an appellate court strictly as a lawsuit. Hence it leaves to the jury the office of weighing the evidence, and to the trial court the exclusive office of setting aside a verdict because against the weight of the evidence. It follows that on demurrer to the evidence it restricts itself to its normal function of determining whether or not there was (not a scintilla, but) substantial evidence to go to the jury *17on the issue [Wendling v. Bowden, 252 Mo. l. c. 692; Teckenbrock v. McLaughlin, 209 Mo. l. c. 538 et seq.; Mowry v. Norman, 204 Mo. l. c. 193.]
(2) Courts are fond of sustaining-wills. The right to dispose of one’s owh property, the jus disponendi, stands now as always on the solidest grounds as one of the landmarks of the law and is not to be frittered away by piece-meal or indirection. Courts are not blind to am itching in juries to break wills, to make them for others, to act as if they thought they knew how he should divide his property better than did testator himself. Hence, a line of cases may be found in this jurisdiction (and we have no bone to pick with them as a class) showing a drift along the line of sedulously guarding against that tendency, and of correcting verdicts attributable to it with a firm hand. To this end the rule is that when the issue, is undue influence or testamentary incapacity, the proofs educed in support' of those issues are searched with a critical eye. As they deal with psychological inferences, they are submitted to the severest tests of reason to see whether they furnish a substantial basis for a finding in the affirmative and breaking the will. But after all is said in that behalf that can be well said, it still remains true that, given contestees’ demurrer to the evidence in a will contest, as here, it is to be judged by the general rule applicable to similar demurrers in other lawsuits. That rule runs as follows (vide, Williams v. Railroad, 257 Mo. l. c. 112):
• “On demurrer, a defendant’s testimony (where contradicted) is taken as false; a plaintiff’s (where not self-evidently perjured or opposed to the physics of the case) is taken as true. Contradictions between witnesses or self-contradictions by a witness, together with the credibility of witnesses and the weight due their testimony, are for the jury, not the court. So it is for the jury to reconcile - differences and iron out *18the wrinkles of vagueness or discrepancy, if any. So, the court must allow to a plaintiff’s case on defendant’s demurrer the benefit of every reasonable inference of fact arising On all the proof. [Fritz v. Railroad, 243 Mo. l. c. 77; Stauffer v. Railroad, 243 Mo. l. c. 316.] ‘The party demurring admits the truth of the testimony to which he demurs, and also those conclusions of fact which a jury might fairly draw from that testimony. Forced and violent inferences he does not admit, but the testimony is to be taken most strongly against him, and such conclusions as a jury might justifiably draw the court ought to draw.’ [Per Marshall, C. J., in Pawling v. United States, 4 Cranch, 219; Pleasants v. Fant, 89 U. S. (22 Wall.) l. c. 121.] ”
(3) From such postulates the following conclusions spring, to-wit:
In the first place, it is but confusing the issue on demurrer to'the evidence'in this case to canvass the proofs educed by contestees to sustain the will, where, as here, there was substantial countervailing proof on the. part of contestant. It may stand conceded that contestees introduced cogent evidence supporting the testamentary capacity of testator. The record shows that to be true and the concession is justified. But that concession neither settles nor helps settle the question of law on demurrer. Its force was spent below on the jury.
In the second place, on demurrer we are concerned alone with the admitted facts and with the tendency of contestant’s reasonable and material proof (whether contradicted or not by contestees’).
The two fundamental propositions just laid down are vital and, through inadvertence it would seem, are not always heeded. It is as clear as can be that if on defendant’s demurrer to the evidence an appellate court on defendant’s appeal permits itself to be controlled by defendant’s controverted testimony, such court at once usurps the preclusive office of the jury. *19It strikes down the jury’s right to believe or disbelieve. Accordingly in a case of this kind, hanging on the sole thread of a demurrer, to even bask in the sunshine of demurrant’s contradicted testimony is to put the judicial mind in the way of being seduced somewhat as Samson fell by lying in the wrong lap.
In the next place, the bill of exceptions covers over 1000 pages of typewriting. Contestees’ abstract, condensed as it is into narrative form (which fact we commend), covers between 400 and '500 pages. It would extend this opinion to bounds sounding to folly to undertake to reproduce here the whole of the evidence on the issue of testamentary capacity. Moreover, to take a bit of evidence here and a bit there from this witness and that — bits tom from explanatory context, the thread of the witness’s discourse — I deem unphilosophical and misleading in so heavy a case weighted down as it is with infinite details. There is danger in that course of merely amplifying the fallacy of accent mentioned in books on logic. Every school boy knows some of the trite examples, for instance: If “him” and “neighbor” were underscored in the biblical sentences: ‘ ‘ Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor,” and “And he spake to his sons, saying, saddle me an ass, and they saddled him,” a singular perversion of sense at once illustrating the mischief that may lurk in the fallacy of accent so made apparent. Now, accentuating bits of evidence by reproduction and parading those disconnected bits is subject to the same mischief on a larger scale. If space and time permitted a fair summary of each witness’s testimony, another situation would arise. Here there was a cloud of witnesses and that course is impracticable.
Accordingly we shall mention (and give our conclusions on) the ultimate facts either admitted in the case or which contestant’s material testimony tended to prove as courts have done from times immemorial.
With these observations we come to those facts.
*20(b) Testator, bimself a small farmer at the time, married a neighboring farmer’s daughter, who died in 1887, leaving two children, daughters. One, Kate, married Mr. Turner and died of consumption, leaving two sons, parties to this suit. Testator was indifferent to Turner — the cause must be left to conjecture. The record is barren of any testimony furnishing a rational basis for an estrangement on his part from his daughter, Mrs. Turner, or from her children, his grandsons. We use the term “rational” designedly to exclude caprice or whims. The other daughter, Nellie, now Mrs. Harvey, was seven years old when her mother died, and lived in her father’s house while he was a widower, to-wit, until 1890, say three years. Though he was then a man of affluence, he consented two weeks after that event that Nellie might leave his, home to live with her aunt, testator’s sister, for a time. That was the' end of her home life. She, when young, was sent to a ladies’ boarding school in Lexington for two years or so. Married while under twenty, her father refused his advice on the question of marriage, leaving her to make up her own mind and do as she chose, but evidently he did not look kindly upon it. The marriage was unfortunate. While in her teens and before her marriage she sought to return to her father’s house, but he advised her against it, and she never again was one of the household. Indeed after leaving her aunt and school she had no home in a just sense, lived here and there, her father supporting her. She separated from her husband in a few months after marriage, her father aiding her in procuring a divorce. Her life seems to have been full of sorrow and misfortune, but we look in vain in this record for any rational cause for his dealing harshly with her, and for any rational cause for his entertaining aught but sympathy and fatherly-affection for her. She married again, bore a child and there are record indications she was in needy circumstances when the will was made, as before and *21since. Testator remarried, as said, in 1890. Two sons, now living and parties to this suit, were born of that marriage. Preparatory to going to Europe in 1900 with his wife and her children and with Dr. Hughes, the alienist hereinbefore referred to, he made a will. That will was more beneficial to his children by the first marriage than the will in suit. After providing bountifully for his wife and her two sons, he divided the residue of his estate into five parts, giving his wife one part, each of her two sons one, to Nellie one, and Mrs. Turner one. Mrs. Turner having died during his absence in Europe, three years later he made a codicil giving the Turner boys their mother’s said share, and (having acquired fifty acres of land since the will was made) he gave that to one of the sons of his second wife.- In 1905, he, being then about seventy years of age, made a second will. By that he disposed of an estate estimated at $310,000', in lands, houses, bonds, stocks, loans, cash. By its provisions the second wife took property of the value of $88,000'; her two sons each the same amount, aggregating $176,000; the daughter, Nellie, $35,000; and his grandsons, the Turner boys, $5000 each. The inequalities in the will speak for themselves. We find no dependable estimate of the amount of the 'estate when the first will was made. It is contended by contestant’s counsel that it was practically of the same amount at the date of both wills. Counsel for contestees do not agree to that. The best we can make of it is that the difference, if any, was not large.
Doing back a little to take up the dropped thread of the personality of testator and bring it forward as part of the warp and woof of this case, it appears that he early laid the foundation for a great fortune. At least before disease laid its heavy hand upon him he had a business farsightedness, a power of getting and holding money above the average man, even the successful man. He was of fine physique, weighed, say, *22two hundred pounds, an attractive-personality, had the confidence of his community, held for years the lucrative office of collector of revenue, thereby acquiring an accurate knowledge of local land values — a knowledge essential to the safe placing of loans in country regions in Jackson county and such investments he largely made. He organized a national bank at Independence and was its president until the day of his death. From the humble position of a small farmer and wood hauler, he, before making any will, had won his way to a pronounced business success, as “success” is spoken of conventionally. So much is undisputed on this record. It may be taken as conceded, too, that he was a proud man, a reticent and self-contained man in his prime. He was not given to sentiment or a large flow of affection and it may be that the qualities of. hardness and sternness predominated. Seemingly throughout that business prime he was absorbed in the close pursuit of money and it is a just estimate of the record to say that this was a quality so much accentuated in the last few years of his life that it became a ruling passion amounting to almost, if not quite, avarice. In fact, learned counsel for contestees, if we did not miss the thread of their argument at our bar, sought to explain some of the transactions in evidence as taking: root in that unlovely quality of mind and heart rather than in an unsound mind.
We now come to a group of facts more directly connected with the issue of testamentary incapacity. One of them, a main and master fact in the case (and one we stress) stands conceded with others, to-vdt, that testator for ten years prior to his death was in the grasp of an insidious and dread disease, epilepsy, a disease properly classed as a mental disease. It was incurable in this case, as it always is apparently, and baffled the skill of the most experienced alienists. It seems to be the consensus of opinion that it is a pro-, gressive disease when it seizes its victim in old age, as *23here. It was so in this instance and while apparently arrested somewhat at one time, yet it gathered headway again later on and ran its fatal and inevitable course. Added to that disease, testator suffered from an aggravated hernia. About nine months after making the will in question he submitted to a major operation for hernia, was seized with an epileptic convulsion without fully recovering from the anaesthetic administered, and died of apoplexy superinduced by that convulsion and without recovering consciousness.
The medical experts who testified were not in accord on the question of the origin of epilepsy or its seat, or its necessary effects, nor is it worth while for the purposes of deciding this case to enter that vexed field. The case may proceed on the theory that epilepsy in and of itself is not necessarily a permanent state of insanity, nor is it technically insanity at all. We take it when a fit of grand mal is on, as one form of epilepsy is called, or even when a fit of petit mal is on, as another form is called, there comes a time immediately before the fit and during its existence and after the crisis is passed (and its victim is recovering) that there exists a state of mind all would agree constitutes an entire or partial blankness, confusion or arrest of the mental faculties spelling testamentary incapacity. In this case contestant put in no proof showing that the will was made at such particular time; oontestees’ proof affirmatively showed the contrary. The real question, then, is whether the disease had created such a permanent mental condition as made the question of testamentary capacity at the point of time the will was executed a question for the jury. Now on that question, as indicated heretofore, contestees introduced cogent evidence tending: to show that the mental and moral faculties of testator had not been so permanently impaired that a state of testamentary incapacity existed. If that evidence is to control us as a matter of law, the demurrer was badly ruled. But, as *24heretofore pointed out, the stiff guiding rule on demurrer will not permit the case to break on the evidence of the unsuccessful contestees where there was competent contradictory and cogent evidence on contestant’s part tending to prove testamentary incapacity. Attend to our impressions and conclusions on the tendency of contestant’s evidence on that score, arrived at from a painstaking study of the record.
■ There was medical evidence from one doctor tending to show that epilepsy has a depreciating effect on the mind. That doctor put the matter this way: The more ‘ ‘ spells ’ ’ a man has the weaker his mind becomes. Epilepsy is a brain disease, a change in the cells some place in the brain. Another expert gave testimony tending to show that some medical authorities put petit mal as more injurious to the mind than grand mal and some less so. His own observation was, equally so, that is, there was practically no difference in the damage to the mind in the patient who suffers repeated attacks of petit mal and one who suffers attacks, of grand mal. Attacks at long intervals were not as bad as at frequent intervals. Other expert testimony tended to show that epilepsy, coming at old age in connection with arterial sclerosis, as it does, is incurable and progressive. The victim of such epilepsy can not have a spell unless there is something wrong before; the spell or fit does not throw off the sclerotic condition; the brain is diseased just the same and stays in that way until there is another spell. The disease is in the arteries or blood vessels of the brain. The witness, the tendency of whose testimony we are now following, stated that the memory of the epileptic is affected; next there comes a change in his will power. These changes may come in two, three or ten or twelve years — there is no rule about it. That the attention is affected earlier than the moral faculties. Next comes the lessening of the patient’s perceptive powers, his ability to grasp situations and facts. At that stage *25comes deterioration in power for mental work and later Ms moral sense is affected. In late stages, if the victim of epilepsy be an old man, he may not properly distinguish Ms duties to the members of his family. No hard-and-fast rule can be given. Each epileptic case is a study to itself, and it would not be possible to give the number of years in which those respective changes occur. There was testimony testator was suffering from senile epilepsy, and experts in describing the natural course of the disease, said it consisted in changes of the brain and circulation. The blood vessels become rigid and hardened. The framework of the brain enlarges and the brain really becomes smaller. These changes may also affect the blood vessels of the kidneys or the heart. The seat of 'the mind is in the brain, and in those old-age changes mentioned and connected with epilepsy the mind becomes weak-, ened, convulsions hasten that condition and mental changes occur gradually. The faculty of attention, as said, is affected. The patient is unable to fix his mind very easily on a subject for any length of time. Memory of recent events is affected very much. The-will and judgment are affected. In fact, all the faculties of the mind upon wMch moral actions are based and all the emotions are affected. The ethical sense is weakened as well as the moral sense, that is, the sense of right and wrong. These brain changes are permanent and get worse and worse in semle epilepsy. The cells of the brain shrink and shrivel in its progressive form, and if a person lives long enough he would not have any mind at all; he keeps going down and getting weaker all the time.
■We are of opinion there was substantial medical evidence tending to show that testator was afflicted, with the kind of epilepsy we have outlined. He had both grand mal and petit mal for, say, ten years before he made his last will. On hypothetical questions some *26of the expert testimony was to the effect that testator did not have testamentary capacity.
Recurring now to contestant’s lay evidence, there was testimony of that same kind strongly tending to show testator had a typical and established case of senile epilepsy, agreeing therein with the expert testimony. Many instances of convulsions, some petit mal, some grand mal, are described and, as we read the record, they grew more and more frequent in the last years of his life. The details of these convulsions covered such phases as blankness of countenance, jerking, twitchings and other facial changes, unconsciousness, falling to the ground, frothing at the mouth and the whole sad category of epileptic phenomena. Testator, it is admitted by contestees, “never talked about his infirmity and so far as he could, concealed its existence,” and yet so many convulsions are described by contestant’s witnesses (casually seen at chance times and places) that it is beyond all reason to suppose there were not- many they did not see and which, in the complete history of his case, might have to be reckoned with as having a cumulative effect. So, too, the effect of his epilepsy manifested itself physically. He was a sick man, “feeble,” “pale,” “weak” and fell off greatly in weight. That his mind was actually affected, and in a marked way too, there can be little doubt if contestant’s testimony is to be credited with the weight seemingly its due. This manifested itself in inability to control his emotions; in inability to fix his attention on a subject for any length of time, even in business matters in which formerly he had been proficient and eager; in a singular forgetfulness in current and important business matters, in business orders and directions, and even in forgetfulness of the existence of large loans due him. Taking his native hue and normal bent of mind, deep-set on gainful accumulation, the last fact permits emphasis. It manifested itself in the fact that he had lost confidence in his own *27judgment in management of important features of his business and what judgment he had in business under his exclusive charge seemed in some instances whimsical and poor — we refer to his farming operations, his sale of stock, farm implements, etc., the whimsical and unbusinesslike character of his later leases, etc. Moreover this man had delusions. For instance, among others: He saw debtors when none existed. He would dun people for debts who never owed him a penny, or had a money .transaction with him; he (contrary to the fact) came to believe he was born in the house his first wife was born in; he thought the homestead of her birth was the homestead where he was born, and so on. So, too, his ethical sense was so impaired it seemed to run low with his first children. For instance: He, an affluent father, took many notes from his needy and unfortunate daughter, Nellie, for small amounts of money loaned her for her support and charged her in some instances eight per cent compound interest, this when he was loaning money at six per cent (and in at least one instance at three per cent) to others. He had in his hands for a long time for his two daughters by his first marriage, money coming to them from their mother’s estate, say $5000. I'f the evidence is to be credited he paid them this money without any interest at all, and over their protestations. One of them, Kate, was facing inevitable and known death from consumption at the time this hard and unfatherly settlement was driven through. There is evidence she was-in tears over it, and when testator was at once appealed to by a neighbor woman who was spurred thereto by those tears, he assured this neighbor he was going to “fix it all right,” that he had promised his daughter to “make her children equal with the rest of my children.” If this solemn promise was made, and the jury had the right to believe it was, we have a broken promise, one in its dramatic settings and sacredness almost rising to *28the dignity of the vow of antiquity; for it was not kept'either presently or at any time — witness the will-made immediately thereafter and the one made ten years later.
There was testimony from contestant’s lay witnesses, intelligent and disinterested men so far as we can see, who had opportunities of observation and who made observations, tending to prove facts warranting their opinion evidence. That opinion evidence they gave to the effect that testator’s mind was permanently-affected in the last few years of his life. If this testimony is entitled to credit, he was not of sound mind at the time of the execution of the last will. The credibility of these witnesses was not directly impeached nor was it destroyed on cross-examination.
In the former opinion in this case (236 Mo. l. c. 544), it was said: “He kept a great estate to the end, but he had powerful aid in competent agents. Under some of the testimony, his personal attention to and knowledge of his affairs and property were of such sort toward the close as indicated a wandering and weak-ened mind — a mental reckoning lost.” That'conclusion is brought to book by counsel for contestees and its accuracy sharply challenged. We have gone over the present record with an eye to that challenge, and as we thought then, so we think now, to-wit, the- observation was just. Testator’s business may be divided into two classes. In one he had personal charge, in the other he did not. To the first class belong his farming operations. In regard to them his business judgment was not at all what it had been before he was broken by his affliction. His farm ran down. The energy and good sense of its early management were lost. Leases (or more accurately, farming contracts) drawn by him were full of whims, inconsequential features were accentuated, and main features looking to good husbandry and sensible results were pretermitted or obscured. ' Some of the narrations of these leases *29were incoherent and the net result of his farming operations (carried on with whimsical orders, forgotten when executed and changed about without reason) by no means establish a. rational mind in business, to my way of thinking. Coming to the other class,'to-wit, his banking and loan business, the success of both features may be conceded. But there was testimony the jury was justified in believing that, while he was president of a bank to the day of his death, yet finally he took no intelligent or active part as an adviser in its business affairs, nor was he expected to for several years before his death. Under such circumstances while to remove him as president was unnecessary, yet to keep him as president amounted to no more- than having him as a figurehead — we use the word in no offensive sense. As to his loan business, it may be said that he had no bad loans, and yet, he had a large investment in the line of real estate loans. But there are record indications that the only substantial office filled by him in connection with these loans toward the close of his career was that his judgment was asked by his attorney on the value of offered landed securities. Such request was natural and the fact not controlling. These loans were to all intents and purposes procured and made under the supervision of Mr. Clements, his attorney — a great aid, indeed. Loan papers were kept in the bank. The aid of the officers of the- bank was given when required in the collection and computatio'n of interest. Hence, we say again, as we' said before, that he had great aids in the preservation of his estate.
In a case where a demurrer to the evidence was held to lie, Philips, C., in speaking for this court, made the following apposite pronouncement (Jackson v. Hardin, 83 Mo. l. c. 185 et seq.):
“As neither courts nor juries can make wills for men they ought to be careful in unmaking them. We are not unmindful, in upholding the action of the court in taking this case from the jury, of the great impor*30tanee of the trial courts not trenching upon the rightful province of the jury to determine and judge of the facts. Where there are facts established from which the jury may reasonably draw legitimate inferences tending to ■sustain an issue, the court should not interfere. But where the evidence is of that character that the trial judge would have a plain duty to perform in setting aside the verdict as unsupported by the evidence, it is his duty and his prerogative to interfere before submission to the jury and direct a verdict for the defendant.”
In Furber v. Bolt & Nut Co., 185 Mo. l. c. 311 et seq., Valliant, J., speaking for this court, said:
“In considering whether or not the plaintiff was entitled to go to the jury on this specification we must give him the benefit of every conclusion that could lawfully be drawn from his own evidence, aided, if it is aided, by the evidence of the defendant. Where the evidence of the defendant contradicts that of the plaintiff a question is presented for the jury, not for the court. Yet when the court is asked to authorize a jury to find a fact from the testimony so vague and uncertain that the inference to be drawn from it amounts to scarcely more than conjecture of the possibility that the fact might exist, then the court ought to look at the character of the evidence on the other side and if the case is such that the verdict for the plaintiff would necessarily have to be set aside, the court should not submit the question to the jury.”
There is nothing in either of those cases militating against the rule laid down in this opinion under subsection a, this paragraph, from the Williams case, supra. In speaking to the question the writers of those opinions were merely approaching it from a different angle. When rightly understood by proper analysis equivalent doctrine is announced by all. This court did not mean in the Furber case that where there was substantial evidence tending" to prove the cause *31of action stated in a petition, we conld go to defendant’s contradicted evidence in ruling a demurrer. What it said was on the hypothesis that plaintiff’s evidence could be classed as mere conjecture or as creating a mere possibility, and if that were so then you could go- to the defendant’s evidence. In such case defendant’s evidence would be practically uncontroverted, and hence to be reckoned with on demurrer under the rule in the Williams case.
So that, admonished and quickened by acceptable doctrine governing the ruling of demurrers to the evidence at the close of the case, we are of opinion the demurrer in this case was well ruled.
Harsh and unnatural wills may stand. We have been fond of saying that the very object of making any will at all was to let the distribution of the estate flow in channels outside of the general Statute of Descents and Distributions. Mere inequalities in a will, therefore, do not impugn it, nor, standing alone, are they sufficient evidence of testamentary incapacity, when that is in issue-, or undue influence, when that is in. issue; but when there is other competent and substantial proof of testamentary incapacity or undue influence, then the rule is that unnatural-“or marked inequalities in a will, based on no reasonable ground, are factors to be reckoned with on either issue in combination with other testimony. Such factors are here and the demurrer seeks them.
Testamentary' incapacity is a psychological phenomenon. Witnesses testifying to unsoundness of mind are dealing with psychological inferences. In that class of inferences error may easily lurk. Hence the caution of courts, hence the strictness with which courts examine such testimony to see if it bears the hallmark of reason, to see if the facts' postulated by the witnesses rationally warrant the inference. Cases may be found that possibly go too far in taking the issue of fact from the jury. If so they are attributable to *32judicial zeal in protecting- the right to make wills, to give rounded effect to the Statute of Wills, and to strike down the mischief of unmaking them except on solid grounds. The pestiferous notion that where there is a will there is a way — to break it, is not the doctrine óf this court (Story v. Story, 188 Mo. l. c. 128) and that mere oddities and eccentricities combed together and not necessarily referable to seated aberration of mind are not sufficient in law to break a will, however artistically selected, arranged and paraded, is a theory we have never departed from.
It is possible that in our later decisions we have receded somewhat from the extreme lengths of some' older cases. Be that as it may, after three full arguments by distinguished counsel, twice in division and once before the whole bench, supplemented by a patient study of this record, we have come to the conclusion that the issue of testamentary incapacity was for the jury. That conclusion we consider well within the facts and reasoning of a line of cases of which the following are but examples: Roberts v. Bartlett, 190 Mo. 680; Meier v. Buchter, 197 Mo. 68; Holton v. Cochran, 208 Mo. 314; Crum v. Crum, 231 Mo. 626; Mowry v. Norman, 204 Mo. 173, 223 Mo. 463; Turner v. Anderson, 236 Mo. 523; Wendling v. Bowden, 252 Mo. 647.
Each and all of the premises considered, we shall not interfere with the judgment. Accordingly, it is affirmed.
All concur except Bond, J., who dissents in an opinion filed.