Will of Ball v. Boston

Marshall, J.

As often, and not too often, said, tbe testamentary right is one of tbe most important of tbe inherent incidents of human existence. It has been so regarded since tbe dawn of civilization. As an eminent text-writer put tbe matter, “It has been held sacred by all nations and under all conditionsand, we may add, it has in no time or place or condition been more significantly upheld than during tbe period of development in tbe countries blessed with, and characterized by civic growth, promoted by, principles of tbe common law. It is not a mere privilege which legislatures can directly or unreasonably regulate to destroy. It is not an incident of tbe possession of property which courts can deal with in any spirit of mere discretion. It is a right, absolute, which every person of mature mind and disposing memory may exercise, subject to some regulations to prevent abuse of it and to safeguard it, as be sees fit. Filial expectancy of profiting by inheritance, is proper. Eeasonable indulgence in it is natural and judicial conservation of tbe free exercise of volition to satisfy it, is demanded; but, in a very high de*32gree, tbe testamentary right, as compared with that of the mere subjects of testamentary charity or bounty, is the superior. As said for the court in Vance v. Davis, 118 Wis. 548, 95 N. W. 939, “The highest equity which courts can consider is the right of an individual to dispose of his property as he chooses. The hope of inheritance, which any child may indulge in during a parent’s life, bears no comparison in the eyes of the law to the right of disposal by the parent.” If one testamentarily gives his property in a particular lawful way, “there is no duty of equity or conscience to thwart that will.”

The foregoing observations are deemed proper as pointing, in general, the attitude with which trial courts, and all courts, should consider a question presented as to whether a will, made with all the formalities prescribed by law to safeguard and evidence the free exercise of the testamentary right, especially where testamentary capacity is either not disputed or not successfully impeached, shall be judicially enforced as the real wish of the testator or suppressed as a fraudulent production; a creation of the volition of another, wrongly imposed upon the testator so as to give it the cast of the latter’s considerate effort. It is not infrequent that there is evidence in a trial record that the particular situation dealt with yras measured with rather an exaggerated idea of the rights of disappointed relatives, partially or wholly eclipsing the real right to be protected above all. Vance v. Davis, supra; Will of Rice, 150 Wis. 401, 136 N. W. 956, 137 N. W. 778; Loennecker’s Will, 112 Wis. 461, 88 N. W. 215; In re Butler’s Will, 110 Wis. 70, 85 N. W. 678; Will of Dardis, 135 Wis. 457, 115 N. W. 332.

The sole question in a will contest is, Does the purported will legally express the testator’s dying wish ? ITis right, not that of any survivor, is the dominant thing. The will may be very unlike what it would seem, from a moral standpoint, it ought to be, yet if it lawfully expresses the testator’s dying *33wisb, that ends the subject, — there is no power in. equity to change it or set it aside, — the judicial power exists only to execute it. Vance v. Davis, supra; Will of Rice, supra. As remarked by Ryan, C. J., in Dodge v. Williams, 46 Wis. 70, 1 N. W. 92, 50 N. W. 1103:

“Breaking a will is very much like making one,” imposing on the testator a rule for the distribution of his estate “against his solemn wish in dying.” “Every one should have power to dispose by will, after his death, in accordance with, his own wishes, of whatever he may leave behind him in his own sole right, as he had in life to dispose of it by contract or gift. And it is as much the duty of courts to uphold his will after death, as to uphold and enforce his contracts made during life.”

It is not intended by the foregoing observations to suggest that there was any want of familiarity by the learned trial court in disposing of this case with the salutary principle expressed and so often illustrated in the opinions of this and other courts; or that there was any purpose to unmake the will of Mr. Ball and remake it along the lines of a statutory distribution, — thought to be more considerate, under the circumstances, of the moral claims of his children. The effect of the logic which led to the result complained of is the paramount question.

There are many evidentiary conclusions leading to the vital matter of fact in issue. It is contended by appellant that such evidentiary circumstances are, in some cases, without any evidence to support them, in others, contrary to the clear preponderance of the evidence, and, in others, in conflict with direct and circumstantial proof showing the contrary, and, that, in any event, the final inference of fact is wholly unwarranted. That is a severe arraignment of the findings and calls for pretty close examination of the record.

Before taking up, in detail, the numerous complaints as to the findings, it seems best to advert to some well séttled principles of law applicable thereto.

*34In general, findings of fact made by a trial court are dis-turbable with much difficulty, for reasons often stated. Those reasons have less and less force till they cease to apply at all, according to circumstances. They have no force at all in case of tbe result having been reached by misconception of the law. Maldaner v. Smith, 102 Wis. 30, 78 N. W. 140; Kelley v. Crawford, 112 Wis. 368, 88 N. W. 296; Harrigan v. Gilchrist, 121 Wis. 127, 312, 99 N. W. 909.

It must be appreciated that the alleged wrong sounds in fraud. Small v. Champeny, 102 Wis. 61, 68, 78 N. W. 407; Vance v. Davis, 118 Wis. 548, 95 N. W. 939; Loennecker’s Will, 112 Wis. 461, 88 N. W. 215; Winn v. Itzel, 125 Wis. 19, 103 N. W. 220; Gordon v. Burris, 153 Mo. 223, 54 S. W. 546; Grove v. Spiker, 72 Md. 300, 20 Atl. 144; Mackall v. Mackall, 135 U. S. 167, 10 Sup. Ct. 705. Terms of apparently double meaning will be found used in respect to the '.subject, such as “fraud and undue influence;” “fraud or undue influence,” in connection with suggestions that the terms “fraud” and “undue influence” are not technically synonymous, though if there be any difference it is, probably, that between actual and constructive fraud.

In Will of Slinger, 72 Wis. 22, 37 N. W. 236, the late chief justice, speaking for the court, said: “Manifestly, it is a subtle species of fraud, whereby mastery is obtained over the mind of the victim by insidious approaches, seductive artifices, or other species of circumvention.” Note the judicial conception of the essentials of the wrong found in this case, “insidious approaches, seductive artifices, or other species of circumvention.” We could not put too much emphasis thereon to contrast therewith those perfectly legitimate influences between husband and wife, which will be later referred to and, in the light of which, the real facts of this case must be viewed.

In Gordon v. Burris, supra, the court remarked, without qualification, that undue influence is a fraud, and in Grove v. *35Spiker, supra, that it is closely allied to actual fraud. It is., really, one of the most reprehensible of deceits because of the cunning, insidiousness, and artifices of seduction, which, in general, characterize it and by means of which the unsuspecting victim is rendered powerless to carry out his own wishes or resist those of the wrongdoer.

Thus it will be seen that, in a case of this sort, if there is-failure to appreciate that the gist of the attack upon the wiE is fraud, and the rule applies that, he who alleges fraud must establish it, — not by a mere preponderance of, but by clear and satisfactory, evidence, — the finding as to the vital fact is liable to fall within the rule before stated as to want of dignity because of having been reached without proper legal guidance.

The rule of clear and satisfactory evidence in fraud cases, as distinguished from mere preponderance of the evidence, is substantial and may, very properly, be the turning point, especially, when the matter rests in mere inference. As has been frequently said, while in ordinary civil matters the person on whom the burden of proof rests may rely upon evidence establishing the facts to a reasonable certainty, though the evidence be not, in all respects, clear and satisfactory, not so where fraud is the gist of the matter, then he must go further, — not to the extent of establishing the charge with the highest degree of certainty, but to that one which rests, not only in reasonable certainty, but on evidence which is clear and satisfactory. Though the difference may appear somewhat shadowy it exists and forms a substantial basis for a rule firmly intrenched in our jurisprudence. Lepley v. Andersen, 142 Wis. 668, 671, 125 N. W. 443; Harrigan v. Gilchrist, 121 Wis. 127, 313, 99 N. W. 909. Its logic rests in a presumption against wrong akin to that of innocence in a criminal case. Whether the salutary rule was not lost sight of in this case, challenges attention for reasons which will, appear as we proceed.

*36We note the statement in the learned circuit judge’s opinion that,. the contestants having established a prima facie case of undue influence, the burden was upon the proponent to show that the will was the testator’s own voluntary act. That is somewhat ambiguous, in view of the expressions found in Davis v. Dean, 66 Wis. 100, 26 N. W. 737; Disch v. Timm, 101 Wis. 179, 77 N. W. 196, and some other cases, from which it might be inferred, perhaps not without warrant, that in this class of cases, the burden of proof is on the person charged with fraud to prove affirmatively that there was no such wrong upon a prima facie case being circumstantially made against him; that then the burden of proof shifts and remains with the defendant. Those expressions were somewhat emphasized by the statement in Vance v. Davis, 118 Wis. 548, 95 N. W. 939, that, “in apparent contradiction of the ordinary rule requiring clear and direct proof of fraud, this, and other courts have recognized the necessity of casting the burden of negative proof upon one who profits from a position of confidence and control by a conveyance of such character and made under such circumstances as to suggest improbability that it is the free act of the grantor, and probability that it is due to influence of the beneficiary.” All such expressions, understood with reference to the premises upon which they are based, and the particular facts dealt with, are free from serious, if not from any, infirmity, yet they have misled, sometimes, as the records here bear evidence.

Whatever of misleading character there is in. the expressions referred to, was intended to be eliminated from our jurisprudence in the treatment of the subject by the present chief justice, speaking for the court, in Winn v. Itzel, 125 Wis. 19, 32, 103 N. W. 220, thiswise:

“We do not understand that the principle there approved changed the practice in fraud cases, or affected the order of the trial of such cases. Parties who charge fraud must prove fraud after as well as before that decision,” — referring par-*37tieularly to Vance v. Davis. “They still have tbe burden of proof. It was simply held in that line of cases that when a plaintiff, charging fraud, had proven certain facts, he had made a p'ima facie case, though he might not have produced any direct evidence of fraudulent acts or words. . . . When the plaintiff makes a prima facie case, entitling him to relief if the proof stops there, the defendant must take up the burden and meet the case so made by other evidence. This is the case in all contests of fact. It is not peculiar to fraud cases. The rule of Davis v. Dean did not deny the long established rule nor did it tend to do so. It simply announced what facts would be considered as prima facie proof of fraud, requiring explanation by the defendant.”

Thus it will be seen, in a case of this sort, upon a prima facie case being circumstantially made calling upon the person charged with fraud to explain his conduct, there still stands the presumption against wrong doing, eclipsed for the time being by the adversary presumption, but, subject to be efficiently aroused by affirmative evidence, direct or circumstantial, so satisfactorily explaining the adversary circumstances that they no longer seem to exist by clear and satisfactory evidence. In the end, upon the whole case, the circumstances from which the alleged undue influence is infer-able as matter of law must stand upon such evidence. That is, the burden being upon the one charging undue influence, from first to last, to establish it by clear and satisfactory evidence, the rule goes to the existence of the circumstances; the effect of the circumstances is matter of law. Weaken the case as to any one of the vital major incidents so that it can no longer be said to exist by clear and satisfactory evidence; then the prima facie case once created is so far rebutted that the plaintiff cannot successfully stand thereon, but must go further.

A brief treatment of what constitutes undue influence and what circumstances are essential, where such evidence, alone, is relied upon by the person charging fraud, will aid in test*38ing tibie question of whether the findings here, as to mere evi-dentiary incidents, has a sound basis in the evidence, as well as whether they establish, with the requisite degree of certainty, even prima facie, the major circumstance, essential to support the legal presumption of wrong doing. .

The general characteristics of undue influence are strikingly presented in Will of Slinger, before adverted to. The actor is treated as a wrongdoer, — one bent upon a reprehensible purpose; the other as his unwilling or unsuspecting, in any.event under the circumstances, powerless victim of the purpose effected by “that subtle species of fraud,” — where such helplessness to resist direct or indirect suggestion is produced by “insidious approaches, seductive artifices, or other species of circumvention.” Undue influence is the very antithesis of right influence. It exists only where there is practical destruction of voluntary volition, — at least, is moral coercion for an ulterior purpose. Anderson v. Laugen, 122 Wis. 57, 99 N. W. 437. This species of wrongful influence should never be confused with influence through affection or disposition to favor a member of one’s family produced by legitimate feelings of esteem, or gratitude.

One may be very strongly influenced by a wife, or other person standing in close relation to him, to prefer such person in the final disposition of his property. He may even be strongly importuned, his judgment appealed to and reason convinced by argument to a desired end, if there is no wrong influence, so long as he finally, by his own volition, carries his purpose thus arrived at into effect. In re Will of Jackman, 26 Wis. 104; Deck v. Deck, 106 Wis. 470, 82 N. W. 293; Mueller v. Pew, 127 Wis. 288, 106 N. W. 840; Appeal of Turner, 72 Conn. 305, 44 Atl. 310.

The language of this court in the Jackman Will Case has been, in terms, or effect, reiterated here in numerous decisions and cited, time and time again, with approval elsewhere. The *39influence of a wife or child, if exerted in a fair and reasonable manner, is not unlawful, and in order to be undue “it must be exerted mala fide, to produce a result wbicb the party, as a reasonable person, was bound to know was unreasonable and unjust.” “As neither courts nor parties can make wills for men they ought to be careful in unmaking them.” The influence denounced by the law must be something more than “the influence of affection or attachment” or design of gratifying the wishes of one beloved, respected, and trusted by the testator.” Jackson v. Hardin, 83 Mo. 175, 185. “Mere solicitation will not be sufficient to vitiate a will made by a person having a knowledge of what he is doing, and intending to do it, though his act may be brought about by solicitation, or that kind of influence which a disposition to gratify another may produce.” Sutton v. Sutton, 5 Harr. (Del.) 459, 461. Mere kindness of treatment and proper attention which stimulates the desire to reward from an intelligent sense of duty are legitimate. Appeal of Turner, 72 Conn. 305, 44 Atl. 310; Barlow v. Waters (Ky.) 28 S. W. 785, 786; Nelson’s Will, 39 Minn. 204, 39 N. W. 143.

Thus this court, and most courts, have spoken, to guard against wishes of disappointed relatives improperly disturbing the testamentary right, either because of a judicial failure to differentiate between undue influence and due influence, or to appreciate that the instrumentality for avoiding wills upon the ground of undue influence is, primarily, to ’ conserve the rights of the testator, not those who would profit from his estate by displacing his will. The danger of so far dignifying the incidental as to endanger the primary right, magnify suspicion into proof, and impair the capacity of a person to reward a wife or other relative for that care in the helplessness of old. age, sometimes accompanied with such infirmities as to require attention beyond the power of mere money to obtain, was adverted to in Vance v. Davis, 118 Wis. *40548, 95 N. W. 939, and particularly in Mackall v. Mackall, 135 U. S. 167, 172, 10 Sup. Ct. 705, tbe court speaking thus:

“Influence gained by kindness and affection will not be regarded as undue if no imposition or fraud be practiced, even tbougb it induced tbe testator to make an unequal and unjust disposition of bis property in favor of those wbo bave contributed to bis comfort and administered to bis wants, if sucb disposition is voluntarily made.”
“It would be a great reproach to tbe law if, in its jealous watchfulness over tbe freedom of testamentary disposition, it would deprive age and infirmity of tbe kindly ministrations of affection, or of tbe power of rewarding those wbo bestow them.”

Tbe foregoing, as to tbe nature of undue influence, raises tbe question, logically, as to tbe essential circumstances for its establishment, where there is no direct evidence. That has been frequently, in terms or effect, answered. There must be a subject “unquestionably susceptible to undue influence,” a disposition to undue influence for tbe purpose of procuring tbe improper favor, opportunity to exert that influence and effect tbe wrongful purpose, and it must be exerted so as to deprive tbe victim of free agency “and constrain him to do not only what is against bis will, but what be is unable to refuse or too weak to resist.” That, in the Jackman Will Case (26 Wis. 104), has been, in effect, repeated many times. vThe law does not lay bold of and render tbe first three elements, prima facie, clear and satisfactory evidence of tbe accomplishment in advance of their being established with that degree of certainty. They cannot rest upon mere preponderance of tbe evidence or suspicion. This feature is important in anything like a close case. Tbe trial judge here reached tbe conclusion that sucb three elements existed. In that be proceeded by logical steps to tbe ultimate fact. Whether be appreciated tbe essential of certainty referred to does not appear from anything said in tbe opinion, and if we should conclude be did not from tbe findings themselves^ as before indicated, they should be shorn of tbe pre*41sumption in their favor. That the stated degree of certainty is necessary, follows from the very nature of the case and has been expressly recognized in the authorities before cited, and significantly in Fox v. Martin, 104 Wis. 581, 80 N. W. 921; Loennecker’s Will, 112 Wis. 461, 88 N. W. 215. The rule is stated in the latter case as practically the logic of the former, that there must be shown a subject “unquestionably susceptible to undue influence . . . also some clear evidence of opportunity and a disposition on the part of the beneficiary to exercise such influence.” That is repeated in Vance v. Davis, 118 Wis. 548, 95 N. W. 939; Winn v. Itzel, 125 Wis. 19, 103 N. W. 220, and other cases, all to the general effect that the presumption against wrong is too probative to be overcome by anything short of clearly established circumstances clearly inconsistent therewith.

In the foregoing legal environment of this case we .will proceed to examine the numerous complaints of the findings of fact.

The general effect of the exceptions is that the trial court viewed the case with suspicion from the mere fact that Mr. Ball, an old infirm man with three adult children, which he had ordinary regard for, took a second wife, lived with her a little more than a year in practical seclusion from his children, then deceased; having in his last sickness and about a month before the end left her by will all his property. The idea is that proponent’s case having been thus wrongfully regarded, many little actual or supposed incidents -were woven together to confirm such suspicion, some of such incidents having no support in the evidence and some found from the most unfavorable inferences the evidence would reasonably bear, resulting in many ordinary occurrences being given the east of “insidious approaches, seductive artifices, or other species of circumvention,” and proponent being convicted of having subverted Mr. Ball’s mind and destroyed his capacity to exercise his own volition in disposing of his estate, — contrary to direct evidence that he made his will while in full possession *42of bis faculties; that proponent neither gave direction nor made a suggestion in respect to it, and that be acted in ber absence from bis presence and without ber knowledge respecting what was embodied in the testament. If this broad general claim is borne out by the record, obviously, the legal principles to which we have adverted were not given their appropriate force.

In view of the general scope of the complaints made by counsel for appellant, it seems best to state here the general character of Mr. Balls life and his surroundings at the time of making the will, particularly the size of his estate and the legal and moral claims which, in the natural course of things, one circumstanced as he was would be likely to recognize.

Mr. Ball lived with his first wife happily, it would seem, from the time he was a young man until he was about sixty-five years of age. She bore him three children, two boys and one girl, and all lived at home until of age and two had secured homes for themselves. The daughter married before her mother died and became well located with a prosperous business man as her husband in a city some distance from her father’s home. The oldest son was some thirty-eight years of age when the will, was made. • He was without family and had lived apart from his father for some years though assisting him, for pay, in running the stable. He was accustomed to using intoxicants, but was in good health and abundantly able to take care of himself. The youngest son, at the end, was about twenty-seven years old. He lived with his father some three years after the mother died, then married and established a home of his own, in which he resided with his wife and child. He was possessed of an income of $1,800' per year. All were independent of the father. No one of them was so situated as to be able, conveniently, to make a home for him in his old age. He had- no reasonable expectation of that care from his children which he required on account of his age and infirmities. He had always been domestic in habits *43and kindly disposed towards Ms family, especially Ms wife. He was tkat solicitous for tke Erst one, witk wkom be lived thirty-five years more or less, that he early took out and kept up a policy of life insurance of $1,000 for her sole benefit, as he evidently supposed. About a year after her death he employed Mrs. McKelvery, a woman about fifty years of age, an industrious rather strong character, as housekeeper, so as to preserve his home life. After his youngest son made a home for himself, Mr. Ball sold Ms place and boarded and roomed alone. About a year thereafter he married Mrs. M c-Kelvery. Such mutual regard existed between them and had been fostered by her serving him faithfully for some two years as housekeeper and later nursing him in sickness, as might reasonably be expected in case of a man of his years, kindly disposed and of domestic habits, and a woman of her years and station, associating together as they had much of the time, the old gentleman needing the assistance in his business and the care wMch the strong woman was able to render, and she being willing to afford such assistance and care in consideration of companionship and such reasonable expectation of being provided for in the final disposition of his property as a man of his disposition would be likely to gratify. She made a home for him and served him faithfully as a wife to the day of his death, bestowing upon him, to the limit of her ability, all the care which she was capable of, and main tig his life as comfortable as she could. He endeavored to transfer to her his life insurance policy, but was unable to do so. At the last, he saw no way of providing for her except by will. No one of his children stood in need of his assistance. The thousand dollar insurance policy, which he regarded as Ms property, he found to be legally that of his children. He had, as he thought, when reduced to money and all claims and expenses paid, very little. There was real estate and personal property, estimated to be worth about $6,500, but his indebtedness was so large — being some $3,500 — as to render neces*44sary conversion of bis estate into money in settling tbe same. Tbe outlook was sucb that, after paying tbe indebtedness, expenses of administration and, in case of intestacy, providing for tbe statutory allowances tó bis wife, there would not be mucb to divide, — no more tban enough to afford each of tbe children a few hundred dollars. Under those circumstances, with full testamentary capacity, separate and apart from his wife, be made tbe will which be may well have thought would not yield her for support, facing an expectancy of life of some eighteen years, and for past and future care of him, more than $1,500 or so in ready-money value.

True, the findings are to the effect that the net estate was of the value of $4,500, but that seems clearly contrary to the evidence to the extent of more than $1,500, as we shall see, even if the estate were of the ready-money value of the full inventory — which is not very likely, — leaving out of view expenses of administration and statutory allowances to the widow. Counting those matters, the probable result of intestacy and the probable result of attempting to turn such property as Mr. Ball had into money, as he must have viewed the matter when he made the will, the court placed the net estate rather more than twice the real value.

At this point a serious infirmity appears in the trial disposition of the case in the judge’s opinion, — much more so in the findings. It is significant that the expenses of administration and the rights of the wife as to statutory allowances and the unsecured debts were wholly overlooked,' especially in the findings. That might have had a very material bearing on the final result. In the opinion the net estate was placed at $3,500, while, as before indicated, the figures were raised to $4,500 in the findings, wholly overlooking the unsecured debts and other matters which would necessarily require the equity in the real estate to be sold in order to obtain money for their discharge. To say that Mr. Ball could have thought the effect of his will would be to net his wife $4,500, or half that sum or *45much more tban $1,000 in excess of wbat she would be entitled to in a statutory distribution and settlement, does not seem to be borne out by a fair appreciation of the situation disclosed by the evidence.

In view of the general situation as above pictured, the theory of the decision that Mr. Ball made an unnatural disposition of his property must be unsound, unless there be sufficient in the detail circumstances of Mrs. Ball's conduct towards her husband and his conduct under her influence, to radically change the aspect of things. Without such efficient details, it looks as if he did about what a man seventy years of age, — of domestic habits, who had enjoyed a good home for about thirty-five years or so and been bereft of such for several years and, haviug a few more years in expectancy during which he would stand in great need of wifely care, and a small amount of property and taken for a companion a woman in honorable widowhood, strong in body and mind, of suitable age for the wifely duties he needed,- — might be expected to 'do, if such, knowing his habits, his infirmities, and his fortune, would be willing to enter into such a marriage contract. It is perfectly natural and by no means improper that such a union should take place, promoted only by mutual regard and expectation of the stronger party being remembered, pecun-iarily, in the end, and without any element of that personal nature characteristic of the flower of life. If Mr. Ball thought to reward his wife as well as he reasonably could for her services to him, and she thought to acquire and earn such pecuniary reward as her husband, under the circumstances, might be willing to bestow upon her when near the end and able to fairly measure the value of the consideration rendered by her, all was natural and proper. It would be a most lamentable state of things if, in responding to an appeal, in form, for protection of the testamentary right, the disappointed hopes of relatives, under such circumstances as we have here, should have such weight as to defeat the plan of an *46old. man, situated as Mr. Ball was, of providing for the care needed in the last years of his life.

So the feature of the decision, which evidently had great weight with the trial judge, found in this language:

“Her marriage to the deceased when he was nearly seventy years old, broken in health and burdened by age and his bad habit of alcoholism, was either very self-sacrificing on her part or the result of a design to financially profit by the marriage,”

was not entitled to such regard. The idea seems to be that, for a woman circumstanced as the one in question was to marry a man circumstanced like Mr. Ball, unless it were a case of self-sacrifice on the part of the former instead of anticipated pecuniary remuneration for physically caring for the latter, would be evidence of a design to exercise undue influence and so obtain the pecuniary element by fraud. That is unsound. There is nothing improper about such a marriage, intelligently entered into and characterized by mutual respect, enabling the parties to live peacefully and sympathetically together. There could not be mutuality of efficient adequate consideration in such a case, without the element which seems to have been supposed to be unworthy. There is nothing about such an element, by itself, to arouse even a suspicion of fraudulent intent. Therefore it was error to take such circumstance as a foundation badge of fraud and look thence for evidentiary details of a confirmatory nature.

On the point of whether the final disposition by Mr. Ball was unnatural we do not overlook the two incidents mentioned, that Mr. Ball did not recognize the moral obligation to reimburse his son Boy on account of the latter’s $600 in notes used by the former so many years before his death that the legal right to be paid therefor had been extinguished by the statutes of limitations, and the like moral obligation to his son Charles for $400 of borrowed money. Assuming absence of a clear preponderance of evidence against there being *47suck claims (and we will say in passing the evidence is not very satisfactory in favor thereof), Mr. Ball may well have thought the part reaching the sons of the thousand dollars of insurance money, under all the circumstances, pretty well evened up the account from a moral standpoint.

We will turn from the general features of the case to the first of the three primary essentials of undue influence, viz.: opportunity to commit the fraud. .The trial court found that, easily, from the circumstance that Mr. and Mrs. Ball lived, mostly, by themselves from the time of the marriage-till the end. He was customarily, until near the last, during business hours, like any business man, away from his home. There was no unnatural exclusiveness in the home life, so far as we can see. Except for an incident of Boy’s wanting to speak with his father about business matters between them, and Charles calling once or twice when Mrs. Ball thought the father was resting and did not wish, or ought not, to be disturbed, there is nothing to show that they, or any one else, was not free to see and talk with the sick man upon any proper occasion. He associated with Boy every day before the last sickness, saw him once afterwards, and he was free, so far as appears, except for his own fault, to help take care of his father at any time. The reason why he did not offer to do so will appear later. That Mr. Ball was protected from disturbance, under the circumstances, and Mrs. Ball endeavored to have only such persons with him as were needed for his proper care, is the usual thing and may well have been advised by the physician. So, while there was opportunity for undue influence to the extent, merely, that Mr. and Mrs. Ball lived in the seclusion and exclusion of married life, such is not the kind of opportunity, in general, referred to in such cases as this. The ordinary privacy of married life is not to be looked upon as opportunity for one of the pair to commit a fraud upon the other. There must be pretty conclusive proof of active efficient efforts to improperly seclude the person, *48said, to hare been defrauded by another, where the alleged wrongdoer and the alleged victim are husband and wife, to give the mere period and zone of isolation, even an atmosphere of suspicion.

On the next primary element in a case of this sort, — “a subject unquestionably susceptible to undue influence,”- — we are at a loss to discover any satisfactory evidence. Mr. Ball, by the uncontroverted evidence, even up to and for some time after the day when he made his testament, was a strong-minded, self-willed man. He gave very decided orders with reference to his business affairs, and firmly insisted upon their being carried out. There is no medical testimony, sufficient to carry any substantial weight, that up to the time the will was made his infirmities had seriously weakened his mind. There is no evidence that he was solicited to make the will or with reference to anything in it. The idea of making the will and the ideas which were embodied in it, appear, by all the direct evidence, to have been his own. He sent for the lawyer to draft the paper. True, he made his wife his messenger, but why not ? There is not even a ground for suspicion in that., He knew, with much definiteness, what he had to dispose of hy will, rightly thought it was but little, that he was under great obligations to his wife and was likely to be under still greater, before he died. He dictated what should go into the will, entirely separate and apart from her and with very full appreciation of what he had, what it was worth, and who were his heirs at law. All such matters were spoken of. Later the draft supposed to respond- to his wishes was read to, examined by, and decidedly approved by him. It was then executed without Mrs. Ball having any knowledge of what was in it or having anything to do with it, according to much and all the direct evidence, except that at the request of Mr. Ball she was the messenger sent to obtain presence of a person, suggested by him, for one of the witnesses. He was strong enough to arise from and sit on the edge of his bed *49while signing the paper and repulsed tbe suggestion of helping him. He showed then and for several days thereafter the self-will which had always been characteristic of his life. The paper was left in his possession at his request. All there was of a secretive character about keeping it from the public, was according to the natural order of things and at his request. He lived for about a month after the will was made, and, except the last few days at least of his life, was sound mentally. The direct evidence is full in respect to all these matters and so persuasive that we cannot well escape the conclusion that there is no legitimate basis in the record for holding Mr. Ball, at the date of his will, to have been, unquestionably, subject to undue influence.

We might stop at this point, but it will emphasize the result which must be reached by referring to a few of the infirmities, in detail circumstances, which evidently had much to do with the decision below'. It is said, Mrs. Ball took Mr. Ball to her home to live when they intermarried and that it was some distance from where he formerly resided. What wrong was there in that, or suggestion of improper design under the circumstances ? She had a home and Mr. Ball did not. True, it was a few blocks from where he formerly lived, but was easily reached in a few moments’ walk. The circumstance, though given much significance in the decision, really seems too unimportant to cut any figure in the case.

Mr. Ball, it is said, endeavored to have his wife named as beneficiary in the policy of insurance. No such subject is mentioned in the opinion, but it is given significance in the findings as if it required explanation by Mrs. Ball in addition to her positive direct testimony that she had nothing to do with it. Why such matter required explanation, is not perceived. Mr. Ball, as before indicated, took out the policy in favor of his first wife in the usual way. After she died, regardless of the real status, that he thought the policy belonged to him, and supposed that he had a right to carry out his pri*50mary idea of Ms surviving wife being tbe beneficiary, is most natural. Most men, circumstanced as be was, especially at tbe time wben be did wbat tbe trial court thought suspicious, would bave regarded sucb an insurance policy subject to their disposition. It was a thing wbicb be bought and paid for as much as anything else be possessed. It is not likely be appreciated that, in case of bis first wife predeceasing him, tbe policy would belong to bis children. He may well bave bad in mind, wben be married Mrs. McKelvery, remembering .her for giving him a home and nursing him in bis last days, conferring upon her tbe benefit of tbe life insurance in addition to her statutory allowances, and that wben be was unable to do so, concluded to provide for her as be did.

It is found that Mrs. Bull took much interest in her bus-band’s business and, did so increasingly, as bis infirmities progressed. Why should not a wife take an interest in her husband’s business affairs, more or less, according to bis ability to attend thereto without her aid ? Would a capable wife omit to do so under sucb circumstances as Mr. Ball was in? Instead of sucb an incident as tbe court referred to being regarded as indicative of a fraudulent design, should it not be looked upon as tbe very thing to bave been expected under tbe circumstances, — tbe thing wbicb both parties probably bad in contemplation in making tbe marriage contract ?

Mrs. Ball caused tbe arrest of Boy in order to exclude him from tbe barn, tbe findings suggest. We fail to discover support therefor. Instead, it appears that Mr. Ball rightly regarded Boy to be unsuitable to leave in control of the business and that it was essential to place some one else in charge. He came to that without interference by bis wife, so far as tbe record shows. He consulted bis former partner, Mr. Schlies-man, in respect to the matter three days after tbe will was made, resulting in tbe latter procuring tbe man Mr. Ball desired to employ, to call. Mr. Ball then acted entirely for himself in making tbe contract of employment; tbe employee, *51as a condition of Ms accepting service, requiring the removal of Boy from the barn. To accomplish that without ground for objection on Boy’s part, Mr. Ball sent Mm the amount due for wages and made Schliesman, not Mrs. Ball, the messenger to persuade Boy to vacate, which he refused to do; characterizing his act by very abusive language respecting his father. Failing of the purpose of his errand, Mr. Schlies-man reported to Mr. and Mrs. Ball; first to the latter who suggested seeing a lawyer, very naturally, then to the former; giving the opinion that legal proceedings would be required. Thereupon Mr. Ball said to his friend that he would attend to the matter himself and not bother Mr. Schliesman further, called his wife in and repeated that in her presence, and then, after expressing full appreciation of his approaching end, asked Schliesman to bear witness to his wishes respecting his funeral and burial; giving specific directions regarding the same, and saying that Ms wife would pay his debts, indicating appreciation of the fact of her appointment to handle his estate.

The last of the three visits by Mr. Schliesman was four days after the will was made and he expressed the opinion that Mr. Ball then was as clear in mind as ever. If there be anything, characterizing the affair of Boy’s being compelled to leave the bam, indicating that his father did not masterfully direct it himself and according to his own ideas, we cannot find it in the record. Why the suggestion that Mrs. Ball acted vindictively in the matter because she carried out her husband’s directions, where necessary to aid what he, for good reasons, desired to accomplish ?

The further circumstance is mentioned to show that Mrs. Ball perverted her husband’s mind as to his children, that she gave her two-year-old claim against Charles for laundry work to a lawyer for collection. The debt was contracted before her marriage. Charles made no claim but that he owed it and testified that his father probably sanctioned her effort *52to collect it. Why should not she have taken the course she did to coerce tbe young man into paying the bill be owed ber for washing ? It was contracted when he had no claim, moral or otherwise, upon her for gratuitous services. He was abundantly able to pay the bill. Why is there anything in the incident to the discredit of Mrs. Ball? Furthermore, as we read the evidence, contrary to the finding, the claim was not given to the lawyer for collection before a demand was made upon Charles. lie testified, “She gave the claim to Charles Smith, attorney, after I refused to pay it.” Mr. Ball may well have been indignant because of his son refusing to pay the laundry bill and thought to discipline him in the matter, as was done. Certainly the incident is not worthy of any consideration against Mrs. Ball.

As indicative of undue influence having been exercised and being active and efficient after the will was made, an incident of Mr. Ball having spoken in a very complimentary way to Mr. Schliesman in regard to the manner his wife was caring for him, considering his very bad condition which required close attention and services of a nature very difficult to obtain or render, all of which Mr. Schliesman had observed for himself; also the fact of Mr. Ball having requested that the making of his will might be kept secret, which was a perfectly natural thing, and other matters which, from our viewpoint do not fairly admit of any inference unfavorable to the proponent of the will.

It does not seem necessary to prolong the discussion. The only fair excuse for treating the case with so much fulness as we have is the fact, as it seems, that efficient undue influence was found from many circumstances which, as we look at the matter, hardly are of sufficient weight to arouse suspicion. Some really convincing evidentiary circumstances or direct evidence of undue influence is necessary in a case of this sort, particularly, where the alleged wrongdoer and the victim were husband and wife. Setting aside a man’s will is a *53very serious matter in. any case. It should not be done on mere suspicion or inconclusive circumstances. Proceedings in respect to such a matter should be with special care, where testamentary capacity is evident and the result may lead to defeat an apparent purpose of the testator to make his wife his beneficiary on account of peculiar circumstances, and the amount of property involved is quite moderate. To turn incidents of such wifely attention to a husband in his last days as a capable, faithful woman in good health, may and would be naturally expected, to bestow, so as to have the cast of an attempt to perpetrate a fraud, would be going too far. It seems that the evidence was not considered from quite the proper legal standpoint, — that inferences of wrong doing were deduced from incidents which were natural, rightful, and commendable, and that the refusal to admit the will to probate should not be sustained.

By the Court.- — The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded with instructions to reverse the judgment of the county court and to establish the will and remand the proceedings to such county court with directions for the settlement of the estate under the will. Costs taxed in this court to be paid out of the estate.