105 A. 1 | N.H. | 1918
The plaintiff as the proponent of the will had the burden of proving its due execution, voluntarily, by a competent *91
testator; in short, that the paper offered for probate was a will. Patten v. Cilley,
Undue influence which will avoid a will is defined in the charge to the jury reported in Whitman v. Morey,
It is plain the record contains no evidence of undue influence as above defined. The contestant does not controvert the plaintiff's evidence of the free and uncontrolled action of the testator in the direction and execution of the will but relies on the statement of the plaintiff's husband that he thought the plaintiff could get the testator to make a will and her subsequent interview with him and the friendly relations of the parties. The evidence may disclose opportunity but opportunity and accomplishment are not identical or proved by the same evidence. The relations between the families, and the neighborly services performed for the testator tended to explain the will. The care and attention bestowed on Mr. Osgood by the plaintiff and her husband may have influenced him to make his will as he did. There is evidence it did, but there is no evidence that they deceived him or compelled his action by excessive importunity. However intimate the families may have been, they did not live together. The testator maintained an independent household and was personally cared for by attendants directed and paid by him. There was no evidence of intimate physical or mental association. The will *93 interrupted the operation of the statute of descents: such is usually the purpose of a will. While the testator's relations with his legal heirs were friendly and he thought highly of them there is no evidence they were in any way dependent upon him, or of any moral obligation on his part to permit his property to descend to them.
The evidence tending to show the testator did not wish his property to go to his heirs and why, is not important here. The jury might not believe it. There was no evidence of an intention to die intestate. The evidence of a contrary intention merely emphasizes the absence evidence material here. Some time previous to making the will the plaintiff told the testator he was not obliged to remember his relatives in making the will. Such is the law. Furthermore the testator was not controlled by the statement because he did remember them in the will. There was evidence that some ten years before, Mr. Osgood expressed to his brother's widow a hope or wish that his household furniture and silver should not go out of the family. This is evidence of a purpose contrary to that expressed in the will, but the inference that a change of purpose after such a lapse of time was not freely made would be conjecture merely.
The appellant in support of his contention that there was evidence of undue influence relies upon Edgerly v. Edgerly,
The plaintiff's evidence of the voluntary execution of the will by a competent testator tended to sustain its validity. The sole question therefore is, was there any substantial evidence tending to prove undue influence? In the circumstances proved in Edgerly v. Edgerly such evidence was found. But the present case is clearly distinguishable therefrom. In that case there was evidence that the plaintiff, against whom undue influence was charged, was the confidential adviser of the testatrix in respect to all her business affairs; that her condition, mental and physical, was such that she was practically incapable of forming new ideas and could be easily influenced by the plaintiff; that she had an intention of dying intestate but the plaintiff, anxious to have her make a will in his favor and knowing her condition, took her to a scrivener and remained with her while she executed a will in his favor. The inferences which might be drawn *94 from these facts were held to constitute evidence of undue influence in the making of the will.
In the instant case there is no evidence the plaintiff or her husband advised the testator as to his business or had charge of it. Though enfeebled from physical suffering he managed his own affairs up to the time of his death; there is no evidence he was under anyone's control; he had earlier declared an intention of making a will and consequently did not have an intention of dying intestate; there was no evidence the plaintiff had ever influenced the testator; neither she or her husband were present when the will was drawn. None of the conditions relied on as furnishing evidence for the jury in Edgerly v. Edgerly are in evidence here. The case is much stronger for the proponent of the will than Page v. Bilbruck,
Substantially all the evidence as to the relations between the testator and the plaintiff and her husband is found in their testimony. If the jury refused them any credit, disbelieved their statements entirely, the case is as if they were not called to the stand. Absence, of evidence because of the untrustworthy character of the testimony offered would be as fatal to the defendant's answer to the plaintiff's, prima facie case as the failure to call witnesses. Belief or disbelief of the witnesses called in support of or in opposition to the will was the jury's province, but the power of disposing of his property by will was a part of the testator's property right guaranteed him by statute. Thompson v. Kidder,
Decree for the plaintiff.
All concurred.