delivered the opinion of the Court.
Anniе G. Mitchell, when more than eighty years of age, after making certain small bequests to others, devised unto her servant or attendant, Annie C. Hemler, one of the appellees, all the rest and residue of her estate to the exclusion of her heir at law.
A caveat to thе will was filed by Eleanor M. Thompson, a niece of the testatrix, who died while the-proceedings thereunder were pending, and Harry M. Benzinger, her executor, was, upon his petition, made a party plaintiff in substitution for- her. The caveat contained a number of issues,- but at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case, all' were eliminated except the one of undue influence.
In the course of the trial, Albert S'. Gill, her attorney, who was the draftsman of the will, and who was also- named as executor therein, was offered as a witness by the plaintiff, and was askеd as to the transactions; circumstances, and instructions given to him by the testatrix in connection with the preparation of the will, and what was said by hear in relation thereto at the time the same was prepared.
The defendant objected to the admission of this testimony on the ground that it was a privileged communication. The Court sustained the objection and this ruling of the. Court presents the main question upon this appeal.
Lord Brougham, in the early ease of Greenough v. Gaskill, 1 My. & K. 98, in speaking of the rule which protects from disclosure all confidential communications between solicitor and'eliеnt, said: “It is founded on a regard to the interest of justice, which cannot be upholden, and to the administration of justice, which cannot go on without the aid of men skilled in jurisprudence, in the practice of the courts, and in those matters affecting rights and obligations which form the subject of all judicial proceedings. If the privilege did not exist at all, every one would he thrown on his own legal resources; deprived of all professional assistance, a man would not venture to consult any skillful person, or would only dare to tell his counsellor half his casе.”
*583 Professor Wigmoro in his work on Evidence, Vol. 4, par. 2314, after discussing the question of privilege as applicable to attorney and client in cases, other than will contests, says: “But for wills a special consideration comes into- play. Here it can hardly he doubted that the execution and especially the contents are impliedly desired by the client to be kept secret during his life time, and are accordingly part of the confidential communications. It must be assumed that during that period the attorney should not he called upon to disclose even the fact of a will’s еxecution, much less its tenor. But, on the other hand, this confidence is intended to he temporary only. That there may he such a qualification to the privilege is plain.”
The privilege is the clients and not the attorney’s. The rule exists for the benefit not of the attorney but of the client. It does not rest simply upon the confidence reposed by the client in the solicitor, for there is no rule in other cases in which, at least, equal confidence is reposed; in the cases, for instance, of medical advisors and patients, and of clergymen and prisoners. It seemls to rest not upon the confidence itself hut upon the necessity of carrying it out. Russell v. Jackson, !) Hare, 387.
In the case of Russell v. Jackson, supra, which seems to he generally regarded as the leading case upon the rule, the contest was between the heirs and devisees of the will, and the Court in that case said: “The сourts; when called upon to apply it, must of course have regard to the foundation on which it rests,, and not extend it to cases, which do not fall within the mischief it was designed to prevent,. In eases where the rights and interests of the client, or of those claiming under him, come in conflict with the rights and interests of third persons, there can be no difficulty in applying the rule.”
In that case, as in the case before us, the question was, to which of the two parties claiming under the client the property belonged. The learned chancellor there said, “it would seеm to he a mere arbitrary rule to hold that it belongs to *584 one- of them rather than to the other.” In that case the distinction was- made between cases in which the contest was between parties claiming under the client and those cases where the contest was between parties claiming under the client and third persons, holding that in the first of these cases the rule did not apply, while in the second, it did. Blackburn v. Crawford, 3 Wallace, 175.
In
Glover
v.
Patten,
In re Young’s Estate,
*586 The authorities cited above make it reasonably clear that the right to' invoke the privilege was withheld from both at common law when the issues involved affected' the integrity of the will. If this be so, why should nоt the attorney who prepared the will be required to disclose all that he knows concerning the real state of mind of the testator ? The attorney may know by whom and to what extent the testator was influenced. Again, he may know 'that the testator was not influenced, at all, and may further know the very reasons that controlled him in doing what he did in making the will. In the first instance, should the person causing the will to be made be protected by the' privilege ? And in the latter case, should the one who claims undue influence be pennitted to invoke it and thus make certаin circumstances to which he points and which may 'be easily explained' to stand as the real truth ? The privilege was not extended to will contests at common law and, as our statute is no broader than the common law upon the subject, we have no fight, even if we were inclined to do so, to' extend the privilege to will contests.”
The rule, we think, is well stated in the note
In re Young,
17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 108, in which it is said: “It may be laid down as a general rule of law, gathered from all the authorities, that, unless provided otherwise, by statute, communications by a client to the attorney who drafted his will, in respect to that document, and all transactions occurring between them leading up to its execution, are not, after the client’s death, within the protection of the rule as to privileged communications, in a suit between the testator’s devisees and heirs at law, or other parties who all clаim under him.”
Russell
v.
Jackson, supra; In re Young, supra; Glover
v.
Patten, supra; Kern
v.
Kern,
The defendant, in support of her contention that the privilege exists in this case and that the evidence offered should
*587
not have been admitted, relies chiefly upon the case of
Chew
v.
Farmers’ Bank,
In that ease the defendant did not claim through the testatrix or under the will concerning which the evidence was offered. They were not only not claiming under her, but were resisting tbe claim made by her, and the action of the Court in refusing to admit the evidence was. altogether consistent with the rule abovе stated.
The defendant also cited the case of Gurley v. Park, 135 Did. 442, in support of her contention. The Indiana Court, in discussing that case in the subsequent case of Kern v. Kern, supra,, said: “While the rule announced by the Court in Gurley v. Park is doubtless a correct one in disputes between the client’s representatives on the one hand and strangers on the other, we do not think it applies where both the litigаting parties claim under the client. The attention of the Court' docs not appear to have been called to this distinction, and none of the cases bearing upon it is referred to in tbe opinion. We regard this qualification of tbe general rule as a very materiаl one, and, to tbe extent that the opin *588 ion in Gurley v. Park conflicts with the view we have expressed that case is overruled.”
There are cases in which evidence of the character mentioned, where all the parties claimed under the testator, has been excluded, but mоst of these, if not all of them, are based upon statutes and not upon the common law.
The Court erred, in our opinion, in not permitting Major Grill, the draftsman of the will, to testify as to the trans-actions, circumstances and instructions given by the testatrix to him in connection with the will and its preparation, as, well as what was said by her at such time relative thereto.
It is contended, however, by the appellee that even though the Court erred in this respect, such error was harmless, in view of other admitted testimony. In this we cannot agree with her, in view of the relation еxisting between the witness and the testatrix, and tire weight that would naturally be given to the evidence of such witness by the jury.
But the Court was right in excluding the evidence of others as to what Mr. Gill had told them the testatrix had said to him at such time, as it violated the rule against the admission of hearsay testimony.
The Court granted the defendant her second and third prayers to which ruling of the Court the plaintiff excepted. The third prayer of the defendant, it is true, is not as full as the prayer in
Hiss
v. Weik,
Rulings reversed, and new trial awarded.
