254 P. 455 | Wash. | 1927
This is an action in contest of the will of Thomas McKachney who died on July 25, 1925, a resident of Bremerton, Kitsap county, Washington. The will was executed on October 30, 1924, and was admitted to probate by the superior court of Kitsap county on July 28, 1925. Kittie Boaz, sole beneficiary under the will, was nominated as executrix and, upon the will being admitted, she was appointed executrix by the court and qualified as such.
Within the statutory period the Children's Relief Association of Kitsap county, a corporation for charitable *29 and benevolent purposes, commenced this contest alleging in their petition that the decedent had on February 25, 1924, duly executed and declared his last will and testament (tendered with the petition) whereby he devised and bequeathed all his property to that corporation, and alleging further that the instrument already admitted to probate was not the will of the decedent because at the date of it the decedent did not possess testamentary capacity, and further alleged that undue influence was used by the beneficiary named therein upon the mind of Thomas McKachney to induce him to sign the instrument. Kittie Boaz, as executrix and sole devisee, by her answer denied the allegations of want of testamentary capacity and the allegation of undue influence contained in the petition, with respect to the will already admitted.
The case was tried without a jury and at the conclusion of the testimony on behalf of the contestant the trial court sustained a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to make out a primafacie case in favor of the contestant and entered a judgment upholding the will of October 30, 1924, and the order admitting it to probate, and dismissed the contest proceedings. The contestant has appealed.
[1] In this case, the instrument later in point of time was duly admitted to probate as the will of the decedent. Thereafter the beneficiary under a will executed prior in point of time sought to have that will probated and at the same time contested the one already admitted. In such a case the statute, Rem. Comp. Stat. § 1387, [P.C. § 10019], provides that the previous order of the court probating the will shall be prima facie evidence of the legality of such will, and the burden of proving its illegality shall rest upon the person contesting such probation. This rule, as *30
stated in Hunt v. Phillips,
The contestant alleged that the will of October 30, 1924, already admitted to probate was invalid for two specific reasons. If the contestant would prevail, it, of course, must prove both or one of those allegations. In re Adin's Estate,
For this purpose the statement of facts has been carefully read and considered, rather than the abstract and supplemental abstract which together appear to be more voluminous than the statement of facts. The test of testamentary capacity is about as well defined by our cases as possible. It is given in the case ofIn re Seattle's Estate,
Affirmed.
MACKINTOSH, C.J., MAIN, FULLERTON, and ASKREN, JJ., concur.