42 Minn. 273 | Minn. | 1890
This controversy arises over the codicil to the last will of William H. Dike, deceased, the validity of which is contested by the respondents, on the sole ground that at the time of its execution he was not of sound disposing mind and memory. By his will’, which was made in 1886, he made the following disposition of the estate then possessed by him, viz.: “After my wife, Matilda M. Dike, has received what is secured to her by the laws of this state,
After the class of evidence we have referred to had been introduced on behalf of the proponent, and in connection therewith, as a part of her case, her counsel offered to prove that the week before the testator died he had arranged to have his will changed in the way it was changed by the codicil, and his declarations on that subject; and also that on the Saturday previous to his death he informed one Lowell that he would like to come to his office to make a change in his will, involving the disposition of two-thirds or three-fourths of the judgment referred to. This evidence was objected to by the contestants, and the court sustained the objection, on the ground that there was no question of undue influence in the case. It must be taken as a ruling upon the merits of the proposition. Had mere formal objections been made, they might have been obviated at the time. The question must therefore be deemed to be fairly raised as to the competency and materiality of such evidence on the issue of the testamentary capacity of the testator. We think the evidence was admissible on that issue. The question was, substantially, whether of his own free will the testator intended to make the testamentary disposition it is claimed he did make by his codicil, and whether he was able to and did comprehend the nature and effect of the transaction in its different bearings, including the subject-matter and the effect of the testamentary act upon his heirs and legatees named in the prior will. 1 Redf. Wills, *130, notes. A testator may be of sound disposing mind and memory sufficient to sustain- a will executed by him, though the state of his health and consequent mental condition may be unequal to business transactions of a more exacting nature; and his strength might hold out for the completion of a transaction involving but few details, and requiring his attention but a short time, while it would be insufficient for the disposition of a large estate under an elaborate will. Kempsey v. McGinniss, 21 Mich. 123; Schouler, Wills, § 32; Sheldon v. Dow, 1 Dem. Sur. 503. Certainly, then, in determining the question of the capacity of the testator to undérstand the situation in which he stood in relation to
Order reversed.