Mrs. Equilla Wood executed her will on the 22d day of January, 1912, giving all of her property except $100 to defendant in error. The $100 was given to plaintiff in error. The probate of the will was contested by plaintiff in error in the county court, and again in the district court, on the ground of mental incapacity of the testatrix, undue influence, fraud, and duress on the part of the defendant in error, Sarah L. Coleman, and her husband. Upon the trial, which resulted in the judgment from which this appeal is prosecuted, the case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and in response thereto the jury returned findings upholding the will.
It was shown that testatrix was 82 years of age when the will was executed, and that she died the following year; that the contestant, Adelia T. Rounds, plaintiff in error here, was the only daughter of testatrix; that in a financial sense she was in moderate circumstances, and 67 years of age; that the contestee, Sarah L. Coleman, is the daughter of contestant and the granddaughter of testatrix; that she was possessed of considerable wealth and less than 40 years of age; that the testatrix had lived with Sarah D. Coleman and her husband exclusively for many years prior to the execution of the will and was living with them at the time of her death; that the will was written while she was in the Coleman home, and the evidence tends to show that both the contestee and her husband were present when the will was signed. The existence of the will was kept secret from contestant until after the death of Mrs. Wood. It was *497 witnessed by kinsmen of the Colemans. There is some testimony showing that for a period preceding her death testatrix was mentally weak and childish and that she was frequently seriously ill; that she had’ great confidence in contestee’s husband, Who had managed her business matters for her and who it seems had proselyted her.
It was shown that contestee had intercepted letters which contestant had written to testatrix and withheld them; that in the year 1910 or 1911 testatrix had made a forn^er will, leaving her property to the contestant. There is some testimony showing that she intended to make a different disposition of her property than was finally made by the will, and had expressed the desire that the contestant have her land.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment is. reversed and the cause remanded.
<S=^For otter eases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
