This is аn appeal by the defendant from a judgment rendered upon the denial of a motion to set aside the verdict invalidating the will of Frank Salvatore. Error is assigned and pressed in the denial of the motion, in the charge and in rulings on evidence.
The defendant, as proponent of the will, madе the following claims of proof: Frank Salvatore died on May 12, 1955, aged seventy-eight years. He left a will executed on July 9, 1953, in which he gave the life use of the family home at 382 Rainbow Road, Windsor, to his widow, and the remainder, together with all of his other property, to Anna S. Hayden, his daughter, whom he designаted executrix. Anna, his oldest child, was crippled and walked with difficulty. She had long lived in a house owned by the testator which was next door to his home, аnd at one time she had worked for him in a grocery store *439 which he had conducted. There were six other children, Mary Quagliaroli, Josephine Petinus, Dominica Vannie and Leo, James, and Francis Salvatore. The testator’s reason for favoring Anna was that she was crippled, while the other six children were in good health, physically strong and able to care for themselves. The testator suffered a cerebral vascular аccident at his home on June 6, 1953, and was taken to St. Francis Hospital in Hartford, where he remained until July 17,1953. It was during this period, on July 9, 1953, that he executed his will. He had sufficient mental capacity to make a will and was not unduly influenced in favor of Anna.
The plaintiffs are James and Francis Salvatore, Dominiсa Vannie and Josephine Petinus. As contestants, they claim to have proven that the testator did not have sufficient mental capacity to make a valid will, that he was unduly influenced by Anna Hayden and Mary Quagliaroli, and that the latter, having procured an attorney to prepare the will, guided the testator’s hand in the execution of it while the testator was in a weak, feeble physical condition and in a confused and emotionally disturbed state of mind.
The defendant assigns error in the finding of certain paragraphs of her claims of proof. She also assigns error in the finding of a number of paragraphs of the plaintiffs’ claims of proof. In a jury case the claims of proof are used, not to test the court’s ruling оn the motion to set aside the verdict, but to consider errors claimed in the rulings during the trial and in the charge. The claims of proof found fairly present the facts necessary for this purpose. Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc. (2d Ed.) p. 199. Furthermore, a litigant ordinarily may not force
*440
into the claims of prоof of his adversary factual matters which are objectionable to the latter and upon which he does not rely.
Castaldo
v.
D’Eramo,
The court did not err in denying the
motion to
set aside the verdict. Undеr proper instructions from the court, the questions of the mental capacity of a testator and undue influence present issues of fact.
Nichols
v.
Wentz, 78
Conn. 429, 435,
The defendant assigns error in the court’s charge to the jury that “the natural objects of the testator’s bounty; that is, Frank Salvatore’s bounty, ... in this case, embraces the same persons as the phrase ‘heirs-at-law.’ ” The testator’s heirs at law were his wife and his children. Cum. Sup. §3002d; §7058. We have indicated that the phrase “natural objects of the testator’s bounty” does not mean those with whom the testator “has been on terms of cоnfidence, intimacy and affection, but those who will take in the absence of a will, his next of kin.”
Page
v.
Phelps,
The defendant complains of two rulings on evidence. JosepMne Petinus, one of the plaintiffs, was allowed, over objection, to testify to a stаtement made to her by the defendant pertaiMng to the making of the will. Under the circumstances, tMs statement was clearly admissible.
Richmond’s Appeal,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
