Judges: Lott, Surr
Filed Date: 9/20/1888
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The objections to the probate of the will in this matter are reduced, so far as the proofs are concerned, to the single question, had the decedent testamentary capacity? It is shown beyond all dispute that the testator had sufficient mental ability to transact all the affairs attending the management of a large estate, with discernment, and with such judgment that his fortune was largely increased, subsequent to a period when, as it is claimed by the contestants, he was incompetent to make a will. It has not been shown that in a single instance, down to the close of his life, the testator, although he personally attended to the many transactions connected with his estate, did other than what was beneficial to his interests. The correspondence of the testator in evidence, which is very voluminous, and is continued to within a few days of his death, shows, in my judgment, that he was not only competent to make a will, but also that he was possessed of a mind capable of grasping all the affairs of his life. To this proof is added the testimony of all those with whom he had business or social relations, showing, as I believe, that while he was for a long time before his death in failing bodily health, his mind was not in any wise impaired. It is true that on some occasions he uttered unusual expressions, yet I think they are sufficiently accounted for by the physical diseases from which he suffered. If any doubt existed on that point it is removed by the medical testimony, which, to my mind, sufficiently accounts for the occurrences I refer to as flowing from physical, rather than mental, disease. The point most pressed in this controversy relates to the provisions of the will as they regard the testator’s son. The decedent in his will has referred to the reason for the dispositions complained of by his son, *