On the trial of this case in the Supreme Court of the District
of Columbia, that court, after examination of the facts, held that
"(1) where a will relates only to personalty, and is in the
handwriting of the testator and signed by him, no other formality
is required to render it valid" in the District, and that "(2)
Immaterial alterations in a will, though made after the testator's
death by one of the beneficiaries under it, will not invalidate it"
in the courts of the District "when not fraudulently made." This
Court, after passing upon the facts in detail, arrives at
substantially the same conclusions touching them as did the Supreme
Court of the District, and affirms its judgment.
Page 162 U. S. 384
The facts and the case are stated in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for our determination is whether the Supreme Court
of the District of Columbia at a general term thereof erred in
affirming the action of a special term of the court, sitting as a
circuit court, in peremptorily instructing a jury to find certain
issues in a will contest favorably to the defendants. The contest
in question was begun by Charles McIntire in the probate branch of
the court for the purpose of annulling the probate of a certain
alleged last will and testament of his elder brother, David
McIntire. The original contestant having died intestate pending the
action, he was succeeded as a party plaintiff, by his son his duly
qualified administrator, who was also, in his individual capacity,
a legatee under the probated will.
Issues were framed in the probate branch, and certified to the
circuit court, to be determined by a jury. The opinion of the
general term is reported in 19 D.C. 482.
The following facts were established, and are necessary to be
stated for a proper understanding of the case:
David McIntire resided in Washington from about 1866 until his
death at the age of 72 years, on April 1, 1884. He never married,
and left an estate consisting of personal property exceeding
$50,000 in value, and the following collateral kindred: Charles
McIntire, a younger brother, and his son, Charles McIntire, Jr.;
Edwin A. McIntire, Martha McIntire, Elizabeth M. Test, Emma T.
McIntire, and Adaline McIntire, children of a predeceased elder
brother, Edwin T. McIntire, and also the following grandnieces
and
Page 162 U. S. 385
grandnephews: Annie Laura McIntire, wife of William T. Galliher;
Emma v., William E., and Henry N. McIntire, children of Henry
McIntire, a deceased son of the testator's elder brother, Edwin T.
McIntire. For several years immediately prior to his death, David
McIntire lived at the home of William T. Galliher, husband of his
grandniece Annie Laura.
Four or five hours after the death of David McIntire, an
examination was made by his nephew Edwin A. McIntire, and by Mr.
Galliher and his wife, and her sister Emma v. McIntire, of a chest
which had belonged to decedent, and in a tin case therein were
found two separate writings, which were read and examined by each
one present. On April 8, 1884, these documents, pasted together,
were proved, in the probate branch of the Supreme Court of the
District, as the last will and testament of Mr. McIntire, by the
joint affidavit of the four persons above named, who, as above
stated, first inspected the writings after the death of the
testator. The documents were admitted to probate on April 12, 1884,
and letters of administration issued to E. A. McIntire. As
probated, the writing read as follows:
"January 7th, 1880"
"This my last will and Testament. I David McIntire, Tin Plate
Worker, of this city (of) Do will Bequeath or Devise to my Nephews
and Nieces That is to say, From July the first 1st eighteen hundred
and fifty-four (1854) To the opening of, or reading of this Paper,
One thousand three hundred and fifty dollars and sixty-four cents
(1,350.64) is to be calculated at Six 6 percent interest That
amount whatever it may be is to be given to each of my Brother
Edwin's children. The remainder if any, is to be equally divided
Between my Brothers Edwin and Charles children."
"David McIntire [Seal]"
(Endorsed on back:)
"The Judges of Courts lay it down as a rule in law that what a
person leaves in his handwriting, with his name attached, is his,
Will, and it is the law. The law, requires no
Page 162 U. S. 386
particular formality in action, or words to constitute a valid
will or request."
"David McIntire"
"January 1, 1880"
"At my death, or after i wish my body to be taken to
Philadelphia, and deposited in the 'Macphelah Cemetery' Vault with
the cover unscrewed and remain in that condition until friends or
relatives are satisfied, and then deposited in the lot with the
other graves. And providing 'Macphelah Cemetery' should be sold and
a disposition of those made in the family lot, by the family, then
the instructions as stated above is to follow that
disposition."
"David McIntyre or tire"
"To provide for the demise when it should come, to the great
proprietor of all. My clothing is to go to those that they fit. If
there is more than one, a rough estimate is to be made and divided
so recipients may have a word and be satisfied nephews first. I do
not leave them as a legacy they must take them as their own. To
avoid trouble,
i.e. not of any account whatever, To those
that i appoint to settle see that those things are carried
out."
"D. McInt."
"You must act understandingly there will be no money in
bank."
"If the articles are worth having. To give satisfaction to all
interested. Provided the surroundings should be disturbed. That is
the names i have written down with the articles attached to them.
It is my intention that they take them as their own."
"David McIntire"
"To Lizzy M'Intire Test as she is raising more boys. Hence, my
Chest with all my clothing or wearing apparel, coat vest, pants,
shirts, drawers, socks &c. The large double shawl the veghble
studs goes with the shirts. The sewing apparatus. The 5 glass
stopper vials."
"To Emma V. The writing desk with all the writing apparatus pens
ink, paper, envelopes, pencils. The cotton mufler, red silk
handkerchief and gold studs. "
Page 162 U. S. 387
"To Chas. M'Intire Jr. The telescope-gun and one pocket knife,
Webster's Dictionary and Pocket-Book."
"The linen Pocket handkerchief to Normy"
"The sachel & strap, Martha, Addyline, Emma."
It will subserve clearness of statement to mention here that the
sum specifically given by the writing dated January 7, 1880, to the
children of testator's brother Edwin equaled an indebtedness owing
to the testator by his younger brother Charles.
In February, 1885, a suit was filed on the equity side of the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia on behalf of Charles
McIntire, Jr., and Mrs. Galliher and her sisters and brothers, all
claiming as legatees under the probated will, seeking the
appointment of a receiver to take possession of the estate in
question until the appointment of a new administrator, it being
alleged that Edwin A. McIntire had been guilty of fraudulent and
deceptive practices, that his bond was insufficient, and that the
estate was not safe in his hands. An amicable settlement of this
suit was had.
Shortly after the adjustment of this suit, on June 5, 1885,
these contest proceedings, heretofore referred to as begun by
Charles McIntire, were instituted in the probate branch.
The amended petition of Charles McIntire contained the following
allegation with reference to the alleged invalidity of the will in
question:
"Petitioner further says upon information and belief that the
said paper writing bearing date January 7, 1880, was not executed
by the said David McIntire, or, if so executed, that he was not at
that time of sound mind, nor conscious of the contents of the same,
nor that he executed the same freely and voluntarily, nor that the
same is his final and complete last will, and he is advised and
believes that the said paper writings purporting to be the last
will and testament of the said David McIntire have been
fraudulently altered by the said Edwin A. McIntire, with the intent
and effect thereby to cheat and defraud the next of kin of said
decedent."
Answers were filed on behalf of Edwin A. McIntire, his
Page 162 U. S. 388
sisters, and their mother (as assignee of her daughter Adaline,
who died in July, 1885), and the issues certified to the circuit
court branch to be determined by a jury were as follows:
"1. Was the paper writing, as now probated, and now bearing date
January 7, 1880, purporting to be the last will and testament of
said David McIntire, deceased, executed by said David McIntire in
due form as required by law?"
"2. Was the said David McIntire at the time of the alleged
execution of the said paper writing, as now probated, and now
bearing date January 7, 1880, of sound and disposing mind, and
capable of making a valid deed or contract?"
"3. Were the contents of the said paper writing, as now
probated, and now bearing date January 7, 1880, read to or by the
said David McIntire, or otherwise made known to him at or before
the execution thereof?"
"4. Was the said paper writing, as now probated and now bearing
date January 7, 1880, executed by the said David McIntire under the
undue influence or by the fraud of any person or persons?"
"5. Is the said paper writing, as now probated and now bearing
date January 7, 1880, the complete and final last will and
testament of the said David McIntire?"
"6. Has the said paper writing, purporting to be the last will
and testament of the said David McIntire, deceased, probated on the
8th day of April, 1884, or any part thereof, been fraudulently
altered since the death of the said David McIntire, and before the
probate thereof, by any person or persons, to the prejudice of any
of the next of kin or heirs at law of said David McIntire?"
"7. Has the said instrument, purporting to be the last will and
testament of said David McIntire, deceased, been in any respect
altered since the death of said David McIntire, the same documents
which were found in the made, what were the said alterations, and
how were they made? Were such alterations made by any party
interested under said, will, or with the privity of any party
interested under said will?"
"8. Has the said instrument purporting to be the last will and
testament of said David McIntire, deceased, or any part thereof,
been revoked? "
Page 162 U. S. 389
Two trials of these issues were had. On the first, the findings
of the jury were set aside. On the second trial (June, 1889), the
court instructed the jury to find all the issues favorably to the
defendants, which was done, and general term overruled a motion for
a new trial.
With this preliminary statement, we come to the consideration of
the question whether the trial court rightly instructed the jury to
return a verdict in favor of the defendants. In the proceedings
before the jury, no attempt was made to establish that the testator
had ever been of unsound mind or that the execution of the
testamentary writings in question were the result of the exercise
upon him of any undue influence; hence the second and fourth issues
were properly determined. So also, the evidence all tended to show
that the writings in question were the same documents which were
found in the tin case belonging to the deceased, and that the
contents were in his handwriting, except insofar as the questions
of alteration or suppression are concerned, which we shall
hereafter consider.
To the extent, therefore, of these facts, the instructions given
by the trial court were also undoubtedly correct.
The real controversy is whether there was proof supporting the
claim that material alterations had been made in the will after the
death of the testator and before its probate, and also whether
there was proof sustaining the charge that a material part thereof
had been suppressed. The conflicting contentions of the parties on
this subject are as follows: the contestant asserts that evidence
was introduced tending to show that the will proper, when it was
first taken by Edwin A. McIntire into his possession, was dated
January 1, 1880, whereas as probated it, reads January 7, 1880;
that the date of the second paper or codicil had been altered from
January 1, 1884, so as to read January 1, 1880: that the words "of
the city of," in the will proper, had been altered by Edwin A.
McIntire, or by his procurement so as to read "of this city;" that
the second writing or codicil, which disposed of the wearing
apparel, was originally a full double sheet of legal-cap paper, but
that one of the folds -- that is, one-fourth of a half
Page 162 U. S. 390
sheet, which had upon it matter written by the testator, had
been torn off after it had been taken into E. A. McIntire's
possession, and before the writing was probated; that the proof
showed that this was done with the connivance of the defendants.
The defendants, on the other hand, assert that the clear
preponderance of proof established that the will as probated was in
the condition in which it was found after the death of the
testator. Both parties, besides the direct evidence by them
offered, introduced much indirect testimony to sustain their
respective positions. Thus the contestant sought to corroborate his
theory that the will had been materially altered by testimony going
to show that, subsequent to January 1, 1880, the testator had
become unfriendly to the contestees who are named in the alleged
writing, and had presumably altered the will which he had
previously written in their favor. On the other hand, the
defendants assert that their contention is fortified by evidence
tending to show that, prior and subsequent to the 1st of January,
1880, the testator was greatly incensed at his brother Charles
because of the existence of a long outstanding indebtedness due him
by Charles, which has been heretofore referred to, and therefore
had reason not to make a will in his favor. In addition, the
contestant, in order to sustain the alleged proof of material
alterations and suppression, offered much evidence, which was
excluded, which, it was claimed, if it had been admitted, would
have tended to show that Edwin A. McIntire, with the approval of
the other defendants, made false representations to the probate
judge in procuring the grant of letters of administration and in
fixing the amount of the bond to be by him given in that capacity;
that deceptive practices were resorted to to prevent the testator's
brother Charles, who resided in Pennsylvania, from seeking to
qualify as administrator, and that untruthful and fraudulent
statements were also made by E. A. McIntire to the legatee Charles
McIntire, Jr., to his attorneys, and to others as to the amount of
the estate and its assets, and also that E. A. McIntire concealed
the possession of a large amount of assets, and made a false
inventory. It is manifest that the correctness of the ruling
Page 162 U. S. 391
of the lower court in instructing a verdict, as well as the
question whether prejudicial error resulted from the action of the
court in excluding the testimony as to McIntire's misconduct in
relation to the inventory and his misrepresentations and fraudulent
action as to other matters (apart from the alleged alterations or
suppression of the will), must depend primarily on whether the
direct testimony as to alterations and suppression left it
uncertain whether such alterations or suppressions were of a vital
character. If there was not only no adequate proof to have
supported a verdict resting on the fact that there had been
material alterations and suppression, but, on the contrary, if was
a clear preponderance of proof the other way, it is obvious that it
becomes immaterial, for the purpose of ascertaining the validity of
the will, to determine whether or not in other respects McIntire
was guilty of fraud and wrongdoing.
In examining the testimony for the purpose of ascertaining
whether there is any proof of material alteration and suppression,
the question to be determined is whether there was any proof of
such alteration or suppression as would have sustained an
affirmative answer by the jury to the eighth issue. The mere fact
that the proof may have established that, after the death of the
testator, alterations were made which did not materially change the
will, and which were not of such a nature as to justify the
presumption that the testator had revoked the will in whole or in
part, would not have authorized a verdict the result of which would
have been to set aside the probate of the will.
We come now to determine whether there was evidence that there
had been such material alterations or suppression as would have
supported a verdict setting aside the will. The only witnesses
testifying on this subject on behalf of the contestant were Mr. and
Mrs. Galliher and Emma v. McIntire. Before examining the testimony
of these three witnesses, it must be borne in mind, as already
stated, that they all three read the contents of the documents in
question after the death of David McIntire, when they were first
taken from the receptacle in which they were found. These witnesses
were peculiarly
Page 162 U. S. 392
interested in the provisions of the writings, as they naturally
anticipated that the deceased would give at least a portion of his
estate to the children of his dead nephew, with whom he had been
for many years in direct contact under the same roof. Seven days
following this careful reading and inspection of the papers, they
stated under oath, in an affidavit intended to be the basis for the
admission of the writings to probate, that
"these papers were discovered in a tin case in a chest late the
property of the decedent; that they are now, and have been for
years past, well acquainted with the handwriting of the deceased,
and they believe the entire writing and signatures are in his
handwriting."
After the will had been admitted to probate and the
administrator appointed, in February, 1885, in the petition filed
in the equity suit, supported by the affidavits of these witnesses,
they treated the writings in question as a valid will of David
McIntire and asserted rights under it. The testimony given by these
witnesses as to the alterations in the will is as follows:
Mrs. Galliher testified that she read over the papers when they
were found, and that the one dated January 1, 1880, originally bore
the date January 1, 1884, while the one now dated January 7, 1880,
originally read January 1, 1880, and the latter paper had on it the
words "of the city of," instead of the words, as now, "of this
city;" that the document was written on a new, full-length sheet of
paper, one-eighth of which is now missing, and "looked as if it had
been just written, folded, and put in the chest." The two papers
were disjoined. The next she saw of the papers after Edwin A.
McIntire retained possession of them was in the probate court on
April 8, 1884, when she deposed to their genuineness. She said she
then noticed the change in the date and the alteration of the words
"of the city of," and called the attention of her uncle (E. A.
McIntire) thereto, who replied that he thought it better to have
them both one date, and that he altered the will to read "of this
city," "because otherwise he would have to take it to Philadelphia
to probate it, and he could not give bond there." Mrs. Galliher
further testified that she did not think she noticed at that time
that a part of the will had been
Page 162 U. S. 393
torn off. She was asked the question, "At the time of signing
this affidavit, did you know that those papers had been altered and
mutilated?" and answered:
"Yes, sir, but, as I said, Mr. McIntire told me that that made
no difference. I had perfect confidence in him. He was is lawyer,
and I knew nothing about it. He was my uncle, and I thought I could
trust him."
The witness also testified that she remembered particularly that
upon the paper originally dated 1884 there was contained a bequest
of the testator's glasses to those who would take them or have
them. She was asked, "Did you know whether there was any other
writing on the papers?", and answered, "That I don't remember."
On cross-examination, in answer to the question how she came to
make the examination of the papers which resulted in discovering
that a portion of one paper had been torn off, the witness answered
that it was indirectly caused by receiving an intimation from her
uncle Edwin A. McIntire that her brothers, sister, and herself
would not be beneficiaries under the will, and that on such second
examination, she discovered that there had been slight alterations
in two letters "of" that she had not noticed on the day the will
was probated, and she also then noticed that a fold of the second
paper was torn off, because she missed the provision about the
glasses. The witness claimed that the bequest of the glasses was
impressed upon her memory because of the oddity of the expression
concerning them. She also testified that she had the paper
sufficiently in her mind to miss anything that was taken out of it
that had been impressed upon her memory. She was then asked, "Now,
would you say to the jury that there was no other writing on that
fold that you say was torn off?" and answered: "That I do not
remember. I can't say that there was or was not." The witness also
testified that she was prejudiced against her aunts and their
brother on account of an alleged conspiracy on their part to hurt
her husband's good name; that the contestant came to see her about
the will in February or March, 1885 at a time when she was
dissatisfied, because she was not a beneficiary under
Page 162 U. S. 394
it. She further testified that she thought the will as probated
was all right, and should stand as the last will of David McIntire
until she discovered that she was not to be benefited by it.
Mr. Galliher testified that he read and examined the papers
found in the tin case; that he thought the paper now dated January
7, 1880, was the same paper, except as to the alterations already
referred to; that the paper now dated January 1, 1880, was
originally dated January 1, 1884, and that he made a copy of it on
April 1, 1884, and that he made a memorandum of the items on the
other, which memorandum, however, was not exhibited. He said that
at the time he signed the affidavit for probate of the writings, he
probably read the affidavit which he signed, but did not notice the
alterations, and first learned of them from his wife upon leaving
the courtroom. He did not then return to examine the will, but
sometime after went back and looked at the papers, and then
discovered the changes of date, and the alterations of the word
"the" to "this," and the erasure of the word "of," but did not
think he then noticed that a part of one sheet was gone.
Subsequently, on his attention's being called to the absence of the
provisions in reference to the glasses, he again examined the
papers, and thought it was then he discovered that a portion had
been torn off. He was asked, "Did you know of any other writing on
those papers besides the expression about the glasses, to which you
have referred, that is not there now?" and answered, "I do not,
sir." On cross-examination, the witness testified that he had a
distinct and clear recollection that the codicil was a complete
sheet at the time it was taken from the chest, and that it was
probably within a month after the probate of the will that he
discovered that it had been mutilated. He could not, however,
assign any reason why, after being informed by his wife of the
alterations on leaving the courthouse immediately after the probate
of the will, he did not at once return, and, if the fact was as
claimed, call the attention of the court to the matter. The witness
further testified that for a good while after the probate, he
thought his wife was a legatee
Page 162 U. S. 395
under the will. He made the second examination of the will at
the courthouse before the intimation from Mr. McIntire that his
wife would have no interest under the will, "so as to know of my
[his] own knowledge that these corrections had been made." When
asked how he happened to discover that a part of one paper was torn
off, he answered:
"Because it was a whole sheet at the time I turned it over to E.
A. McIntire, and this bequest was on there in regard to the
glasses; that portion of the sheet had disappeared and that bequest
was not on there."
Despite the discovery of the alleged alterations and mutilations
referred to, the witness said he did not go to see Mr. McIntire or
demand from him an explanation, and did not call the attention of
anybody to the subject until some six or eight months afterwards,
when he spoke of it in the office of certain attorneys on being
interrogated in regard to the alterations. Prior to that, after
hearing from Mr. McIntire that his wife would not share in the
estate, witness consulted an intimate friend, a lawyer; but the
witness said he did not think he told him that the will had been
mutilated and altered.
Emma V. McIntire testified that on her inspection of the
writings when they were taken from the chest on April 1, 1884,
there was no paper dated January 7, 1880, but that the paper now
bearing such date was one of the papers found, except as to the
date; also, that the words "of the city or," in said paper, had
been altered to read "of this city." This witness also testified
that she thought the second paper, now dated January 1, 1880, was
one of the papers found in the chest, except that the date was
January 1, 1884, when she first saw it, and that a remark to the
effect that the paper was written the January previous to the death
of testator was made at the time the papers were examined, on April
1, 1884. She also testified that she thought the second paper was
"originally a complete sheet; just the length of the other one."
She remembered having heard the paper read, and that there was some
remark in it about glasses. She further testified that both papers
were read aloud, and that then each one took them and read them
severally, and that they all
Page 162 U. S. 396
supposed that she and her sister and brothers were entitled to
the share in their uncle David's estate which would have come to
their father had he lived. The witness also swore that she did not
discover the alterations when she verified the affidavit in the
probate court wherein she averred the authenticity of the
documents, though she read the papers carefully at the time she
made the affidavit, which latter statement, however, was
subsequently qualified on cross-examination by the statement that
perhaps she had not read them as carefully as she ought to have
done. She further stated that she did not notice the alterations
until her sister called her attention to them.
The foregoing condensed summary is substantially all the
testimony given by Mr. and Mrs. Galliher and Emma V. McIntire
bearing upon the question of the alleged material alterations and
suppression of the documents constituting the probated will. As
already stated, these witnesses were the only ones who testified on
this subject on behalf of contestant, and upon their testimony the
case necessarily depends. If we leave entirely out of view the
evidence of the defendants to the effect that the papers
constituting the will as probated were precisely in the condition
they were when taken from the tin case, we do not think a jury
could have properly inferred from this testimony that in the
alleged missing portion of the will there existed provisions so in
conflict or inconsistent with the probated will as to have operated
to materially alter or revoke it. That the actual alterations to
which the witnesses testify in no way materially modified or
abrogated the will is too clear for discussion. The whole case,
hence, depends upon the assertion that there was sufficient
evidence to have authorized the jury to find that there was a
material mutilation or suppression. But none of the three witnesses
testified (granting their testimony as to the mutilation to have
been true) that the part torn off contained anything but the
reference to the glasses of the testator. It is urged, however,
that while they recollected that the torn-off part had in the
memoranda as to the glasses, they did not remember whether it
embraced anything else, and therefore
Page 162 U. S. 397
non constat that it might not have contained other
things, and thus would have justified the jury in drawing the
presumption of a fraudulent suppression of provisions which, if
known, might have revoked or modified the will. But this contention
entirely obscures the difference between the failure of a witness
to recollect a fact which, from the nature and extent of his
knowledge, he must necessarily have recalled if it existed (hence
giving rise to the implication that, where it is not remembered, it
did not exist), and the contrary case where, from the position and
means of knowledge of a witness, his failure to remember justifies
no such deduction. The failure of these witnesses to remember comes
clearly under the first of these categories. They were willing and
friendly witnesses for the contestant, manifestly desirous of
stating everything favorable to his claims. They examined the will
immediately after the death. They then not only heard it read
aloud, but also read it themselves. They then thought that they
were interested in it as legatees. If any provision had existed
revoking the will, or materially changing its provisions, such fact
would, in the very nature of things, have been impressed upon their
minds above and beyond everything else. When, therefore, after
swearing to the validity and completeness of the will for the
purpose of probate, after asserting rights under it in the equity
suit filed against the administrator, they subsequently declared
that they did not recollect whether there had been any material
alteration or suppression, their want of memory necessarily
negatives the presumption which might otherwise result from their
testimony if their sources of information and relation to the will
had not been of the kind just mentioned. This is particularly the
case as to the testimony of Mr. Galliher. He not only examined and
read the will after the death, not only testified as to its
completeness when it was probated, but actually made a complete
copy of the will proper, and a memorandum of the items of the other
paper or codicil at the time when it was examined, and before it
was turned over to E. A. McIntire to be probated. The context of
his testimony indicates that before he testified at the trial, he
refreshed his memory by reference
Page 162 U. S. 398
to the contemporaneous copy and memoranda. It follows,
therefore, when in answer to the point-blank question, "Did you
know of any other writing on those papers besides the expression
about the glasses to which you have referred that is not there
now?" he said, "I do not know, sir," that he negatived the
possibility of there having been such material alterations, because
his means of knowledge were such that he must necessarily have
known of the fact had it existed. Indeed, we can see no reason to
doubt that if the issue presented had been probate
vela
non, the testimony introduced by the contestant here would
have justified the admission of the documents to probate -- that
is, after eliminating the immaterial alterations which the
testimony of the contestant asserts to have been made. This being
true, it follows that the testimony which would have been adequate
to probate the will cannot at the same time, be sufficient to
destroy the probate and annul the will.
The case of
Jones v. Murphy, 8 Watts. & Serge. 275,
relied upon by the plaintiff in error, is not in point. In that
case, the existence of a second will was proved, which the evidence
tended to show had been destroyed by interested parties, but these
was an absence of direct evidence of the contents of the missing
paper. Evidence was introduced, however, justifying the inference
that the testator might have designed an alteration of the
provisions of the earlier will in favor of a daughter, from whom he
was estranged when the first will was executed but who subsequently
became reconciled to her father. The court held that where a
fraudulent suppression was proved, and, in addition, other
circumstances, such as a motive for a material change in a former
will, the jury, in the absence of evidence as to the contents of
the later testamentary writing, might presume that it contained a
clause revoking the prior will. Here, however, we have two
documents -- the will proper, evidently deliberately and carefully
written, and another instrument, having the effect of a codicil,
both being sedulously preserved by the testator. It is an asserted
change or suppression in the latter instrument which, it is
contended, would have justified the jury in finding the will to
have been revoked,
Page 162 U. S. 399
although the testimony affirmatively established that even if
the suppression asserted existed, it contained no provision
revoking the will. The necessary effect of the action of the trial
judge in directing findings favorable to the contestees was to hold
that the contestant was not entitled to relief. In this conclusion
we concur, although the negative answers given to the fifth and
seventh questions are not literally accurate in the light of the
evidence as to the immaterial alterations offered on behalf of the
contestant. The judgment is therefore
Affirmed.