In the present action a deed of valuable real testate, purporting to have been execnted by an old and feeble woman upon her deathbed, in favor of her companion, is attacked as obtained' by fraud and undue influence. These charges were found true by the trial court and the deed was declared void, and from this judgment the grantee appeals.
Before proceeding to the consideration of the merits of the case we shall consider certain questions raised as to the rulings of the trial court upon the admission of evidence. The deed in question bears date on the 2d day of September, 1898. Mrs. Abbey was then very sick and confined to her bed and died two days thereafter. The deed was prepared by Mr. C. T. Ileydecker, an attorney residing and practicing at Wau-kegan, at the request of Miss Itzel and Mr. Braunschweiger. The certificate of acknowledgment certified that Mrs. Abbey acknowledged that she signed, sealed, and delivered the instrument as her free and voluntary act for the uses and purposes therein set forth, and was signed by Mr. Heydecker as notary public. Upon the trial of the action, after the examination of the plaintiff, Winn, Mr. Ileydecker was called as a witness and was allowed to testify, against objection, in substance, that Mrs. Abbey did not speak, nor express by look or act any consciousness whatever of the character of the transaction at the time the deed purports to have been executed; that she could not sign her name; and that he wrote it, and Braunschweiger lifted her hand and put it on the pen while be (Heydecker) made the mark. Thus the officer was allowed to falsify his own official certificate, and this ruling is assigned as erroneous. The question has not been directly *26passed upon by this court, so far as we have been able to discover. In other jurisdictions authorities are quite evenly divided on the question. 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.) 562, notes 1, 2; 1 Cyc. 626, notes 46, 41. The authorities which hold such testimony inadmissible do so upon the ground that it is against public policy to allow a public officer to undermine by oral testimony his official certificate, upon the integrity of which rights of third persons may depend, and there is force in the argument. Certainly such testimony is thoroughly impeached by the witness himself. It might probably be termed a “gross impropriety,” as was said by the court in Loughney v. Loughney, 87 Wis. 92, 58 N. W. 250, where the scrivener and witness to a will, who was named as executor therein and presented the same for probate, testified that the testator lacked mental capacity to make a will. Still we have not been able to convince ourselves that such testimony should be entirely excluded. It is not likely that it will be frequently offered. Few public officials would desire to thus impeach their own integrity. Circumstances might easily arise, however, which would justify, if not demand, its admission. Prior to 1878 an assessor was freely allowed to impeach the truth of his own sworn affidavit upon the assessment roll, .and it was deemed necessary to pass an act of the legislature to stop the practice. Schettler v. Ft. Howard, 43 Wis. 48; Laws of 1878, ch. 334, § 12; Plumer v. Marathon Co. 46 Wis. 163, 50 N. W. 416. We are inclined to hold the testimony admissible, but we also hold that in the absence of a satisfactory explanation by the officer showing that the official certificate, though mistaken, was honestly made at the time' (and there was no such testimony here), such testimony should receive little weight. Wilson v. South Parle Com’rs, 70 Ill. 46.
Quite a number of exceptions were preserved to the rulings of the trial court admitting certain evidence, and exceptions were likewise preserved to rulings by which the hearing of *27tbe case was reopened after argument bad begun, and tbe testimony of additional witnesses allowed to be taken. It is not deemed necessary to state these rulings in detail. As to the-first class of rulings above referred to, it is very well established that a judgment in an equitable action will not.be reversed merely for the erroneous admission of evidence. This court upon appeal will simply ignore the evidence wrongly admitted. As to the second class of rulings, it is sufficient to say that the conduct of the trial is in the sound discretion of' the trial court, and that the record before us does not show that there was abuse of discretion in the present case in allowing the case to be. opened after it was formally closed, and' allowing the introduction of further evidence.
The plaintiff was the first witness sworn in the case. lie-produced the deed of trust and stated in what manner he had dealt with the property. He produced also the will and codicil, and they were received in evidence, together with the probate proceedings in the Milwaukee county court. He also-produced Miss Itzel*s deed, or the record thereof, and offered' the same in evidence, and stated that the defendants Taylor and Mathews had objected to his making a deed to Miss Itzel. He also stated -the amounts and dates of the judgments in-favor of Harkins and O’Keeffe, and here his direct evidence-closed.
The plaintiff is an attorney at law, and brought this action-in his own proper person for the purpose of obtaining direction from the court as to his duties as trustee under the trust deed. Neither in his complaint nor in his opening testimony did he show any personal interest in the controversy. While-he was nominally the plaintiff in the action, he was really a stakeholder only, and the-actual litigation was between Miss-Itzel, on the one side, and the respondents Taylor and Mathews, on the other side. In his direct testimony he did not give any evidence bearing on the merits of the contest, but contented himself with merely bringing before the court the-*28situation of tbe trust and tbe trust property and tbe claims of tbe contending parties. After bis direct testimony was closed be was cross-examined in turn by counsel for tbe various claimants; and tbe cross-examination on bebalf of tbe appellant Itzel covers many pages, and covers practically all tbe transactions between tbe witness and Mrs. Abbey, and between tbe witness and Miss Itzel and Braunschweiger, botb before and after tbe death of Mrs. Abbey. It seems somewhat doubtful whether tbe law would justify so extensive a cross-examination upon subjects not even mentioned in tbe direct examination, bad objection been made. Ordinarily tbe cross-examination of a witness should be confined to matters brought out upon tbe direct examination. In case tbe witness is also a party to tbe action, a somewhat broader range is allowed. Sullivan v. Collins, 107 Wis. 291, 83 N. W. 310. While tbe witness here was a party to tbe action, be was only nominally such; and it may well be doubted whether, in tbe application of tbe rule as to cross-examination, be should be considered as in any different class from the ordinary witness.
Tbe appellant assigns three errors in tbe rulings of tbe court upon tbe cross-examination of Winn, which will be briefly noticed.
(1) It appeared that proceedings for tbe settlement of tbe estate of Mrs. Abbey were first begun in Lake county, Illinois, and then abandoned; and appellant’s counsel asked what was tbe object of having probate proceedings commenced in Wau-kegan, and objection to tbe question as not cross-examination and as immaterial was sustained. Certainly tbe question was not cross-examination of any matter referred to in tbe direct examination, but it further appears that later in tbe case tbe witness was allowed to state, in substance, that tbe reason administration proceedings were begun in Illinois was because it was feared that large and baseless claims against tbe estate might be filed in Milwaukee, and because Miss Itzel and Braunschweiger thought something might be saved in tbe way *29of taxes on tbe estate if administration were begun in that state.
(2) The appellant’s counsel asked Mr. Winn to produce-any letters from Mrs. Abbey which he then had in his possession in the court room, and he declined on the ground of privilege as attorney, and the court ruled that there was no law to> compel such production, and sustained the objection. Immediately thereafter it appeared that the witness had but one letter with him, and that it was merely a friendly letter, and it was produced and received in evidence. Afterwards he stated that he had some other letters from her at his office, and, when-asked if he would produce them, he objected on the ground that they were addressed to him as her attorney. Here the-matter dropped. There was no ruling or exception. It may-well be that there were letters which should have been received, but the counsel did not go far enough in this record to present the question. He should have given formal notice-to produce, or at least he should have demanded their production, basing such demand on a statement of what he expected to be able to prove, and then he would have obtained a ruling of the court and an exception. As it was, his only exception was taken to an abstract statement of the court with regard to-a letter which was afterwards produced and received without objection. So it is evident that there was no prejudicial ruling here on any theory.
(3) It appears that, after probate proceedings were begun in Wisconsin, the appellant filed objections to the appointment of Mr. Winn as executor of the will, and that she met Mr. Winn at Milwaukee February 1, 1899, and a written agreement was made between the appellant and Mr. Winn, by which, among other things, Winn agreed that after his appointment as executor, and after appraisal, he would deliver-to a trustee the articles of personal property bequeathed to the appellant, and the appellant agreed that she would withdraw her objections to Winn’s appointment and aid in the-*30settlement of the estate. After the proof had been made of the making of this agreement, appellant’s counsel asked Mr. Wirm whether he had the receipt given by Miss Itzel on the payment of her legacy to her, and an objection to the question was sustained. How that receipt, if given, would throw any light on any of the issues in this case was not even suggested, nor is it suggested in the brief in this court. There was plainly no error in this ruling.
One further ruling excluding testimony remains to be noticed. Mr. Wmn testified that he took his account as trustee to Waukegan with him on the afternoon of September 1, 1898, in order to have it approved by Mrs. Abbey, and he denied that anything was said at that time about a description of the Eighth street property (this was the name applied to the prop•erty in litigation), or that he would cause a description of the property to be sent from Milwaukee so that it could be put in a deed to Miss Itzel. One O. I). Marks, an attorney officing with the plaintiff, was afterwards called as a witness, and testified that, by Mr. Winn’s request, he (Marks) brought the account to Waukegan on a later train, and he was asked as to conversations with plaintiff that evening at Waukegan; the object being to show that Winn instructed him to send a description of the property to Waukegan, and thus to contradict Winns statement that he heard no talk about the proposed deed to Miss Itzel. Objections to these questions were sustained on the ground that the communications were confidential. We do not appreciate the force of the objection made, and think that the testimony should have been admitted; but in the view we have taken of the merits of the case it will be seen that the ruling becomes of no importance.
Two minor findings are excepted to, namely, the finding that Mrs. Abbey was eighty-two years of age at the time of her death, and the finding that Miss Itzel was employed by Mrs. Abbey upon a fixed salary. There is no great materiality as to the exact age of Mrs. Abbey. It is admitted that she was *31more than seventy years of age. The material question is as to the strength of her will and faculties rather than as to her age. The second finding referred to is in exact accord with the evidence.
This brings us to the consideration of the general question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings of the court to the effect that the deed to Miss Itzel was procured by fraud and undue influence on the part of Braunschweiger and Miss Itzel. There was an absence of direct evidence of fraud or undue influence, unless, indeed, the testimony of the witness Heydecker be so considered. No witness testified to any word of abuse or blandishment which had for its object the obtaining of this deed. The circumstances under which the deed was admittedly signed were relied on by the respondents as being sufficient to justify the finding of actual fraud, under the rule stated by this court in the case of Davis v. Dean, 66 Wis. 100, 26 N. W. 737. The trial court agreed with this contention and-the appellant takes sharp issue with it. The question is first presented in this way: After the court had heard the testimony of the plaintiff, O. T. Heydecker, Lizzie Brean, and Mrs. Heydecker, the question whether the burden of proof had shifted to the appellant Miss Itzel appears to have been raised and discussed. Whether any definite motion of any kind was made, or whether it was merely an academic •discussion, does not appear; but the trial court finally stated it to be his opinion that the burden of proof had shifted to the •defendant Itzel to show the fairness of the transaction. To this ruling exception was taken and it is now assigned as error. Immediately upon the making of the ruling the appellant as•sumed the burden of the case and proceeded to put in her testimony. This practice seems somewhat singular, and apparently indicates some confusion of ideas on the part of both court and counsel as to the effect of the doctrine laid down in the Davis v. Dean Case, and approved with some modifications and explanations by subsequent cases. See Small v. Cham *32 peny, 102 Wis. 61, 78 N. W. 407; Vance v. Davis, 118 Wis. 548, 95 N. W. 939. We do not understand that the principle there approved changed the practice in fraud cases, or affected the order of the trial of such cases. Parties who charge fraud must prove fraud after as well as before that decision. They still have the burden of proof. It was simply held in that line-'of cases that when a plaintiff, charging fraud, had proven certain facts, he had made a prima facie case, though he might not have produced any direct evidence of fraudulent acts or words, and he might then rest his case, and the defendant must then rebut the inference of fraud so raised by affirmative proof of good faith. After as well as before that decision it was im cumbent on the plaintiff to malm his case in the first instance, and to present all the proof which he had and wished to present tending to prove fraud, whether circumstantial or direct. After as well as before that decision it was the duty of the court at the close of the plaintiff’s case to decide whether a prima facie showing of fraud had been made, if the question was raised by proper motion on the part of the defendant. After as well as before that decision, in case the trial court held that a prima facie showing of fraud had been made, the defendant could either stand upon the plaintiff’s proofs and challenge their sufficiency in this court, or he could introduce his own proofs tending to rebut the plaintiff’s case and establish his innocence. In this sense, and in this sense only, the burden of proof shifts. When the plaintiff makes a prima facie case, entitling him to relief if the proof stops there, the defendant must take up the burden and meet the case so made by other evidence. This is the case in all contests of fact. It is not peculiar to fraud cases. The rule of Davis v. Dean did not change the long-established rule nor did it tend to do so. It simply announced what facts would be considered as prima facie proof of fraud, requiring explanation by the defendant. Small v. Champeny, supra.
So the practice which seems to have been adopted in the *33instant case, by which the plaintiff.introduced a part of his proof and then insisted that the 'bnrden of proof had been arbitrarily shifted to the defendant’s shoulders and must be accepted by him, notwithstanding the plaintiff had affirmative evidence still in reserve, cannot be approved. The burden of proof does not play hide and seek in this way in a fraud case any more than in any other casei But while the practice adopted here was erroneous, still, if all the material proof offered by all of the parties was ultimately received, and it appears by such proof that the circumstances were indeed such as to raise a legitimate presumption of fraud, and that the defendant has not overcome that presumption by affirmative proof, there will be no reversible error. This, therefore, is the question to be considered.
Reference to the adjudicated cases following the lead of Davis v. Dean, supra, in this court, and which are cited in Vance v. Davis, 118 Wis. 548, 95 N. W. 939, very clearly shows the difficulty — nay, the practical impossibility — of laying down any exact rule or rules for determining what particular circumstances, when proven, will raise the inference of fr^-ud. The circumstances will naturally vary with the infinite variety of human transactions and human relationships and surroundings. In the case of Loennecker’s Will, 112 Wis. 461, 88 N. W. 215, it was said that, in order to raise this presumption, “there must be shown a subject urn questionably susceptible to undue influence, either as the result of old age, mental weakness, or both; also some clear evidence of opportunity, and a disposition on the part of the beneficiary to exercise such influence. When these facts are shown, and especially when they exist with other facts out of the usual course of business transactions of such a nature, the presumption will arise which will put the beneficiary to his proof of good faith.” In a general way there seems little fault to be found with this statement of the rule; it being understood that “opportunity” here doe» not mean mere phys*34ical propinquity or possibility of personal contact, but the fact that interviews or personal transactions between the parties were had, followed by the accomplishment of the desired end, as suggested in Vance v. Davis, supra.
With this general statement of the requirements of the proof in such cases it will be necessary to review the evidence to see whether it supports the findings of the court. The evidence impeaching the deed offered by the defendants Mathews and Taylor tended to show the following facts, which are more or less relevant to the present inquiry: That prior to the year 1896 the deceased, being a childless widow, between seventy and eighty years of age, and possessing a comfortable income derived from real property in Milwaukee, lived in her own house in that city, with her servants, her household affairs being managed by the witness Braunschweiger, a trusted employee, who had been with her and her deceased son a number of years; that Mr. Geilfuss, a banker, managed her business affairs; that she was fond of showy dress and addicted •to the use of liquor, sometimes to excess; that she was peculiar in some ways, excitable, and susceptible to flattery; that for .a short time in 1896 she expressed fear of Braunschweiger, ¡which feeling after two or three months subsided; that in the summer of 1896 she became acquainted with Miss Itzel, a music teacher in good standing in Milwaukee, and induced her to come and live with her as a companion; that the household thus'made up continued to exist in apparent harmony until Mrs. Abbey’s death; that in September, 1896, Mrs. Abbey made a will (revoking a former will) by which she gave $2,000 to Braunschweiger and $1,000 to Miss Itzel, the will being drawn by the plaintiff, Winn, who soon thereafter became the manager of her business in place of Geilfuss and so continued till her death; that in June, 1897, Mrs. Abbey executed a codicil to her will by which she increased Braun-schweigeEs legacy to $3,000 and added $1,000 to the legacy of Miss Itzel, together with jewelry .and household furniture, *35and gave $3,000 to the plaintiff, Winn; that at the same time she made a trust deed of her property to Winn, as stated in the statement of facts, supra, and made a written contract with Miss Itzel by which Miss Itzel was to remain with Mrs. Abbey during life, as companion and nurse, for the sum of $25 per month; that Miss Itzel was constantly with Mrs. Abbey as her companion, and that she modified Mrs. Abbey’s showy manner of dress; that Mrs. Abbey relied on Braunschweiger and Miss Itzel for the conduct of her domestic affairs, and that, in Mr. Winn's opinion, Miss Itzel did her whole duty by Mrs. Abbey, and that Mrs. Abbey’s confidence in and affection for both was great; that Mrs. Abbey wrote a letter to Mr. Winn, September 28, 1897, stating her desire to deed the Eighth street property to Miss Itzel for her kindness; that Winn afterwards asked Mrs. Abbey if he should convey the land to Miss Itzel, and she simply said: “No; I am not dead yet. I am capable of taking care of my own property while I live;” that Winn went to Europe in the spring of 1898, leaving Mrs. Abbey in good health; that she remained in usual" health till late in August, when she fell ill of dysentery; that Winn returned August 31, 1898, and on the following day went to Waukegan with his account and found her ill, but that she audited his account and indorsed a check; that on the 2d of September Miss Itzel called upon Heydecker and asked him to make a deed of the Eighth street property, which he did, and brought to the house; that'this deed was in form executed by Mrs. Abbey (Heydecker testifying, however, in contradiction of his certificate, that she was not conscious and did not acknowledge it) ; that she was undeniably very weak and unable to write or hold a pen; that only Braunschweiger, Hey-decker, Miss Itzel, and the nurse, Miss Pettifoe, were present ; that she died on the second day following, in great suffering. There was no direct testimony that either Miss Itzel or Braunschweiger had ever said a word, by way of threat or blandishment, to induce the execution of the deed, nor was *36there any testimony that Miss Itzel had ever treated Mrs. Abbey improperly. There was some testimony given by Ida Voet, a servant who lived with the family in 1896, to the effect that Brannschweiger at that time shamefully ill-treated Mrs. Abbey, and whipped her, and that he and Miss Itzel lived in-adulterous relations from the first day' Miss Itzel entered the-house; but we have been unable to give credence to this testimony, not only on account of its inherent improbability, but also from the fact that it is completely contradicted and discredited by practically all the other evidence, both oral and written, in the case. There was practically no evidence worthy of mention which tended to show that Mrs. Abbey was of unsound mind or incapable of understanding a business transaction at any time prior to the day on which the deed to Miss Itzel was executed.
It seems extremely doubtful whether this evidence raises a prima facie case of fraud, within the rule above stated, but we do not find it necessary to decide the question. Conceding, for the purposes of the case, that it is sufficient, we will proceed to consider the evidence adduced in support of the good faith of the transaction. In this connection we will first consider the question whether Mrs. Abbey was conscious when the deed was presented to her for signature. Upon this inquiry we have first the fact that the deed, on its face, is properly acknowledged and certified by an authorized officer of the law. It is well settled that the evidence must be perfectly clear, convincing, and satisfactory in order to justify a court in holding that the certificate of acknowledgment is false. Linde v. Gudden, 109 Wis. 326, 85 N. W. 323. Bearing in mind this-rule, we find-that the only evidence tending to impeach the certificate of the officer is -that of the officer himself. The very unsatisfactory character of this evidence has been previously-referred to, and, even if no evidence were introduced to support the certificate, we cannot think that it should be held to-be successfully falsified by such self-impeaching statements. *37But there is considerable evidence tending to support the certificate and show that the deceased was conscious of ber acts. There was present in the room a trained nurse, Miss Pettifoe, •evidently a lady of education and culture, absolutely disinterested, and peculiarly fitted by her education and calling to judge of the mental condition of the deceased. She also signed her name as witness to the deed. Her testimony was full and apparently frank and was not shaken upon cross-examination. Without rehearsing it in detail, it can be said it was to the effect that, while Mrs. Abbey was very feeble, she was perfectly conscious, joined in the conversation, was apparently, perfectly cognizant of the transaction, and, in reply to the questions of the officer, announced her entire satisfaction with the conveyance and its purpose, and tried to write her name with the pen, only desisting because of physical weakness. This testimony is corroborated by that of Braunsehweiger and Miss Itzel, the only other persons present, but who were, of course, interested witnesses. Miss Pet-tifoe also testified that -when Mrs. Abbey took the pen she tried to write the letter “M,” and made some scratches with the pen upon the deed in that attempt. The original deed, which was introduced in evidence, shows upon the first line prepared for the signature of the grantor a number of irregular pen scratches, which seem perfectly to correspond with Miss Pet-tifoe’s statement of' the fact, and which are entirely unexplained on any other theory. Braunsehweiger testified also that, when Heydecker wrote Mrs. Abbey’s name, she (Mrs. Abbey) told him he had spelled “Matilda” wrong, whereupon he (Heydecker) corrected the spelling. Examination of the deed shows that a change was made in the spelling of the name; it having been once “Mathilda,” and then evidently changed to Matilda. In the face of all of- this evidence tending to support the certificate of acknowledgment, it cannot be reasonably claimed for a moment that the unsupported, self-*38impeached testimony of Heydecker will suffice to falsify his own certificate of acknowledgment.
This question is not, however, decisive of the case. The deed may have been properly acknowledged and executed by Mrs. Abbey while conscious and sane, and yet her act may have been the result of previously exerted undue influence or duress, or both, aid to this question we now turn. As before stated, there is no direct evidence in the case of any word or act. on the part of Miss Itzel which could be construed as a threat or a solicitation to make such a conveyance. It is said that it was an unnaturally large gift to one not of kin to the deceased, especially after provision had been made for the donee by will and increased by a recently executed codicil. There is, perhaps, some force to this consideration. Had Mrs. Abbey left descendants who would naturally be expected to come into the estate, or had the estate been relatively small, the argument would have considerable weight. But this was not the case. Mrs. Abbey had an estate of about $140,000. She left no direct heirs. Her relatives were in the east and had no part in taking care of her during her declining years. The subtraction of property worth $9,000 from her estate to compensate a faithful companion would not be intrinsically strange or unjust to any one. Miss Itzel had constantly attended her for more than two. years; giving up her own calling upon what seems very modest, if not inadequate, compensation. Mr. Winn testifies that Mrs. Abbey’s affection for Miss Itzel was great, and that Miss Itzel did her whole duty by Mrs. Abbey; and this is borne out by Mr. Winn’s correspondence with Miss Itzel, which continued up to September 21, 1898, when he wrote a letter to her stating that nothing had been omitted by her which could in any way contribute to Mrs. Abbey’s pleasure, happiness, and peace of mind, and that “you and Carl deserve and are entitled to much credit and to the everlasting gratitude of every one in*39terested. in her [Mrs. Abbey’s] welfare.” In view of all these facts, the desire of Mts. Abbey t'o further compensate Miss Itzel does not seem particularly strange or unnatural. If it appeared, however, that there had been no thought on Mrs. Abbey’s part of the making of such a gift prior to the day of the execution of the deed, the argument that some undue influence had been exerted just as Mrs. Abbey was about to die would have some considerable weight. The testimony shows, however, that for at least a year Mrs. Abbey had this idea in mind. The letter of September 28, 1897, written by Mrs. Abbey to Mr. Winn, has already been referred to. The genuineness of this letter was rather feebly questioned by Mr. Winn in his testimony, but he answered it at once and always treated it as genuine, and there is absolutely no evidence which would justify a finding that it was forged or did not express Mrs. Abbey’s actual desire. Moreover, the original letter is preserved in the bill of exceptions, and, upon comparison with the admittedly genuine letters, bears every mark of authenticity. In this letter she says, “I am certainly pleased to know we can pay all indebtedness in November or December, so that I can get the Eighth street property cleared, as I intend Miss Itzel to have this to show my gratitude for her loveliness in being with me, sacrificing her home feelings for me.” It seems that there was an incumbrance on this property, and Mrs. Abbey’s idea, according to this letter, was that she would deed the property to Miss Itzel when the incum-brance was removed. Exactly in accord with the idea expressed in this letter is the testimony of Mrs. Salina Maeger-lein, a lady entirely disinterested, well acquainted with Mrs. Abbey for years in Milwaukee, and who visited her in her home in "Waukegan some two or three weeks before her death. Mrs. Maegerlein testifies that Mrs. Abbey was in very good health; that she played on the piano, and sang, and recited a poem, and took a walk with her out of doors; that she spoke to her of the Eighth street property, and complained that Mr. *40 Winn bad stayed in Europe nearly four months when be only expected to stay two months; that be hadn’t cleared the property of the mortgage, and she was displeased about it because she wanted to give this property to Miss Itzel as a reward for her work. Another disinterested witness, Mrs. Alden, a neighbor at Waukegan, testified to a conversation with Mrs. Abbey during the same month of August, in which she said, in substance, that she wished Mr. Winn would hurry up and come home because she wanted her property fixed; that she wanted everything fixed for Anna’s good. The testimony so furnished by the letter and the two witnesses Maegerlein and Alden is perfectly consistent, no reason appears to question its credibility, and it seems to quite well establish the fact of Mrs. Abbey’s long-standing desire to do the very thing now attacked, without any reference to the testimony given by Miss Itzel herself and Braunschweiger, which is definite and full to the effect that at numerous times Mrs. Abbey talked with Mr. Winn about clearing the title of the Eighth street property so it could be deeded to Miss Itzel. Thus, as it seems to us, the only really suspicious circumstance in the transaction, namely, the delay in the execution of the deed until a day or two before Mrs. Abbey’s death, is quite fully and satisfactorily explained; that is, it appears that she was waiting for the return of Mr. Winn, her business man, from Europe, and it appears that, when he did return, the description of the property was at once procured and the deed executed.
On the whole, we entertain no doubt that, if the burden of proof was east on the defendant Itzel by the making of a prima facie case against her, it was quite fully and fairly lifted by the evidence which we have referred to, and hence that the judgment was erroneous. There are some unpleasant and unexplained features of the case with reference to the commencement of probate proceedings in the probate court of Lake county, Illinois, upon a petition signed by Mr. Hey-decker, in which he stated under oath on the 22d day of Oc*41tober, 1898, that Mrs. Abbey died, leaving no will and leaving personal estate valued at $1,000, -which we have not referred to at length, for the reason that they seem to have little ox no bearing upon the issue here. There is positive testimony that Mr. Heydecker was informed on September 2d that there was a will, and it seems inconceivable that he had not learned the fact before October 22d. Certainly he must have known that her estate was large; and this whole transaction smacks •strongly of a scheme to suppress the will and administer the estate as intestate. This apparent attempt to deceive the probate court of Lake county is not pleasant to comment upon, though it may perhaps he susceptible of explanation. Standing unexplained as it does in the record before us, it tends to throw additional discredit upon the testimony of Mr. Hey-decker. It appears from the evidence that this attempt to administer the estate as intestate in Illinois was balked by a petition filed by Miss Itzel, in which it was stated that Mrs. Abbey died testate, and the letters of administration which had been issued to Heydecker were revoked. How much Mr. Winn knew of this transaction does not fully appear, but it seems that he had some knowledge of it, and it is somewhat significant to note that after this time his relations with Miss Itzel, which up to that time had been uniformly friendly, became strained and apparently unfriendly.
We have, perhaps, spent too much time in discussing mere evidence. We are slow to set aside the findings of fact of a trial court, but it is our duty to do so if we are convinced that they are against the clear preponderance of the evidence, and •of that fact we are convinced in the present case.
By the Gowri. — Judgment reversed upon all the appeals, aipl cause remanded with directions to enter judgment directing the trustee to deed the property in dispute to the defendant Itzel and dismiss the cross-complaint of the defendants Taylor and Mathews.