There is no allegation of any undue influence as to any of the other devises and bequests in said will nor as to the mental capacity of the testator, the sole question raised by caveators, his heirs at law, being as to the undue influence alleged to have been exerted by his wife.
Our statute, C. S., 4134, revokes any will made prior to the marriage, and the testimony of the existence of such previous will cannot be therefore considered as evidence of undue influence. Means v. Ury, 141 N. C., 248.
*6Indeed, on a review of tbe evidence in tbis controversy, tbe judge might almost have been justified in directing tbe jury to find tbat there was no evidence of undue influence by tbe propounder. In tbis record there is no evidence that even a single time sbe ever mentioned tbe making of tbe will to bim. Tbe will was executed one year after bis marriage to bis second wife, and on tbe anniversary of tbeir wedding, without any evidence of a knowledge thereof by her at tbe time of its being made. He died in November following.
Tbe exceptions may be briefly considered: Tbe first exception was to tbe court’s refusal to admit tbe caveators to show tbat shortly after tbe death of her husband, Mrs. Bradford left Elizabeth City and has since resided in another state. Sbe accounted for this, on cross-examination, by stating tbat shortly after her husband’s death sbe received a telegram announcing her mother’s death, and left to be with her father in New York City, and has been with him ever since, except in tbis trial and on occasional visits here. Tbe caveators have bad tbe benefit, if there was any, of tbe testimony which they sought to elicit.
Tbe second exception is to tbe exclusion of testimony that tbe morning after her husband’s funeral tbe widow, at tbat time in conversation with her brother-in-law, declined to be disturbed.
In response to an inquiry, Mrs. Bradford testified tbat “independent of any relationship with Mr. Bradford, sbe bad nothing to do with preparing tbe will, and tbat the first time sbe even saw it was after bis death.” Tbe question as asked and answered carefully excluded anything which grew out of any transaction between tbe testator and tbe witness. It was entirely competent for her to say tbat tbe first time sbe saw tbe will was after tbe death of her husband. Tbis certainly was not a transaction with tbe deceased, and sbe could properly testify to tbis as a substantive independent fact. Lane v. Rogers, 113 N. C., 171, and citations thereto in tbe 2d Anno. Ed. It was an independent fact, which did not involve any dealing with her husband. Watts v. Warren, 108 N. C., 514.
Her statement tbat “excluding any relationship with Mr. Bradford (which means excluding any dealings with Mr. Bradford) sbe had nothing to do with preparing tbe will,” was simply a declaration tbat sbe did not do tbis through third parties, and the authorities are uniform tbat a witness may testify to a substantive, independent fact, even though tbis may indirectly tend to prove a transaction with tbe deceased. Grandy v. Sawyer, 113 N. C., 42; Cornelius v. Brawley, 109 N. C., 542. In tbis latter case tbe widow and devisee proved tbe finding of the will among tbe valuable papers.
*7Besides this, the same witness testified to the same facts later without objection. Her testimony that after the testator’s death “I did not go to the bank to get the will; I did not see it until after Mr. Bradford’s death” was competent.
Exceptions 6 and 1 are to the testimony of Miss Edna E. Cox, a sister of Mrs. Bradford, to statements made by the first Mrs. Bradford in the presence and hearing of Mrs. Bradford regarding their wishes to adopt the propounder as their daughter in appreciation of kindness to them both, and that if that was not possible, that the propounder, after the wife’s death (she'being then in the hospital), should marry the testator. The caveators insist that (by reason of the disparity of their ages) the marriage between the propounder and the testator was an unnatural one, but this is not a proposition of law, and certainly, standing alone, as it did, it could not be considered as evidence of undue influence of the propounder in procuring the marriage, and, beyond question, it would not tend to show that by undue influence she procured the execution of this will a year after the marriage. The mere fact that a husband bequeaths, as in this case, a large proportion of his property to his wife is not evidence that she exerted undue influence in procurement of the same. In re Peterson, 136 N. C., 13; In re Cooper, 166 N. C., 210.
In this case the sanity and mental capacity of the testator are not denied; nor that he was an experienced and active business man; that every line of the will is in his own handwriting; that it was duly witnessed at his bank, and had been filed for months in his private deposit box in the bank, which he visited almost every day, and from which he had constant opportunity to remove and destroy it if so inclined.
After a full and careful scrutiny of the record and all the exceptions, we do not see that the caveators have been in any wise prejudiced in the conduct of the cause by any ruling of his Honor.
No error.