Harvey J., who heard the oral testimony, accepted the evidence of
Austin and Morgan (among other witnesses for the plaintiffs) as
truthful, and, if Austin's evidence is true, there can be no doubt
Nock quite understood what he was doing. Learned counsel for the
appellant have urged, however, that Austin's account should not be
accepted as accurate, because his participation in the making of the
will throws suspicion on him, and therefore he has the onus of doing
everything reasonably possible to clear away that suspicion ; that,
by his not seeing that Nock had independent advice or that some
one else was present to corroborate the story as to reading over the
will, he had so acted as to leave the suspicion still existing, and that,
notwithstanding the withdrawal of the fourth ground of objection,
the conduct of Austin may still, on the doctrine of Tyrrell v. Painton
(1), be used against him on the broad question of suspicious circum- -
stances. Morgan's evidence relative to an earlier will is challenged
on the same grounds, with the additional circumstance that Morgan
was also Nock's legal adviser.