3 Redf. 52 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1877
For the purpose of determining the questions raised in this matter, it will be necessary to refer only to the testimony bearing upon these points, but to a clear understanding of the case it will be necessary to consider somewhat carefully the terms of the will and codicils, in order, if practicable, to' ascertain the extent and object of the change sought to be effected by the codicil contested.
The will bears date October 17, 1870, and among other dispositions he bequeaths unto Henry Booth, $7000; William R. Kitchen, $20,000; and to three daughters and one son of said Kitchen, $3000 each; to Mrs. Wardlaw, the use of $500 for life, and at her death, to her children; to Caroline Bell Wardlaw, her daughter, $4000; Mary Wardlaw, another daughter, $2000; to Caroline Bell, aforesaid, $5000 in trust for the education, improvement and benefit of her father’s family; that as to the legacies to William R. Kitchen, in case he should die before the testator, they should go to his wife for life, and after her death to their children ; and he directed his executors to convert the rest residue and remainder of his estate into money, and after payment of his debts, &c., that it be given to, and divided between five persons named, one of whom was said Kitchen, in proportion to the legacies given to, or in trust for them by will, to be added as an increase thereof, and that all lapsed legacies be included in that residuum; and appointed Kitchen and Henry Booth his executors.
The first codicil bears date 24th day of September,
It is conceded by counsel for the contestants that the proof of the due execution of the codicil in question is sufficient, and in reference to the consideration of the testimony in the case, it will only be necessary to extract so much of it as relates to the questions above suggested, which are involved in this contest.
A careful review of the testimony satisfies me that the deceased, at the time when he executed the codicil in question, was of sound and disposing mind, and that' his mental faculties at that time had not become materially impaired; and the same testimony shows that the codicil in question was produced before the witnesses by deceased, and he declared it to be a codicil to his will; subsequently showed a familiarity with its provisions, explaining its purposes and the reasons for certain changes from his will and first codicil; and that he read the whole will audibly to Mrs. Pollock, Borne three weeks before his decease.
The only question therefore left to be determined is, whether, under these circumstances, the fact that the codicil appears to be in the handwriting of Mr. Kitchen, whose children are alleged to have been made greater beneficiaries than they would have been but for the codicil, raises such a presumption as to require further proof as to the knowledge of the testator of the provisions of his will, and his intelligent, unbiassed disposition of his estate.
In Barry v. Butlin (1 Curteis, 637), it was held that the onus probandi, in every case, lies upon the party who propounds a will, and that where the party who prepares a will takes a benefit under it, this is a circumstance which excites the suspicion of the court, and unless that suspicion be removed the court will not pronounce in favor of the instrument. In that case, the will was prepared by the deceased’s solicitor, under which he took considerable benefit, and which
In that case, the will was admitted to probate on proof of the alienation of the testator from his son, notwithstanding the testator was concededly of weak
In the .case of Delafield v. Parish (25 N. Y., 9), which has been considerably misunderstood, on account of the very imperfect head note of the reporter, the facts were that the testator, in full health, made a will, after an attack of paralysis, from which time his wife was hardly ever absent from his presence, and she and her relatives were his constant companions and attendants, to the exclusion, almost wholly, of his own relatives. The codicil was prepared under his wife’s suggestions, which was executed after he was supposed to have recovered from the severity of the attack, but which was subsequently re-executed on account of some doubt of the testator’s capacity when first executed. Subsequently, after the making, with the aid of her brother, an estimate of his estate, his wife drew up instructions for the disposition of another
That at common law and under our statutes the legal presumption is that every man is compos mentis, and the burthen of proof that he is not rests on the party who alleges that an unnatural condition of mind exists in the testator. He that sets up the fact that the testator was non compos mentis must prove it; that in law the only standard as to mental capacity, in all who are not idiots or lunatics, is found in the fact whether the testator was compos mentis or non compos mentis, as those terms are used in their fixed legal meaning.
That the question in every case is, had the testator compos mentis capacity to make a will, not had he
Vreeland v. McClelland (1 Bradf., 393,) was a case where an executor of an estate, who had never accounted, but kept the assets in his hands, and paid a small sum over to the beneficiary, who was of intemperate habits and weak mind, and who was dependent upon him for satisfaction of his pecuniary wants. The
In Tyler v. Gardiner (35 N. Y., 559,) the will propounded was made within four hours of the decease of the testatrix, Mrs. Tyler. The principal beneficiary, who wrote out the provisions which she desired inserted in the will, wrote to the lawyer who drew the will, directing him as to its terms, and fixed the time for him to call with it. The testatrix’s faculties were enfeebled by long and wasting disease; she had been under the controlling influence of Mrs. Tyler, her daughter, who had imbued her with causeless antipathy to her only son, induced her to expel him from her house, and pursue him with inveterate accusations, and the will involved a complete revocation of intention, the _ entire departure from her previous testamentary disposition, and was made under a mistaken impression, recently imbibed, that her son had been unfaithful and fraudulent, as her agent, in managing her property; that Mrs. Tyler was poor, and the disposition of her property was grossly unequal and unjust. It was held that these facts raised a presumption of undue influence, requiring the party to whom it was imputed to give proof to repel it.
I have carefully considered the authorities cited by the contestant’s counsel, and upon them alone I should hesitate to hold that the proof in this case is insufficient to admit the second codicil to probate, for the reason that it seems to me that there can be no reasonable doubt of the clear mental soundness of the testator at the time when it was executed, because there is no proof
In Coffin v. Coffin (23 N. Y., 9), Mr. Justice Com-stock (at page 13) cites the case of Barry v. Butlin (above cited) with approbation. In Leaycraft v. Simmons (3 Bradf., 35,) the decedent was 89 years old; made a will at his son’s residence, which appeared to be in his son’s handwriting, and was executed without the knowledge of his daughter (his only other child); but the proof showed that the decedent was of undoubted capacity. It appeared that the son had acted as his agent, and took the largest share of the estate under the will; that testator expressed a desire to make a codicil, in order to enlarge the provisions in favor of his daughter, and so stated to his son, who had custody of the instrument, and requested him the next day to bring it with him. His son failed to come as he was accustomed to, and no such codicil was executed. It was held that, under such circumstances, it was proper to call for further proof of recognition of the will by decedent. Such proof was furnished by showing that he spoke of the terms of the will after its execution, although he expressed a desire to change it.
In Burling v. Loveland (2 Curteis, 225), the testator was 76 years of age, of doubtful capacity, whose will was prepared by a solicitor, who was appointed executor and one of the residuary legatees. The will was refused probate, because the court held that there
In Harrison v. Rowan, (3 Washington C. Ct., 580), the court says: “ It is not necessary, in order to
establish the will, that the person claiming under it should prove that it was read over to the testator in the presence of the attesting or other witnesses. The law presumes in general that the will was read over by or to the testator.”
In reflecting upon the very forcible and somewhat severe expression of the testator in his codicil respecting the enforcement of the claim against Mr. Booth, I was at first disposed to think that, taken in conjunction with his prior legacies to him and his children, the revolution in his intention must have been the result of some prejudice or some supposed dereliction
To establish undue influence over the testator at the time of the execution of his will, it must appear that the importunity or influence Avas such as to deprive him of the free exercise of his will. (Gardiner v. Gardiner 34 N. Y., 155, and other cases cited.)
Undue influence is such as to impose a restraint on the Avill of the testator, so as to prevent him from doing Avhat he wishes to do, or forces him to do Avhat he does not Avish to do.
I haAre not deemed it necessary to discuss the question raised as to whether Mr. Kitchen’s family will receive more or less by reason of the' second codicil, but I assume, for the purposes of this case, that his interest and the interest of his family is increased by that codicil, and if it Avere not so, there is the same difficulty in accounting for the revolution of the testator’s mind and purpose in respect to Mr. Booth and his family, and which, if it were necessary to make an
Upon the best and most thorough consideration of the testimony and the authorities bearing upon the case which I have been able to bestow, I cannot resist the conclusion that the testator was of sound and disposing mind, free from undue influence, when he executed the codicil in question, and that he had full knowledge of, and comprehended, its contents and provisions.
I am unable to deduce from the numerous authorities upon the subject, the principle that the mere fact that the subsequent will or codicil reverses some of the provisions of the prior will in favor of one, in whose handwriting such subsequent will or codicil appears, overcomes the legal presumption that an intelligent testator, who executed a will according to law, understood its terms, and, in the absence of affirmative proof of undue influence, executed it without restraint.
Indeed in the cases where the maxim. “Qui se scrip sit hmredem ” has been held to impose upon the proponent proof of a more clear and satisfactory character, there has intervened the element either of impaired faculties or weakened mind, or some affirmative evidence tending to show undue influence or some intimate relation of a confidential or fiduciary character between the testator and the writer of the will.
The second codicil in question should be admitted to probate.
Order accordingly.