48 N.J. Eq. 269 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1891
This is an appeal from a decree of the orphans court of the county of Essex, refusing probate to a paper purporting to be the will of Patrick Monaghan, deceased. The reason assigned in the decree for refusing to admit the paper to probate is, that it had not been published by the decedent as his will in the manner required by the statute concerning wills. I cannot concur in that view, but for another reason I think the decree is clearly right and should be affirmed. The proofs show very clearly, as I think, that the paper is the product of undue influence.
The decedent signed the paper in question on the 26th day of December, 1889, when he and those about him believed he was in the grasp of death and could live but a very short time. He was very sick, and so extremely weak as to be unable to write his name; he signed the paper by making his mark; he was a Roman Catholic, and had, shortly prior to the day on which he signed the paper, been prepared for death according to the rites of that church. He did not, however, die until the 16th day of January following. He was a widower, and for more than a year prior to his sickness had lived alone in a single room. Up until a few months before he was taken sick he had, for many
The sister of the decedent swears that the desire to make the-will in question originated with the decedent, and that he made-this desire known to her on the afternoon of the 26th of December, 1889, while she was preparing food for him, by saying, “ If I had a man I should like to draw a will; ” that she replied, “ all right,” and then, after she had finished what she was doing,, she went out and sent her husband for the priest. Her husband, says that he went for the priest and told him that the decedent-, would like to have a will drawn, and asked him to come down, and draw it. The priest, however, testifies that the husband! said that the decedent was dying and had made no disposition, of his earthly goods — not that the decedent wanted to have a will, drawn. That the priest was not informed that the decedent wanted a will drawn, or that he desired to make a will, is made-entirely certain by what the priest said to decedent when he-called on him. He called a few hours after receiving notice that, the decedent was dying. He says he went to decedent’s bed and' asked him, in the presence of two witnesses, if he knew he was-about to die, and that decedent replied that he did. He says,, then, “I told him I thought it was better for him to arrange-his account, otherwise there would be litigation after his death.”' In the same connection he says, “ I spoke to him, and reiterated' again and again, and asked him what he would do, and how he-intended to dispose of his property. He told me he would leave-his property to his sister Bridget.” A person who was present at this interview, and who signed the paper as a subscribing-witness, says, that before the decedent said he would leave his-
Undue influence consists in the destruction of free agency. Whatever constrains a person to do what is against his will, and what he would not do if left to himself, is undue influence, no matter by what means the control is exercised. The extent or degree of the influence is wholly immaterial, for the test is, was ■ the influence, whether powerful or slight, sufficient to destroy free agency, so as to make the act brought in judgment the act of another rather than the expression of the mind and heart of the actor. Undue influence exercised by any one, whether he or another gains by its exercise, renders the will or other instrument thus procured worthless. These principles are so well settled and familiar, and so obviously essential for the protection of those suffering from sickness or subject to the infirmities of old age, as to dispense with the citation of authority. Applying them to this case, it is clear that the paper under consideration is the product of undue influence. Left to himself, it is manifest that the decedent would have died intestate. He did not want to make a will. When he was first advised by his priest to make a will he refused, or deferred doing so until another time. His priest says he refused because he did not think he was dying. But now he is told he is about to die; he believed he was in the grasp of death; he is also told that it will be better for him to make a will, and that if he does not litigation will follow his death. These words came to him from his spiritual adviser— from the man to whom he had committed the welfare of his soul and in whom he reposed the highest and holiest trust that it is possible for one human being to repose in another. Spoken by such a person, at such a time, they were invested with all the coercive force that words can ever have. To the decedent their force was irresistible. They not only subdued and broke his will,
The decree of the orphans court should be affirmed, with costs.