34 N.J. Eq. 511 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1881
This appeal is from the decree of the orphans court of Monmouth county, admitting to probate three instruments of writing (a will and two codicils) as the will of James Osborn, deceased, late of that county. The testator died on the 11th of June, 1880. He was then over eighty-five years .old. For many years before his death he had been blind. The will in question was made December 19th, 1872; one of the codicils, August 5th, 1876, and the other, August 17th, 1877—so that the will was made seven years and a half before his death; the first of the codicils about four years, and the other about three years. ITe had outlived some of his children, both sons and daughters, and the surviving daughters had {harried and gone away from him. For many, about fifteen, of the last years of his life he was blind and wholly dependent (he was a widower) on his two-surviving sons, Abram and Andrew (especially the latter), for the necessary attention to his physical wants. He always lived on his farm, which bordered on Squan river. He made a will in 1870 (drawn by Mr. A, R. Throckmorton), which is in evidence. In 1872, he made the will in dispute. By it he gave to Abram, by metes and bounds, part (fifty-five and twentymine hundredths acres) of his farm, excepting thereout the family burying-ground of about half an acre, for a burial place for his family and their descendants forever. The devise was, however, subject to the payment, in one year after his decease, of a legacy of $300 to his daughter Mrs. Plerbert, which he charged thereon. To his son Andrew he gave, by like particular description by metes and boundaries, another part, about one hundred and three acres, of the farm, subject to the payment of legacies, payable in one year from his death, thereby charged thereon, one of $500 to
He made Abram and Andrew his executors. By the first codicil, which was made about three years and a-half after the making of the will, he ratified the will except as altered or changed thereby, and gave to Ann, daughter of his deceased son George, a legacy of $400, payable in one year from his death, out of the proceeds of his real estate ordered to be sold, charging it, in case of deficiency, on the land devised to Abram and Andrew.
By the last codicil, made August 17th, 1877, about a year afterwards, he states that his indebtedness is such as to render a change in the will and previous codicil necessary, in his opinion, and, ratifying those instruments except as changed thereby, he
That the testator, at the time of the execution of each of these instruments, was possessed of competent testamentary capacity, is proved beyond all doubt. To his execution of all of them, his friend and neighbor and family physician, Dr. Robert Laird, was a witness, and his execution of the will and the last codicil was wit-' nessed by Mr. A. R. Throckmorton, the lawyer by whom all the instruments were drawn. They two were the witnesses to the will. To the first codicil, Dr. Laird and John D. Warner, now deceased, were witnesses, and the execution of the last codicil was witnessed by Dr. Laird, Mr. Throckmorton and Joseph Thompson. The instructions for drawing all these instruments were received by Mr. Throckmorton from the testator himself, and under circumstances leading to the conviction that the testamentary acts were the result of the deliberate and free action of ■the testator’s mind and will. Dr. Laird was his next neighbor. He had known the testator for nearly half a century, and had been his family physician for about forty years, and was intimately acquainted with him for all that time. Mr. Throckmorton had known him personally and intimately for about twenty-five years. Mr. Thompson, who is one of the witnesses to the first codicil, knew the testator well. He was, at the time when that instrument was signed, living on the farm as a tenant on shares, and had been so for about five months, and during all that time had, with his family, occupied part of the house, while ■the testator and his son ¿Andrew occupied the other part. The testamentary witnesses, then, were all well acquainted with the testator, and, consequently, were able to judge of his capacity at the time of doing the testamentary acts under consideration. Dr. Laird, in his testimony, says that, during the last ten years
There is also the testimony of other witnesses, besides those who witnessed the execution of the instruments, to the testator’s competency. Elias Allen, called for the caveators, test!» fies to a business transaction (the renewal of the testator’s note, which he held) which he had with the testator about a year-
John A. Osborn knew the testator for thirty-five years. He boarded in the testator’s house with Andrew for about six
It is urged, however, -on the part of the caveators, that he did not know or appreciate the value of his farm ; that it was worth a very large sum of money, and that the fact that by the last codicil he, under the apprehension that his sons would not be able to pay his debts and those legacies (which were small in comparison with the value of the property) as they stood, and retain the property, reduced the legacies to his daughters and the grandchildren to whom he had made bequests, is evidence of want of capacity. And it is also urged that the fact that he gave no legacies to, and made no mention of, the children of some of his deceased children, and the fact that his disposition of the property is grossly unequal, are evidence in the same direction. To consider the first of these objections: There were at the testator’s death three mortgages on the homestead property ; one originally for $2,750 and interest, given in 1869, on which he appears to have paid $400; another of $150 and the-
The testator seems to have intended to leave his farm to his sons before the will in question was made. By the will of 1870, he gave it to his then three sons, Abram, Andrew and George', but between that time and the making of the will of 1872, George died. By the will of 1870, he gave to Abram the same part of the homestead farm given by the will of 1872, subject to a legacy of $300 to Mrs. Herbert. He gave to George, subject to a legacy of $300 to Mrs. Twitchell, another part of it, seventy-five and twenty-six hundredths acres, and a small island, known as Osborn Island, containing about three acres of upland (including shore about seven acres), and another tract of about twenty-three acres, and to Andrew he gave, subject to a legacy of $950 to Mrs. Collins, and one of $450 to Mrs. Day, the same part of the homestead farm, about one hundred and three acres, given to him by the will of 1872.
“If we are clear,” says Judge Potts (in the orphans court), in Turner v. Cheesman, 2 McCart. 243, 257, “ that this is the testator’s codicil, and expresses the will of a sound and disposing mind, we cannot look beyond it for his reasons or his motives for doing what he did. The right of absolute dominion which every man has over his own property is sacred and inviolable. The argument is only legitimately applicable so far as it affects the question’ of the testator’s capacity at the time.”
“ A testator,” said the court, in Boylan ads. Meeker, 4 Dutch. 274, 277, “ has the right to make an unreasonable, unjust, injudicious will, and his neighbors have no right, sitting as a jury, to alter the disposition of his property, simply because they think the testator did not do justice to his family connections.”
“It may be harsh and severe,” says the court in Den v. Gibbons, 2 Zab. 117, 153, “ it may be extremely cruel, under some circumstances, to disinherit one child and to bestow the whole estate upon another, but if the testator be of disposing mind and memory, and duly execute such will in the form prescribed by law, no court can interfere.”
In the case in hand, it is not difficult to supply motives for giving the greater part of the property to the two sons. They
In Humphrey’s will, 11 C. E. Gr. 513, affirmed on appeal, sub nom. Jenkins v. Moore, 12 C. E. Gr. 567, it was said by this court:
“A discrimination made by a man of the testator’s age [he was very old] and: in his condition [he was blind] in disposing of his estate in favor of his only daughter, who had given to him her whole time, and with assiduous attention ministered to his wants when he most needed care and sympathy, can neither be regarded as evidence of incapacity or undue influence.”
The decree of the orphans court admitting the instrument to probate, should be affirmed, with costs of the appeal and a counsel fee of f 100 to each side, to be paid out of the estate.