54 N.Y.S. 523 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The learned judge at special term held, in substance, that the relation between the defendant and his mother in reference to the estate of her deceased husband was an agency involving an element of trust, the bare proof of which raised a presumption adverse to the releases, making it incumbent upon the son to show affirmatively, in the language of Cowee v. Cornell, 75 N. Y. 91, “that no deception was practiced, no undue influence was used, and that all was fair.” He was of the opinion, however, that the defendant had sustained the burden of overcoming this presumption by the evidence which he offered of his mother’s long • and happy home life with him and his family during her 10 years of widowhood, and her strong and constantly growing affection for the defendant as compared with her other children, which the learned judge deemed
Interlocutory judgment modified so as to exclude from the accounting thereby directed the item of interest on the $3,000 mortgage, except for a period subsequent to January 13, 1896; also further modified by striking therefrom the award of costs to the plaintiffs; and, as thus modified, interlocutory judgment affirmed.