48 N.Y.S. 437 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
A petition was presented to the Special Term of this court by Frederick 0. Beach and Jennie Beach Gasper, the only children of Harriet E. Beach, alleging that the said Harriet E. Beach “ is and for a number of years last past has been of unsound mind, and a person incompetent "to manage herself or her affairs in consequence of lunacy, loss of understanding and other causes,” and asking that a commission issue to inquire as to her apparent lunacy or incompetency. There were annexed to this petition affidavits of the peti-' tioners and others, and a series of letters written by Mrs. Beach to
The application was made under the provisions of the Oode of Civil Procedure providing for the appointment of a committee of a person incompetent to manage himself or his affairs. By section 2320 it is provided that the “ jurisdiction of; the Supreme Oourt extends to the custody of the person and the care of the property of a person incompetent to manage himself or his affairs, in consequence of lunacy, idiocy, habitual drunkenness, or imbecility arising from old age, or loss of memory and understanding, or other cause.” By section 2327 it is provided that, “ if it presumptively appears, to the satisfaction of the court, from the petition and the proofs accompanying it, that the case is one of those specified in this title, and that a committee ought, in the exercise of a sound discretion, to be appointed, the court must make an order directing either:
. “1. That a commission issue, as prescribed in the next section, to one or more fit persons designated in the order, or,
“ 2. That the question of fact arising upon the competency of the person with respect to whom the petition prays for the appointment of a committee, be tried by a jury at a Trial Term of the court.”
The somewhat unusual proceeding was taken in this case of submitting' affidavits and proof on behalf of the person alleged to be incompetent, and determining the question of such incompetency upon such affidavits rather than upon a trial either before a sheriff’s jury or before a jury at a Trial Term of the court, the tribunals indicated by the provisions of the Oode who are to determine that question. By section 2325 of the Oode the proceeding to be followed upon the presentation of such a petition is prescribed. There it is. provided that the petition must be accompanied with proof. by affidavit that
From the petition presented it appears that Mrs. Beach is now sixty-nine years of age; that she resided with her husband,,the father of the petitioners, in this city until his death, intestate,, o.n the 1st of January, 1896; that the property of Mrs. Beach consists of an interest in the personal estate of the father, valued at about $2.7,000, and the dower interest in the i;eal estate of which her husband died seized, valued at about $195,000, but from which no income is realized over and above that necessary to pay taxes and assessments, interest on mortgages and insurance premiums; that in the summer of 1896 Mrs. Beach went to Europe, where she still resides, traveling from place to place; and that at the time the petition was presented she was at Venice, Italy; that Mrs. Beach, in January, 1897, at Alexandria, Egypt, intermarried with one Henry Rogers. It further appeared by the petition and! accompanying papers that Mrs. Beach had been twice in the asylum for the insane in consequence of her mental condition; that she was first sent; to an asylum in the year 1855, when she was placed in an insane asylum at Hartford, Conn.; that subsequently, in December, 1890, she was placed in the Bloomingdale Asylum for the Insane, and remained there until May, 1891, when she was discharged from said asylum upon habeas corpus. Mrs. Beach has been for several years a spiritualist, .believing that she was in constant communication with the spirits of deceased! persons, and the person that: she has since married is also a spiritualist, and had acted as the medium through whom she . received the communications from the spirits. His affidavit is annexed to the papers in opposition to this application, and from it it appears that he is fifty-two years of age, some seventeen years younger than.Mrs. Beach. He alleges that, since 1886, he and Mrs. Beach had been on very friendly terms; that he left Hew York shortly after Mrs. Beach in 1896, arriving in England about August first of that year; that in the following September Mrs. Beach explained to him the position she was in with her family, stating that she was in fear that, her son and daughter would attempt, in order to obtain the control of her share in her husband’s estate, to harass and annoy her or to take lunacy proceedings, or to. do something to force her
Rogers, in his affidavit, says that, except as to the disputes with her children about money affairs, Mrs. Beach felt very affectionately toward them. He says that she is perfectly sane. “ She is no doubt an ardent investigator of spiritualism and student of reforms for women, and in the discussions on these subjects which she has had' with various persons during her travels she always left them interested, and many thanked her for the views she had expressed; ” that “ during the period of our traveling I have seldom referred to the subject of spiritualism, and have used no improper or other influence over her such as is suggested in the petition and evidence.” He also swears : “I have not used any such influence with my said wife either before or after marriage in connection with her affairs or as to our marriage. We married after mature deliberation by both of us, I honestly believing I could be of benefit to her, and she acted entirely of her own free will in accepting me as her husband and companion.” The unselfish motive of Rogers in contracting this marriage is made evident when it is seen that he proceeded to assist her in preventing her children from forcing an arrangement to protect the capital of her property by getting some instrument which transferred the' capital to himself. Mrs. Beach,
Now, turning to the letters written by Mrs. Beach to her children during the time that Rogers was with.liér in the capacity of traveling companion, and down to the time of her marriage to him, it is seen that there is presented the case.of a woman, either acting, or pretending to act, under what she believes to be the advice of her mother,.her late husband and other deceased persons whom she believed were having communications with her. She speaks again and again of her first husband’s wishes that have been communicated to> her. She says in one letter that he (her deceased husband] wants to have her part of the estate portioned off and.for her to use
It is true that a belief in spiritualism may be consistent with good business instincts and sound judgment; and the mere fact that a person is a believer in spiritualism would not of itself justify an inference that such person was incompetent to manage himself or his affairs. When, however, it appears that, in addition to a belief in spiritualism, a person lias become so convinced of the reality of communications from the dead that the control of his person and the disposition of his property are governed by the advice and directions contained in these communications from deceased persons, and that a person under such influence is about to dispose of his property, or to contract a marriage or other relations which appear to be unwise or unusual, according to the accepted standards, and that the assumed communications from such deceased persons have come through the mediumsliip of the person who is to benefit by such advice, arrangements or disposition of property, it seems to me that a case is presented which calls for an investigation as to the competency of such person. It is not the abstract belief in spiritualism that raises the presumption of incompetency, but the fact that a person has surrendered his will to the control of such influences, rather than to the exercise of sound judgment. And when it appears that those influences are being used to procure a disposition of property to others than her children, or those to whom it would naturally go, a case is presented- which, at least, requires an investigation by the tribunal provided to determine questions of this character.
It is said that _ as Rogers is now Mrs. Beach’s husband, it is but natural that she should consult with him and follow his advice as to the disposition of her property, but it here appears that the selection of Rogers as her husband was the result of the communication of the wishes of those that were dead, and she states again and again, that in the disposition which she has made, or was about to make of her property, she was acting under similar communications.
It is unnecessary, nor would it be proper, to determine that upon this record there is exhibited a case of such incompetence as would justify the appointment of a commission to care for Mrs. Beach and her property; but we think it is the duty of the court, if it presum
I think the order appealed from should be reversed and the motion ' granted.
Van Brunt, P. J., Williams and Patterson, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed and motion granted, with costs.