1 Mills Surr. 96 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1899
The trial herein was conducted before Surrogate Arnold, and it has now been stipulated that the case be decided by me without a new hearing. The importance of the issues involved, together with "the great number of conflicting statements scattered through the voluminous testimony that was taken, have caused me to feel keenly the disadvantage of being compelled to weigh evidence without seeing and hearing the witnesses who produce it, and I have, therefore, been at pains to give the minutes and the exhaustive briefs submitted the most careful study before arriving at my decision. Decedent died on May 15, 1894. She married the •contestant in 1887. During the three years prior to her death she invested the greater portion of her funds in western securities, and her husband, at the same time, made similar investments on his own account. Rot only did they thus engage in their business ventures together, but they likewise were in perfect accord with each other on all other subjects, so that their married life was marked by the most complete cordiality and harmony. The record discloses several attempts to show that latterly decedent felt displeasure at her husband, but all of these failed completely. There can be no doubt that the pleasantest companionship existed between this husband and wife. In 1890 decedent, then being in possession of her entire faculties, made a will. She went about the matter deliberately, with the aid of her own attorneys, and without advice from or consultation with contestant. She had no children or remoter descendants. Her only relatives were a brother and four sisters, with none of whom, excepting perhaps the former, she was particularly intimate. The one
Decreed accordingly.