21 N.Y.S. 960 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1893
The alleged will of John Gannon was executed on November 19,1887, and was contested by all his next of kin, namely,
Appellants also contend that the court erred in excluding the articles of separation executed between the deceased and his wife. The will was executed in 1887, and the separation agreement was not executed until 1890. This had nothing to do with, nor could it show in anyway any motive for, the peculiar provisions of the alleged will, as it was executed three years after the will. If admitted, it would have simply tended to show that Gannon’s delusion possessed his mind completely..
The appellants also claim that, the jury having found the decedent had testamentary capacity at the time of the execution of the will, it was error to set it aside on any ground. But it was clearly established on the trial that the decedent was possessed of the idea that his wife was unfaithful to him, and had communicated to him a venereal disease: and it was also clearly established that this was a delusion, and that neither the wife had had such a disease nor had he at any time suffered from it. And it is very certain that this delusion was the chief, if not the sole, cause for making a will by which he deprived his wife of any portion of his property; the provision for dower amounting to nothing, as he had no real estate. The court correctly charged the law in regard to such delusions. In order to invalidate a will it is not necessary that,the intellect should be in total eclipse and oblivion, or that the testator should be generally insane. There is a partial insanity, and a total insanity. Such partial insanity may exist as respects particular persons, things, or subjects, while as to others the person may not be destitute of the use of reason. A person may have upon some subjects, and even generally, mind and memory, and sense to know and apprehend ordinary transactions, and yet upon the subject of those who would naturally be the objects of his care and bounty, and the reasonable and proper disposition to them of his estate, he may be of unsound mind. In this case we think it clear that he was a monomaniac in respect to his wife’s fidelity, and as to the disease which he claimed she had communicated to him. Monomania is a perversion of the understanding in regard to a single object, or a small number of objects, with the predominance of mental excitement; while mania is a condition in which the perversion of the understanding embraces all kinds of objects, and is accompanied with general mental excitement. The verdict of the jury in this case preserves and emphasizes that distinction. By it the jury found that Gannon had general testamentary capacity, was not a monomaniac on all subjects, but had an insane delusion affecting the will in question, and was a maniac on that subject, and that such mania influenced the making of the will. This conforms to the rule in this state. Jarm. Wills, 112; Forman’s Will, 54 Barb. 274; Parish Will Case, 25 N. Y. 1, and cases there cited.
The order should therefore be affirmed, with costs. All concur.