65 N.Y.S. 533 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
Mary Iredale died at West Davenport, in Delaware county, February 12, 1892, aged seventy-seven years, leaving an instrument purporting to be her will, dated November 13, 1891. She was a widow and her nearest relatives were nephews and nieces. Shortly after her death the proposed will was offered for probate, and objections thereto were filed by J. George Lockwood and George B. McC. Roberts, nephews of the decedent and two of the legatees named in the will. The grounds of their objections were that the
In the petition for the probate of the will, the value of the personal property is stated as not exceeding the sum of $20,000, and the value of the real property the sum of $6,000. With the exception of $100 given in trust for the purpose of keeping her burial lot in order, all of her property is given to her nepnews and nieces, thirteen in number. After legacies to these nephews and nieces, ranging from $100 to $2,500 each and amounting in the aggregate to $8,000, she gives the remainder of her property to be equally divided between the legatees named in the will, share and share alike. She appoints A. Raymond Gibbs executor of the will and directs him to sell her real estate.
The proceedings in the Surrogate’s Court were continued for about four years, and a large amount of evidence was introduced upon the part of both the contestants and the proponent. The testimony of the subscribing witnesses showed that the proper formalities for the due execution of a will had been observed. But little, if any, evidence was given upon the issue of undue influence, and the surrogate found that none had been exerted. Almost the entire evidence related to the testamentary capacity of the decedent, and on that question the surrogate found adversely to the proponent and adjudged that probate of the instrument, as the will of Mary Ire-dale, deceased, should be denied.
The decedent was born in England, and although she could read and write, it is evident that her early opportunities for education had been somewhat.limited. She came to this country in 1840 with her parents, who settled in West Davenport. In her earlier life she was a weaver in woolen factories in Schenectady and Troy, and was married at forty years of age to George Iredale, with whom she lived at Davenport, until he left her in about 1872 and returned to-England, where within about two years he died. Thereafter she, her sister, Mrs. Lockwood, and her unmarried brother, Jonathan Roberts, lived together at Davenport until the death of Mrs. Lockwood in 1884, after which she lived with her brother Jonathan until his death on December 26,1890. In the following spring she went
I have carefully examined the voluminous evidence in this case, and it fails to satisfy me of the correctness of the determination of the surrogate. Testamentary incapacity cannot be inferred from advanced age or enfeebled condition of mind and body. If the decedent had sufficient intelligence to comprehend the condition of her property, her relations to those who were the objects of her bounty, the nature and consequences of her act in executing the will, and if it was her free act, it must be held to be valid. (Matter of Lewis, 81 Hun, 213; Horn v. Pullman, 72 N. Y. 269 ; Matter of Snelling, 136 id. 515.) Reading the evidence in the light of this principle, my mind is not left free from doubt. The specific and unaided directions of the decedent for the preparation of the will and all the circumstances attending its execution unmistakably evince her testamentary capacity. Mr. Gribbs, who drew the will and was one of the witnesses, had been for thirty years in the practice of the profession of law and had been acquainted with the decedent for twenty years. About two or three weeks before the will was executed she sent for him to come to her house, and told him that she wanted to make her will; that she had times when she was not feeling well and if anything happened to her she wanted to have her will made, and wanted to know if she could change it after it was made, to which he answered that she could. He asked her how she wanted it. She then proceeded to give him the names of her nephews and nieces to whom she desired to give legacies, the amounts to each, the specific articles of property to some, her reasons for some of the gifts, and then said she wished the rest of her property to be equally divided among the legatees she had named, and told him that she wanted him to be the executor. Mr. Gribbs made a memorandum in accordance with
It is claimed ny the contestants that for nearly two years prior to the execution of the will the decedent was mentally incompetent, and their evidence was largely directed to the proof of that fact, but the undisputed evidence is that during that period and down to the time of her death, she, with some advice and assistance, managed her own property, transacted business with the man who worked her farm on shares and with others, paid her help, attended to her taxes, read the newspapers, conversed with her friends and acquaintances about what she had read, talked about her relatives,
The only expert testimony on the part of the contestants _s that of Dr. Gertrude Peck, the physician who attended the decedent in her illness in 1890, in 1891 and at the time of her death, She testifies that she does not think the decedent was capable of understand
It is a contention of the contestants that the decedent had an insane delusion in respect to the contestant, J. George Lockwood, but this is unsupported by the evidence. Furthermore, it is only when the will is the result of an insane delusion that it is invalidated. (Matter of Will of White, 121 N. Y. 406 ; Dobie v. Armstrong, 160 id. 584.) If the decedent had such a delusion in regard to the contestant it does not appear that it affected the testamentary disposition of her property. In three-fourths of the estate he shares equally with the other nephews and with the nieces named in the will, and the reason of the decedent for giving to her niece, Mary J. Blundel, more than to any of the other legatees, was that Mrs. Blundel had kindly yielded to the solicitations of the decedent to leave her family in Hevada and had come to the decedent’s home to care for her in her advanced age and infirmities.
We are not satisfied with the conclusion reached by the surrogate as to the testamentary capacity of the decedent, and on that subject there is sufficient doubt to make the case a proper one for a trial by a jury. (Matter of Drake, 45 App. Div. 214; Matter of Coe, 47 id. 181.)
The decree appealed from should be reversed on the facts, and a new trial should be had, by a jury at a Trial Term of the Supreme Court in Delaware county, of the questions of fact to be stated in
All concurred, Merwin, J., in the result.
Decree reversed on the facts and a new trial ordered by a jury at a Trial Term of the Supreme Court in Delaware county on the questions of fact to be stated in the order, with costs to abide the event. Order to be settled on notice by Edwards, J.