180 A.D. 203 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
The evidence abundantly supported the verdict on the issue of the due execution of the will; nor was there any evidence which required the submission" to the jury of the question of testamentary capacity. Upon these two issues the evidence for the proponent was ample and without substantial dispute. A careful reading of the record and the elaborate and well-considered briefs of counsel leaves us with the opinion also that the surrogate was justified in directing the jury to find that the will was not secured by undue influence. It is true that the evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that the chief beneficiary induced the will by undue influence; but it does not support such inference, for the evidence is not inconsistent with the assumption that the will expressed the testator’s own voluntary intent. An inference of undue influence cannot be reasonably drawn from circumstances when they are not inconsistent with a contrary inference. (Boyse v. Rossborough, 6 H. L. Cas. [2d ed.]
In order to avoid a will on the ground of undue influence, “ it must be shown that the influence exercised amounted to a moral coercion, which restrained independent action and destroyed free agency, or which, by importunity, which could not be resisted, constrained the testator to do that which was against his free will and desire, but which he was unable to refuse or too weak to resist.” (Children’s Aid Society v. Loveridge, 70 N. Y. 387.) In determining the amount of pressure which would avail to substitute another’s will for the testator’s, the physical and mental condition of the testator is of primary importance. A will enfeebled by age, infirmity or dependence might be bent by pressure which would not influence one in health and mental vigor. The testator, when the will was executed, was eighty-two years of age, addicted to the excessive and continuous use of alcohol, blind and, therefore, dependent on his daughter, with whom he lived, for many personal offices ■ The will seems unjust. Two sons, both heads of families with whom he had lived, both with- slender means of support, one, stricken with insanity, who before his affliction had for twenty years managed the testator’s business and, as the old man said, had been the support of
Upon this background of facts, slight evidence of pressure might warrant a finding of undue influence, but such evidence is not in this case. These circumstances themselves are not such evidence. To reach the result of undue influence,
The decree and order of the Surrogate’s Court of Kings county should be affirmed, with costs.
Jenks, P. J., and Thomas, J., concurred; Mills, J., dissented upon the ground that the issue of undue influence should have been submitted to the jury, with whom Putnam, J., concurred.
Decree and order of the Surrogate’s Court of Kings county affirmed, with costs.