3 N.Y.S. 259 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1888
This is an application upon the part of Mrs. Cynthia D. Rood,, the petitioner, with George S. Everts, for a revocation of the probate of the will and codicils, four in number, of Lyman Soule, deceased, which were' admitted to probate in this court by decree dated June 26, 1886. The proceeding for probate was instituted by the filing of a petition therefor on the-part of Charles G. Briggs, Esq., one of the persons named as executor in the third codicil to said will, on the 16th day of December, 1885, and the issuing of citations upon that day. Thereafter one Leroy Soule, an heir at law and next of kin of said decedent, appeared in said proceeding by his attorney and counsel, and filed objections to the said probate. Eighteen other heirs at law and next of kin appeared by the same attorney. The petitioner in this proceeding was among the number so appearing. The issues thus joined were tried in part, evidence was given by all the subscribing witnesses to the will and codicils, the petitioners had rested their case, some evidence had been adduced upon the part of the contestants, when a compromise was agreed upon,, and the opposition to probate withdrawn; the residuary legatees, Howard Soule, Eanny J. Green, Mary S. Paige, and Charles F. Durston, stipulating that the moneys bequeathed to them by the first subdivision of the thirty-first article of the third codicil should not be counted or treated as among the legacies which by the third subdivision of said article are made the basis of the distribution of the residuary estate. To carry this agreement into full effect, the decree, at the request of all the parties, through their attorneys, was made to embody a construction of the will in conformity with the stipulation. The answer interposed by Leroy Soule, and by which issue was raised, attacked the validity of the attempted disposition of the property by the thirty-fifth and thirty-seventh items of the will, the fourth item of the codicil of March 25, 1882, and the thirty-first item of the codicil of March 7, 1884; and questioned the legal effect of the last two paragraphs thereof, which are referred to in the stipulation and decree. The answer also alleges that the will and codicils were not the free or voluntary acts of the testator, but were procured by fraud and undue influence, and that the testator at the times of their execution was not of sound mind,—all of .which was decided contrary to the allegations of the answer, except that the will was construed in accordance with the stipulation.
The petition for revocation of probate alleges that Lyman Soule, at the time of making the writings, purporting to be his last x^ill and testament and codicil, was not of sound mind or memory, or in any respect capable of making a will; that he did not know their contents; that they were not witnessed at his request; that they were procured by fraud and undue influence; and that, after the execution, the papers were altered, and other papers substituted in their place. Upon the last claim no direct proof was given. The third codicil to the will, bearing date March 7,1884, is shown to be in the handwriting of Charles F. Durston, who is named therein as one of four parties to share equally in the income of the residue of the estate for the period of five years, and at the end of that time to have each one-fourth of $100,000. He is also named as an executor. The dispute over the testamentary capacity of the testator, and the burden of showing that the codicil, so written by an interested party, was the free and untrammeled expression of the testator’s wishes, have been the chief sources of difficulty in the case. The will and two of the codicils are quite long, and at first some of the provisions seem intricate. At the time of the execution of the third codicil the decedent was about 91 years of age. He had never been married, and his nearest relatives were nephews and nieces, and their descendants, who are quite numerous, and all recipients, by the will and codicils, of his bounty. The length of the instruments is due
The first codicil, bearing date the 22d day of March, 1881, witnessed by the ■same persons, refers to the will, and particularly the third item thereof, and merely corrects the names of the two devisees named therein, which had been interchanged, applying the Christian name of the one to the other, and vice versa. The second codicil, dated March 25, 1882, witnessed by the same persons, refers to the will. In the first clause is a devise for life of a farm to the •testator’s brother, (since deceased,) and, upon his decease, to his grandchil■dren. In the second clause is a legacy of $3,000 to Charles 3?. Durston. In the third are legacies of $1,000 each to five clergymen. In the fourth the •thirty-seventh item of the will is quoted and revoked. The same provisions are then made for the payment of the income of the residuary estate as in the ■will, except that the names of four of the beneficiaries are omitted. One new name is added. Of the principal, not to exceed one-ninth is given to the heirs of each of these parties, in the same manner that the residuum was • directed to be distributed by the will to the persons named in item 37, and the balance to be distributed among the three charitable institutions named in the ■thirty-fourth clause of the will. The third codicil, dated March 7, 1884, refers to the will and the former codicils. In the first clause the farm, of which The use was given to two nieces in the third item of the will, is devised absolutely to them and one other niece, and each of the three is given $1,500. In The second clause the legacies of three nieces are increased to $3,000 each. In the third.and fourth clauses 16 legacies are increased $500 each. In the fifth clause a legacy of $5,000 is reduced to $3,000. By the sixth clause the
This analysis of the will and codicils is thought to be proper, in view of the contention upon one side of the case that a person, in the feeble condition of the testator, could not have understood the provisions of the will, owing to their intricacy, and, on the other side, that the will and codicils are simple in their meaning and purport, and, if at all involved, only so in their legal phraseology. Counsel for the proponent says the scheme of the testator was simple, and what he intended is perfectly evident. The difficulty is not as to what was in the testator’s mind, but as to whether the language used expresses his intent. The counsel for the contestants argues that the provisions of the residuary clause are of doubtful legality, as being in contravention of certain statutes, and claims this is evidence that they were not understood by the testator. If the decedent is found to have been of testamentary capacity at the time of the execution of the will and codicils, being a man of unusually advanced age, and consequently of weakened powers, in the circumstances of the case, it is necessary to decide that he fully understood the nature and consequences of his testamentary act; and this must be determined from evidence aliunde the formal execution of the will. The fact that a will is illegal in some of its provisions can be no evidence to show that the attempted disposition was not understood, unless the testator was a lawyer, and well acquainted with the law. It would appear most useful to endeavor to view a will from the testator’s stand-point, rather than that, of the scrivener who drew it; and, if it appears that the will as dictated by the testator was comprehended by him, and that his ideas had been accurately expressed,, in the will, although in language more obscure than is ordinarily used, and not readily understood by a stranger, it must be held that the will in this respect complies with the law, although for some other reason it may not do so.
The first inquiry, however, in this case, is, “did the testator have legal capacity to execute a will at the times of signing the will and codicil?” Much evidence has been given upon this subject, but it was not contended by the argument of the counsel for the contestants that Lyman Soule did not have mental ability to make a will of any kind, and under any circumstances. On the contrary, it was conceded that he might have made a lawful will at the time of the transactions in question. The evidence to support the theory of mental unsoundness was the age of the testator, impaired sight, attacks of vertigo, attended by brief unconsciousness, forgetfulness, losing his way, and having to be assisted home, and sometimes to his room, physical exhaustion, inability to read papers, making radical changes in the disposition of his property in the last years of his life, frequently declaring that he could not do business, and surrendering up most of it into the hands of others. One witness testified to one occasion when Mr. Soule had an attack in a store in 1880, when he fell out of his chair, and remained unconscious until after a doctor had been brought in, and had administered some remedy,—more than 20 minutes. It is not proven what the character of the illness was, but it appears by the evidence of the same witness that “Uncle Lyman,” as he was called, came to the store the next day, and asked if he had done any damage, and requested that the matter be kept quiet. One witness testified to meeting Mr. Soule near the city limits, when he appeared to be lost, in 1883 or 1884. The snow was deep, and witness took him in his sleigh to ride home. He asked witness what certain places were, with which he had been familiar. He was in the sleigh six or seven minutes, and, before lie reached his home, he expressed surprise that he had gotten lost. Several other witnesses tell of meeting him when he inquired for places which had been well known to him. In nearly every case it is shown that Mr. Soule appreciated the information given, and usually acted in accordance with it. Considerable evidence is also
Upon the part of the proponents it is shown that, up to the time of the execution of the third codicil, and subsequently, the testator collected money upon mortgages, and for rent of houses owned by him, gave receipts therefor, and appeared to the persons with whom he transacted the business to be able to understand what he was doing. In October, 1883, he received money upon a mortgage, signed a receipt for it, and indorsed the payment upon the mortgage. The party who made the payment had had many similar business transactions with him, and did not notice anything unusual. In January, 1884, an attorney at law who was acquainted with Mr. Soule came to see about selling him a mortgage, found him at the bank, where he had his desk and papers, told him about the mortgage, and what he wanted. The testator agreed to meet him at his law office at 2 o’clock in the afternoon. He met his engagement promptly, examined the mortgage, objected to it because it ran too long, and finally refused to take it because of the time and of its being payable in small installments. The witness observed nothing different from what he had seen of the testator for a good many years. A few weeks before, he had a conversation with him in regard to a lawsuit which had been tried in 1855. The testator told over the details, of which the witness was cognizant, accurately and rationally, and inquired interestedly about people they had both known in former years. ' The testator was a member of a fire company. 1 He occasionally met the members at their house as late as 1882 or 1883. He lent the company $200 in 1881 or 1882, and took a note. Payments were made from time to time.. At one time he made them a present of $50. In September, 1884, the note was placed in the bank for collection. He met one -of the men who had made payments, and told him the note had run long .enough; whereupon the note was paid.
In 1884 one of his tenants, who kept a restaurant, told him he wanted more room. Mr. Soule said the tenant next door was going out, and he would see what he could do for him, but advised him not to be too hasty about it. In November, 1883, he made a contract with one of his tenants for the sale of a store, title to pass on the 1st of May, 1884. The deed was given at the time named, a mortgage given for part of the purchase price, and a check to Mr. Soule for the balance. The negotiations were made in person. Pending the negotiations, he asked a friend to go in and look at the store. When told that he did not want to buy, he replied: “I would like to have you go in and look at it anyway. ” This was done. Two or three times afterwards, and in 1884 or 1885, he told his friend he had sold the store, intimating that the looking at it had stirred the matter up; the purchaser being the occupant at the time. In the fall of 1885, a short time before his last sickness, he drove out to his tenant-houses. He mentioned particular houses he wanted to see; expressed pleasure at riding; asked the man who drove to take him to the barber shop to be shaved. He became ill, and concluded to go home. The driver says he saw nothing out of the way. In 1884 he met the husband of one of his nieces, who lives in Sennett, where he had formely resided, and asked him if a certain farm would bear a $13,000 loan. At one time he said to this witness: “John, when you go home, tell your young minister I have been making a new codicil to my will, and have left him one thousand dollars. ” This young minister was one of the clergymen named in the second codicil as legatee to the amount of $1,000. Subsequently he told this witness he was going to make a new codicil, and put Mate’s name in it. After that, in 1884, the witness met him, when he said; “John, when you go home, you tell Mate
The testator died November 28, 1885, of acute bronchitis. The will and first two codicils were witnessed by two gentlemen who were officers of, and in ■ daily attendance at, the bank where the testator had his papers, and of which he was a director. They knew him intimately. One of the witnesses, Mr. Newton, Lad been acquainted with him 14 years; liad seen and conversed with him almost daily from the time he brought his papers to the bank, in 1878, to .about 3 months before his death. He had known of bis extensive business transactions, and taken part in many of them, both as an officer of the bank .and as an assistant of the testator. He, as well as the other witness, testifies unqualifiedly to the opinion that the testator was of sound mind and memory, and in all respects competent to make a will at the time of the execution of the will and first two codicils in question. The third codicil was at
Upon the whole evidence, the conclusion is imperative that the testator at the time of the execution of the will and codicil possessed legal testamentary capacity; that he was able to understand the condition of his property; his-obligations to those who were related to him by ties of blood, or who had legal 'or moral claims upon him; and the character and effect of the provisions of his will and codicils. While it appears that his perceptive powers and memory were somewhat impaired, as would be naturally supposed in a person of his advanced years, his regulative faculties and business acumen are shown to have been remarkably well preserved. Cases may be cited in which legal; capacity to make a will has been upheld in which there is apparently much less-ground. The case of Horn v. Pullman, (decided by the court of appeals ini 1873,) 72 N. Y. 269, involved the question of the testamentary capacity of a man, 83 years of age, who was suffering from infirmities incident to advanced age, and had been previously afflicted with sickness, which left him enfeebled in body. His sight and memory were considerably impaired. He took no active part in business for several years before his death, which occurred within three months after the execution of the will. He had grown more reserved and less cheerful than formerly; would repeat questions sometimes t.wo or three times during a conversation. He did not recognize readily some persons with whom he was acquainted, and had to be told who they were. The evidence altogether showed that the testator’s mental and bodily powers were impaired, but failed to show that he did not understand his relations to his family, the condition of his property, and the efféct of his will. There was evidence in the case of circumstances tending to show that he-acted intelligently in the transaction of some trivial matters of business. The physician who attended him during the last years of his life, and who was one-of the subscribing witnesses to his will, testified that his memory of recent, events appeared to be impaired, and that he was bodily and mentally infirm, but, in the witness’ opinion, these infirmities did not affect the testator’s competency to make a will. The court adopts this view of the case, and lays, down the rule that a will should be sustained if the testator is shown to have-had sufficient intelligence to comprehend the condition of his property, his relation to those who are or may be the objects of his bounty, and the scope and! meaning of the provisions of his will, provided it be his free act. Many cases;
A question of more difficulty to decide, upon all the facts of the case, is-whether the instruments admitted to probate as the last will and testament of the testator, and as codicils thereto, were fully understood by him, and were his own free acts, or whether they were obtained by undue influence. Had the parties who wrote the instruments in question been entirely disinterested, and the testator been in the full possession of his normal faculties and senses;had his sight been good, his memory unimpaired, and his actions independent,—the presumption would follow that he fully understood the provisions of the instruments, and desired to have them carried into effect. But the will and first two codicils were written by a lawyer, who is made a legatee to-the amount of $2,000, and the third codicil was drawn by, and is in the handwriting of, another lawyer, who is given thereby one-foiirth of the'income of a large residuary estate for five years, and at the end of that time the sum of $25,000, and who is named therein as an executor, at a salary of $1,000 a-year for six years, in addition to the commissions allowed by law. Upon the ■ issue as to undue influence, the question of the burden of proof is, in the circumstances, not free from difficulty, and the decisions of the courts in other cases have been examined to ascertain the proper rule to be adopted in the • present controversy. The case of Marx v. McGlynn, 88 N. Y. 357, was one in which the testator had made a will in favor of his religious adviser, and the-question of presumption as to undue influence was raised. The court held that it is not sufficient to show that a will is the result of affection or gratitude, or the persuasion of a friend or relative, which he may legitimately use, but the influence must be such as to overpower the will, producing a disposition of the ■ property which the testator would not have made if left free to act. Where, however, a weak-minded person makes a will in favor of his priest or confidential adviser, to the exclusion of the natural objects of his bounty, the law presumes undue influence, and, in order to sustain the will, there should besóme proof besides the making of it. This presumption, however, is one of fact; and, where the evidence tends to show that the will was the voluntary, deliberate act of a person of ordinary intelligence, prompted by affection, • without improper persuasion, and the will is not unjust, a decree admit-ting it to probate will be upheld. Two kinds of undue influence are re-f erred to as being recognized by the law,—one of coercion or threats of injury by which a person is compelled to act contrary to his desire, which cannot-often occur under the present system of executing wills; the other and more common one, in which the mind of a person is wrought upon through constant-persuasion, and mental or moral pressure, or appeals to hope or fears, con-tinned until the victim, for the sake of peace, is compelled to surrender his-own wishes, and do an act which he would not do or desire to do if left freely' to act his own pleasure. The case of Will of Martin, 98 U. Y. 193, was one-in which probate was contested on the ground of undue influence. The tes^ tatrix left three sons, one of whom was named as executor of the will. He had communicated to the-scrivener the provisions to be inserted in the will, and was himself a beneficiary. It was alleged against the will that it was ob« tained by undue influence. The court held that the burden of establishing the defense was upon the parties making the attempt, and, as the testatrix was found to have had testamentary capacity, and a present knowledge of the
The case at bar differs from all the cases cited to such an extent that the ■burden of proof upon the claim of undue influence is left almost entirely to the judgment of the court as a new question. It may be said that propriety at least would dictate that a person deriving a benefit from the will of another ■ should not conduct the affair. Qui se soripsit hceredem, or whoever draws a will in his own favor, does, a thing which ought to excite the suspicion of the •court, and call upon it to jealously examine the evidence, and be judicially ■ satisfied that the paper propounded expresses the true will of the deceased, before admitting it to probate. The fact that the testator had full testamentary • capacity, and knew the contents of the will, is sufficient to remove such suspicions, and to place the burden upon the contestants of proving undue influence. It was said by the surrogate in Wilson v. Moran, 3 Bradf. Sur. 180: “A will by a client in favor of an attorney is not absolutely invalid. * * * In such a case there is no testamentary incapacity, but still the circumstances - call for the largest degree of circumspection and vigilance, to see that the act was in consonance with the views and wishes of the testator, and was not the .result of influence exercised through the medium of the existing confidential relation. * * * It is, in substance, a rule of evidence to the effect that proof of formal execution alone is not enough to force a conclusion, and that, • even after the factum is formally established, the burden remains upon the proponent to show, by additional testimony, spontaneousness and volition.” In view of the propositions contained in the case of Will of Smith, supra, the •doctrine laid down in Wilson v. Moran is only to be applied where the testator is shown to have been dependent upon his attorney for information •concerning the contents of the will, or where the testator was an infirm person, and the provisions of the will are such as to create suspicion, or the cir•cumstances under which it was executed are such as to lead to the inference ■of undue influence, as in the case of Rundell v. Downing, 5 N. Y. St. Rep. 253. It does not appear what may have been Lyman Soule’s purpose as to the disposition of his property prior to the will executed June 24, 1880, or that he was then mentally infirm. The legacy to the attorney who drew the will was small compared with the size of the estate. It would not seem to be unreasonable to assume that the legacy was given in consideration of services rendered. There is not enough evidence to raise the presumption that this
Before proceeding to examine the evidence relating to the third codicil, as-the proponents have referred to t-lie fact that this petitioner upon probate consented to the decree which she seeks to overthrow, it may be proper to refer to some authorities upon the question of the burden of proof in a proceeding like the present for a revocation of probate. In an early case in the surrogate’s court of Hew York county, (Collier v. Idley's Ex'rs, 1 Bradf. Sur. 94,) the history of the law relating to proceedings for the revocation of probate-was carefully examined, the law was expounded substantially as in the Case of Gouraud'in the court of appeals, infra, and the question of the onus of sustaining the allegations against the will was fully considered. It was. there-contended upon the part of the proponents that the probate of the will was prima facie evidence of its validity, and that the burden of overthrowing it lay with the contestant. The surrogate held that the proponents were bound to prove the will by original proof, independently of the first trial, but said, that “ where allegations are filed with the view of raising some issue, narrower than the broad and general one of the invalidity of the will, and the incompetency of the proof, if such a course be regular, the rule of evidence, as I have laid it down, may perhaps be varied.” The case of Post v. Mason, 91 N. Y. 539, was an action brought in the supreme court to have the probate-of a will vacated, and the defendants adjudged to hold property as trustees, which had been given them individually by the will. One of the defendants-was an attorney at law, who, at the death of the testator, and for one or more years previously, had been his friend and counselor. He wrote the will, and was named as one of the residuary legatees. The testator’s property amounted, to about $200,000, and the attorney’s share was about $17,500. The court of appeals in its opinion in that case says: “The relation of attorney and draughtsman, no doubt, gave, in the case before us, the opportunity for influence, and self-interest might supply a motive to unduly exert it; but its exercise cannot be presumed in aid of those who seek to overthrow a will, already established by the judgment of a competent tribunal, rendered in proceedings to which the plaintiffs were themselves parties, nor, in the absence of evidence, warrant a presumption that the intention of the testator was improperly, much less fraudulently, controlled.”
In the present ease the testator was a person of advanced years—about 90— when the third codicil was executed, he was physically infirm, he was slow of movement, his sight was poor, and he depended upon others to read to him. This instrument was, in respect to the most important provisions, contrary toll is previous will and codicils. The attorney and draughtsman was one of the chief beneficiaries. These facts require that the proponent should satisfy the-court, by a clear preponderance of evidence, that the testator fully understood the nature and consequences of the testamentary act. There is no direct, proof of any attempt on the part of the attorney, or those who were associated with him, to induce or influence the testator to make this codicil. There had been one quite radical change in the testamentary disposition of the residuum, of his property, made by one of the former codicils, before the parties who assisted in the making of the third codicil were brought into service. Four of the nine original residuary legatees had been left out, and one new name added. It is proven that Mr. Soule had repeatedly, after making the will,, expressed dissatisfaction with his relatives. He did not live with any of them, or have much intimacy with them. He was heard to say of Howard Soule, who continued throughout to be one of the residuary legatees, that he liked him because he stayed away from him, and did not bother him; that he-did not come until he sent for him. There is evidence of expressions of affec
In the second codicil, dated May 25, 1882, in the making of which it does not appear that he took any part, Mr. Durston is made a legatee to the amount -of $300. It appears that the testator was very frequently in Mr. Durston’s law-office, in the years 1884 and 1885, and that, to enter the office, he had to -climb a very long flight of stairs, with considerable difficulty. Durston attended to the decedent’s law business, supervised his loans, made collections for him, and thus much of his time was occupied during the last three or four years of the testator’s life. It does not appear whether he received any other -compensation than the legacies named in the will. It is shown by the will and codicil that Mr. Soule made provision in this way to compensate other lawyers, and, in one instance, it is upon condition that no other claim be made. The amount given to Durston is stated to be about 6 per cent, of the •■testator’s property. Prior to the execution of this codicil the testator told the ■husband of Mrs. Paige, one of the four principal legatees, that he was going to put his wife’s name in it, and afterwards told him he had done so. This '•legatee had been named in the original will as the recipient of $2,000. With the exception of the change in the residuary clause of the will above mentioned, the scheme.of the third codicil, both as to the persons benefited and the proportionate amounts bequeathed, is practically the same as before. The amounts of most of the general legacies are increased, and all the relatives ■are remembered. From the evidence of the house-keeper, called by the'contestant to show the testator’s infirmity, it appears that, during the time of the preparing the third codicil, he was obtaining the names of the children of his nephews and nieces. There is evidence that the testator knew the consents of the will, from the fact that the first codicil was expressly declared to be made for the purpose of correcting a mistake in the will. The naming of so many relatives of remote degrees of affinity was presumably the act of the tesTator, or done at his dictation, as, in the absence of any member of the family, the lawyer who drew the instrument would hardly have been expected to have known them. The claim is fairly made that the execution of the fourth codicil, -the testator being shown to have been compos mentis, proves presumptively that he knew the contents, of the third codicil. Changes made in the provisions •of the will, increasing legacies of many parties who .were not present or represented, and diminishing those of others, seem rather to support the theory That the testator directed the changes than that they were the work of a few conspirators. By the will and first two codicils about $75,000 is given in general legacies, three farms are devised, and the residue of the property is divided .among six relatives and three charitable institutions. By the will, as altered by all the codicils, about $116,000 is given in general legacies, the farms are -disposed of in the same manner, the income of the balance is given to four persons, three of whom are relatives, for five years, $100,000 is then to be -divided between the four, the three charities are bequeathed $20,000 each, and The residue of the property is given to relatives in proportion to their general
It is in proof that, the day before the third codicil was executed, the testator, his nephew, Howard Soule, Charles G-. Briggs, one of the executors, and -Charles F. Durston, were together in a room in the latter’s office, with the •door shut. The law partner and the cleric of Durston were aware of the fact «that the parties were together, and the clerk was instructed not to allow interruptions. A draft or memorandum of the will had been previously made, which was read over to the testator by Howard Soule, who says this was >his second visit to Auburn, and the first time he had seen the testator upon •this business. After reading the draft, and at the request of the testator, he ..furnished him with names of the children of his (Howard’s) brother, who •were afterwards included in the codicil. He made an appointment to come •again the day following. He came from Syracuse the next day, as agreed, -saw the engrossed codicil in the morning, and read it in part to the testator. In the afternoon he read the whole of it to the testator. This was the same •day upon which it was executed. He now identifies the original instrument •as the one he read before its execution. He was present throughout the signing and witnessing of the codicil. The following day he made and took away -a copy of the paper, and also received a copy of the will and first two codicils: It is urged in support of the good faith of the parties who took part in the transaction that Howard Soule would receive less property under the third -codicil than he would have had if it had not been made. It appears that he had no acquaintance with the attorney who drew the codicil until the week it was executed. He is not proven to have had any motive to urge the change •in testamentary provision. The changes made by the codicil were presumably within the knowledge of Mr. Charles G. Briggs, one of the executors named in the original will as well as the codicils. The clause of the third •codicil which has been criticised is very plainly written. The nanjes of the legatees are mentioned in full, both at the beginning and end of the first subdivisión. The amount of the legacies is both written out and twice stated in figures. It would seem impossible to read the clause, or even glance at this •subdivision of it, without learning who the beneficiaries are. The fact that the codicil was read to the testator by his relative and chosen adviser is fully established. It cannot be held that Lyman Soule was the victim of deception or imposition without involving all the parties who were present at the time the codicil was prepared in an unlawful and contemptible conspiracy. The facts do not create such a presumption. In the absence of positive proof or •circumstantial evidence sustaining such a conclusion, and admitting of no other reasonable hypothesis, the finding must negative the theory of fraud. The conclusion is that, at the time of the execution of the third codicil, the testator was of sound mind and memory, and competent to make a will; that the codicil was his free act; and that it was in all respects properly and legally executed, and that the testator was not under restraint.
It is claimed on the part of the respondents in this proceeding that the petitioner is estopped from maintaining it by the fact that she has derived a ben•efit under it, and accepted money paid in pursuance of the decree admitting •the will to probate. Certain concessions were, at the request of the parties, .granted upon the probate, and incorporated in the decree, as stated above. It is not demonstrated, nor is it clear to the court, that the petitioner derived •any practical benefit from the adjudication in that respect. It is proven that, after the will was admitted to probate, the petitioner, Mrs. Bood, as assignee, received from the executors a legacy of $500, given by the third codicil to
In the case at bar it appears that the petitioner did receive the money from
An offer was also made at the same time to add another party as petitioner, against whom it is not shown the same defense could be made; but as the statutory time of limitation of commencing the proceeding is passed, and some of the parties are infants, and all are not represented, the amendment cannot be held to give the new petitioner the same rights he might have had if joined originally in the petition. It is claimed by the petitioner that the trusts attempted to be created by the will and the thirty-first item of the third codicil are prohibited by the statutes against perpetuities, and are consequently void. The law limits the suspension of the absolute ownership of personal property to two lives in being at the death of the testator, and it is contended that the ownership of the property cannot be absolutely determined until after five years, which may exceed the time allowed by statute. It is also urged that the will violates the statutes forbidding a direction as to the accumulation of interest, except for the benefit'd' minors. The decision of these questions, which are perplexing, is not useful or proper at this time. The inquiry now is whether the will was legally executed, and if it shall stand as proven, or if probate shall be revoked, and the will or codicils bo set aside. The construction of the will, and the decision as to the legality of particular provisions, must be had either upon the j udicial settlement of the accounts of the executors, or a proceeding for that purpose in an action brought in another court.
It being determined that the will and codicils were duly signed and published by a competent person, that they were his free acts, and that he knew and appreciated their provisions and effect, this application is denied. Costs are allowed to the successful parties from the estate.