2 Mills Surr. 320 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1901
— Helen 0. Brush died of consumption in New York city on the 7th day of July, 1900, under fifty years of age. The nearest relatives whom she left her surviving were three sisters — Mrs. Findlay, Mrs. Southard and Miss Mary H. Brush — and a brother, James E. Brush. On the 24th day of May, 1900, she executed a will, under the terms of which Mrs. Southard, who is named as executrix, and who is the proponent herein, is given a legacy of $10,000, and the testatrix’s other sisters and her brother are each given the sum of $1,000. After making various other pecuniary legacies, the decedent gives the remainder of her estate (which, approximately, is oí the value of $20,000) to the First Church of Christ, Scientist, of New York city. The will is contested upon the ground of testamentary incapacity, and upon the further ground of undue influence alleged to have been exercised by agents of the residuary legatee.
The decedent was an unmarried woman. Her property came to her principally from the estate of her father and of that of her deceased brother, in which estates her sisters and surviving brother shared equally with her. She lived with her parents until they died, and, in the year 1889, took up her residence in a house on Forty-seventh street, in the city of New York, which she and Mrs. Findlay owned in common, and wherein she continued to live until within eighteen months of her death. The household, during the period of about ten years, consisted of the decedent and her sisters, Mrs. Findlay and Miss Mary H. Brush. The decedent had mental gifts and a culture of more than ordinary character. She was interested in literature and art, especially devoted to music, and had a strong sense of humor. She was tender-hearted and kindly in her intercourse with others, and, hence, had many friends, who
The above recital indicates sufficiently the main incidents in the life of the decedent which led up to the making of her will, and I shall now proceed to consider the issues raised by the parties herein. The circumstances surrounding the preparation and execution of the will have been testified to in much detail. It appears, from the testimony'of Mrs. Stetson, that she called on the decedent on the morning of May 22, 1900, in pursuance of a request of the latter. The decedent requested heir visitor to confer a favor on her, and then told her that she wished a will prepared, and, in answer to Mrs. Stetson’s inquiries as to the necessity of such a thing, decedent said that she had had two
It is insisted, however, that the testatrix, at the time she executed her will, was laboring under various insane delusions, which were the sole or controlling cause that induced her action. One of these delusions is said to have been her belief that she was being persecuted by her sisters, Mrs. Findlay and Miss Brush, and another that she believed that certain marvelous things — such as the ability of a person to live after extracting all of his blood from his body — could be accomplished through the powers of the religion which she professed. Several experts were called, who testified that, in their opinion, these beliefs were insane delusions, and demonstrated a lack of testamentary capacity, and one of them went so far as to hold that the belief in Christian Science itself was an insane delusion. The record is replete with testimony upon this subject, and the workings and teachings of this religious belief have been gone into most minutely and elaborately. Its adherents believe that
With regard to the other delusions which, it is claimed, affected the mind of the testatrix, it appears that on one occasion, in the winter of 1898, Dr. Ball, who had been her physician, requested her to answer certain hypothetical questions which he desired to ask her in connection with Christian Science, telling her at the same time that he did not care to discuss the subject with her. He then asked her several questions, as, for example, what she would do if a foreign body were imbedded in her eyeball, and she replied that she would go to a Christian Scientist who would remove the pain, so that it would make no difference whether the foreign body were in her eye or not. He also asked her what she would do if she were bleeding to death by having her leg cut off, or what effect it would have if the blood were extracted from her body, and she said that she would not die if her mind were in harmony with the divine mind. The next day Dr. Ball received a letter from the decedent which he destroyed, and wherein, it seems, she explained at length her views upon Christian Science, but, unfortunately, he could not remember its contents. It will be at once observed that the decedent was merely expressing her beliefs as
Upon a careful consideration of the voluminous testimony taken on this trial, I am of the opinion that the burden of proof on the issue of testamentary capacity, which is on the proponent, has been fully sustained, and that, at the time of the execution of her will, the decedent was of sound mind.
The contestants further insist that this will should not be probated for the reason that it was the result of undue influence
Tbe circumstances present in this case clearly show bow it came about that tbe will in contest was made. Tbe sisters and brother of tbe decedent were not dependent upon ber bounty. Their property was equal to that inherited by tbe testatrix, .and, so far as appears, they were as independently situated as she was. During tbe last four years of ber life tbe church which she made ber residuary legatee became deeply rooted in ber affections. She felt that she owed to it a debt of gratitude, for she believed that it bad given heir new health and strength and happiness, and feeling in this wise, she doubtless thought that she could best aid it in tbe promulgation of its teachings by giving to it tbe bulk of ber estate. Sha was, in my opinion, thoroughly aware of what she was about when she made this disposition, and she clearly knew tbe contents of ber will, which was in absolute accord witb ber free and unconstrained intentions and wishes. "Whether ber determination not to give ber fortune to ber family was unwise, whether tbe residuary legatee herein has deserved tbe affection and gratitude which the testatrix has so bountifully given evidence of, are not questions for this court to consider in arriving at its decision. The decedent, being of sound mind and free from restraint, had tbe right to do witb ber own as she pleased, and ber will must, therefore, be admitted to probate.
Tbe contestants raise tbe question that tbe bequest to the First Church of Christ, Scientist, is void because made within two months of ber death, contrary to the provisions of section ■G of chapter 319 of tbe Laws of 1848. It seems that tbe certi
Decreed accordingly.