46 Misc. 375 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1905
Mrs. Egan, the decedent, died on April 14, 1904, from cirrhosis of the liver, resulting from excessive indulgence in alcohol during many years. She was then about 53 years of age. She left her surviving her husband, a nephew she had cared for from childhood and of whom she was very fond and whom she commonly spoke of as her son, a niece who was a favorite of hers, and a brother and a sister were her next of kin and heirs- at-law. She had had two sons, who both died in 1882, being then about 5 and I years of age, respectively, on the occasion of a visit made by her with them to her old home in Ireland. The loss of these children affected her deeply, and it was her statement that she sought relief from her grief in the use of alcohol. ¡She was the owner of a house in Thirty-fourth street, in this city, in which she and her husband resided, and of a personalty consisting of government bonds and deposits in savings banks, and the aggregate value of her estate amounted to $56,000 or more.
In the fall of 1898 her husband caused her arrest for disorderly behavior and intoxication and thereupon procured her to be examined as to her sanity by two physicians, both of high repute as specialists in mental diseases. These gentlemen united in a certificate to the effect that she was then mentally unsound. Upon this certificate approved by a justice of the
Up to this time her principal insane delusion, if not the only one, was that her husband was unfaithful to her, particularly with a woman of mature age named Temperton or Rolan, who was a domestic in the employ of a family living on the same block with her, one member of which was an aged lady named Cox, and the house in which they resided was spoken of as the “ Cox house.” ' She alleged that her husband was the father of a child by this woman, which child was cared for by him in a specified institution, and that he had married her. Prior to her arrest and. imprisonment she had repeated this charge to many people and had employed detectives to watch her husband in order to obtain evidence against him. One of these detectives, named Phelan, had deskroom in an office occupied by Mr. Henry W. Leonard, a lawyer, Mr. Harry P. Leonard, his son and assistant, and Mr. Tyng, another lawyer, and in the course of his employment as such detective, and' in anticipation of the possible need of the services of a lawyer by Mrs. Egan, he brought Mr. Harry P. Leonard to her residence and made her acquainted with him.
Quite shortly after the commitment of Mrs. Egan a proceeding for her release was instituted on the petition of Mr. Harry P. Leonard, and a writ of habeas corpus was obtained and served. Mrs. Egan’s husband also commenced a proceeding for the appointment of a committee of the person and estate of his wife on the ground of her insanity, in which commissioners were appointed by the Supreme Court, and a trial was had before such commissioners and a sheriff’s jury, and the proceedings under the writ of habeas corpus were adjourned from "time to time until the conclusion of that trial. Ro final order was made by the court in the proceeding for the appointment of a committee, and that proceeding was allowed to drop, probably because of the fact that, while the jury agreed that Mrs.
•In this litigation Mrs. Egan was represented by Mr. Tyng, who was actively assisted by the two Leonards, father and son. After her release an action was commenced in her behalf against the two physicians who had certified to her insanity and against the superintendent of the asylum to recover damages for false imprisonment. In this action Mr. Leonard, the elder, was attorney of record. It was upon the calendar and was brought to trial in the early part of 1903, when it was dismissed on the ground that Mrs. Egan had no remedy for false imprisonment, though she might have recovered if sufficient facts existed and could be proved in an action for malicious prosecution.
Up to the time of Mrs. Egan’s discharge in habeas corpus-preceding, which was in October, 1898, her only apparent delusion was an unfounded belief in the unfaithfulness of her husband with the Temperton woman. 3STo proof that this belief had any foundation in fact was offered in that trial, or upon the trial before me. Mrs. Egan, in the course of that trial, expressed a belief that her husband was innocent. At other times she asserted that he was guilty, as charged by her, and subsequently she acted as she had done before her imprisonment, by persistently watching him and having others da so, in her efforts to obtain evidence against him, and by annoying him by angry repetitions of the charges. When she indulged in liquor in great excess, as she did frequently, she compelled her husband to leave her house by actual violence, or threats of bodily harm, and on these occasions he remained
I do not think it strange that the sheriff’s jury refused to find Mrs. Egan insane on proof of this one delusion as to the infidelity of her husband with the Temperton woman. The detectives employed by her, or one of them, had made false reports to her of facts alleged to have been observed by him which might have been believed by a sane person, and mere jealousy, though unfounded, is a frail support for a judicial finding of insanity. But the subsequent conduct of Mrs. Egan justifies the judgment of the physicians who recommended her confinement, and requires the conclusion that, in 1898, she had a disease of the brain, which, with her continued use of alcohol, progressed so as to make her plainly an insane person prior to December 16, 1902, when the propounded paper was signed by her.
Her delusion of jealousy as to the conduct of her husband with the Temperton woman continued to the time of her death, but other delusions became manifest, and at times seemed to be predominant. Among these was the delusion that the “ Cox house ” had been purchased by her husband and that he was using it as a place in which to harbor two women who had been actresses at Proctor’s theatre as his mistresses. There was absolutely no pretense of plausibility for this delusion, and its connection with the previous delusion as to the Temperton woman, who had been a servant in the same house, is quite apparent. That house remained vacant for a time, and while it was so vacant Mrs. Egan hired a room in the house opposite for the purpose of watching it. It was purchased by a respectable gentleman, who afterwards resided there with his wife and two grown daughters. Mr. Egan was not acquainted with the family and never visited there. The ladies suspected had never had any connection with any theatre, and it is not
The house adjoining Mrs. Egan’s on the east is and for many years past has been used as a hospital for the treatment of diseases of the throat and ear. ¡Numerous reputable physicians are on its staff and it has always been known as a decent and quiet establishment. In April, 1900, there was a change of matron in this hospital. The new matron, with her husband and two little girls, aged about 13 and 15' years respectively, then came to reside in the house. ' Mrs. Egan was a stranger to all of them, but within a week after they came there Mrs. Egan came to the door of the hospital with a man, believed to be one of her detectives or a policeman, and charged that the house was being kept as a resort for lewd persons and that her husband had been beguiled into it and had been guilty of immoral acts with the two children of the matron and other women. Thereafter, and so long as Mrs. Egan was physically able to persecute them, she made known tó them and to others her false belief that the matron and her daughters'were leading immoral lives.
A further delusion, or a series of delusions on the part of Mrs. Egan as to the occupants of this hospital, became manifest at about this time. She alleged that certain persons, designated by her as the Whalens and the Duns and by other names, were in that house as a convenient place from which to persecute her. She also believed that the house in her rear, fronting 'Thirty-fifth street, contained other people, who remained there for a similar purpose. These people had power, as she alleged, .to transform themselves into animals or birds, and they visited her house as dogs, or cats, or parrots, changing their forms in her presence. She believed that they stole her property and that they mocked her. At times they were seen by her in the form of “ red devils.” 'She said that they had wires connected through the party wall of her house and from
As a protection against these “ spirits,” as she sometimes called them, she would throw water about her room and on the carpet. She said that this would “ drown the spirits.” She also threw water on the stoop of the hospital and into the window of the front room of that house which was on the same floor with her bedroom, presumably for the same reason, and greatly to the annoyance of the matron of the hospital and her children.
Of course, all of these things were purely imaginary. No one else saw the animals, or birds, or wires, or red devils that she claimed to see, or heard the noises which she thought she heard. The persons she accused of annnoying her did not live in the hospital next door or in the house in the rear, and they had no existence outside of her disordered mind. The evidence demonstrated with such fullness of detail that she entertained these delusions, and that she spoke of them to many persons, if not to every person she talked with, and repeatedly, that I felt that the time of the court was being wasted and requested that counsel for the contestant should not call further witnesses merely for the purpose of corroboration.
Mrs. Egan fancied that the police could protect her from these annoyances, and about October, 1902, she made an oral complaint to the police captain in the precinct in which she resided, and he ordered one of his officers to make an investigation, which he did, making several visits to her for that purpose. On January 22, 1903, she verified a written complaint, apparently prepared by a person familiar with legal writings, in which she gives names to her imaginary tormentors and
From the time when Mrs. Egan was discharged from imprisonment, in 1898, until a time in 1903, when her increasing infirmities and physical weakness made it difficult for her to be about, she was a frequent visitor at the office of the Leonards. She expressed to various people her confidence that they could and would relieve her from the troubles from the Whalens and ■others. She was sometimes dissatisfied with their tardiness and as to the lack of results from their interference, but her visits continued, nevertheless, and she became a familiar figure in their office. Harry Leonard called upon her at her house at least once, and in October, 1902, or about that time, and within a month or two before the date of the propounded paper, she visited him and his wife at their country residence on or near the Palisades, in Hew Jersey, remaining for two nights.
In my opinion Mrs. Egan was, on December 16, 1902, hopelessly insane and her. delusions were then so fixed and her condition was then so chronic that she had no lucid intervals during which these delusions were not the controlling influences-in her mind.
An examination of the provisions of the propounded paper will disclose the fact that they were the direct results of her delusions. Her husband’s conduct towards her was shown to have been most kind and she declared her fondness for him to numerous persons and at various times. Her sole provision for him was a legacy of $5. Her adopted son, for whom she always evidenced the greatest affection until towards the last, she complained that he did not sympathize fully enough with her imaginary troubles and “ sided with Mr. Egan,” is given
These delusions were, therefore, the very foundation of all of the relations between Mrs. Egan and the Leonards. It was in a litigation concerning those delusions, and as to whether they were delusions or not, and in advising her concerning
I am also of opinion that this false belief of Mrs. Egan in the aid which Harry P. Leonard and the lawyers named as beneficiaries in the propounded paper had given her and wofild give her in her dealings with the imaginary Whalens and others was fraudulently created or fostered by Harry P. Leonard in order to obtain the execution of the propounded paper, and that this amounted to such fraud and undue influence as requires that probate be refused to it.
There is another ground upon which probate must be refused to the paper. Harry P. Leonard, the main beneficiary, stood in a position of peculiar confidence towards Mrs. Egan. Though not a lawyer, he was the clerk and assistant of her attorney; his relations with her were those of an attorney and concerned legal matters, and for all of the purposes of the dealings between him and her and the rules of good faith and the presumptions of fraud from transactions in which he received benefits at her hands he is to be treated as if he were an attorney (Nesbit v. Lockman, 34 N. Y. 167; Poillon v. Martin, 1 Sandf. Ch. 569; Hobday v. Peters, 28 Beav. 349; Nesbit v. Berridge, 32 id. 292).
So far as the legacies to the other attorneys were concerned he represented them. He drew the will and she had no independent advice. He was present when the will was exe
This burden has not been borne by the proponent. There is not a scintilla of evidence in the ease, outside of the paper signed by Mrs. Egan, that she desired to make any legacy to either of the two lawyers, or that she desired to give any part of her estate to Harry P. Leonard’s wife, or that she desired to make him the principal object of her bounty, or that she knew that such provisions were in the paper when she signed it, or that she learned of that fact at any time afterward.
The only evidence as to the preparation of the paper was that of Mr. Alfred Lehman, who, as representing the American Bankers’ Protective Association, occupied a desk near that of Harry P. Leonard and says that he heard Mrs. Egan ask Harry P. Leonard to draw her will and thereafter saw her and him in whispered conversation, Mr. Leonard making occasional memoranda. This was on Saturday, and three days later, and on Tuesday, he says he saw Harry P. Leonard take a typewritten paper out of his desk and hand it to Mrs. Egan' They stood together and spoke in low tones, but -he says he heard Mrs. Egan read the paper and professes to remember, two years thereafter, enough of the contents of the paper thus read, so as to show that the reading was not for'his ears, as to
The paper was executed with three witnesses — one a person having deskroom in the office and two who were clients and friends of the Leonards. Two of these witnesses were examined and neither of them claimed such an acquaintance with Mrs. Egan as would make his evidence valuable on the question of her mental condition. The third witness, a physician, who had the appearance of being a man of unusual intelligence, failed to obey a subpoena requiring his attendance, and, when brought into court by the sheriff on an attachment, asserted that his mind was a complete blank on every subject concerning Mrs. Egan or the execution of the paper, and refused to remember anything whatever. Not one of the witnesses knew anything about the contents of the paper, and they none of them had any idea of the amount involved in a transaction, which, they appear to have regarded as something in the nature of a joke. Assuming that Mrs. Egan had possession of the paper after it was executed, there is no evidence that she ever read it and understood its force and effect. No witness has
Entertaining the views I do with regard to the propounded paper I regard, it as entirely creditable to Mr. Tyng that, with full knowledge of it and of the benefit which would accrue to him by its being admitted to probate, he has refrained from taking any part in the proceeding.
The propounded paper will be refused probate. Tax costs and settle findings and decree on notice.
Probate refused.