10 Misc. 608 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1894
After a careful review of all the facts, and mature consideration, I am satisfied the will in this case should not be admitted to probate.
The decedent was a man 60 years of age, had been ill for a long time, exceedingly weak in body and mind, and died about two hours and a half after the execution of the will. He had Bright’s disease of the kidneys — a disease which always, more or less, affects the mental capacity of its victim. He had suffered from it for several years, and during the last two weeks of his life he was a great sufferer. He had been married three times, having children by his first and second wives, but none by his third wife. His third wife, the proponent of the will, is a woman of great mental and physical vigor; has a keen appreciation of her own interests; and the proof shows she never neglected an opportunity to enhance her worldly possessions.
The decedent bought real estate, the title of which was taken
Now, between two and three hours before his death, the decedent executed the alleged will giving to this wife, by whom he had no children, all of his. property of every kind, nature, and description, cutting off his children without a cent, some of whom were quite young. Erom beginning to end the evidence shows that he was very fond of his children. Nothing had come between them to estrange him from them. On the contrary, it appears from the,testimony that within one or two days of his death he declared his intention to treat his children all alike, as. they were all equally dear to- him. Mr.s. Dorothea A'dam testifies that the decedent frequently declared in her presence that he would not make a will; that his children were all alike dear to him. Frederick Bergmann, Sr., brother of proponent, testifies that on the 11th day of December, two- days before he died, at the decedent’s request, he went to him, and decedent said' “ he would not make his will, as all his children were the same to him; they were all as one to him, and that he would give them the same.” He further said: “ My wife will get the house what is her own, and that is enough, and she will get a third besides.” Hugo Adam testifies that he was at the house of decedent at 8 o’clock on the night of his death, and, about two hours before making the will, decedent said to wifi ness: “ I want all my children to have the same if I should die or anything happened to me.” Other witnesses testify that he had- frequently said, but a little while before his death, that he wanted his children all to have the same, and that he did not intend to make a will.
Now, what was it that came between him and his children between 8 and 10 o’clock in the evening of the day of his death
The sole beneficiary under the will (the third wife), from the testimony, appears to have been constantly beseeching the decedent to make a will in her favor. Roman Adam testifies that about two or three weeks before his death the decedent said to him: “ My wife is bothering me so much in regard to making a will, and I do not want to do it.” And the same witness testifies: “ My wife is bothering me to make a will. I will not do it. My children are alike dear to me, and my wife is well enough off. She has got enough to live on; has her own house.”
On the same page the same witness said that he was there at the house on the Sunday before he died, and after Mrs. Nolte and the doctor went out of the room the decedent said: “ I am very weak; I feel very weak, but I believe I will not make a will anyway. My children are all alike dear to me; I will
Erederick Bergmann, Sr., brother of proponent, testifies that decedent had very often said he would not make a will, and further said that his wife had very often asked him to make his will, but that he had refused and told her so. On the cross-examination the same witness further said that decedent stated: “ My time is nearly gone; I shall not stay long here. I will not' make a will. One child is as dear to me as another. My wife has a house belonging to herself, and then she has one^third part. She is well taken care of.”
I do mot find in the minutes any denial by Mrs. Nolte herself that she had importuned the decedent to make a will, as testified to by the witnesses. Thus we find the decedent constantly reiterating that his children were all alike to him, and that he did not intend to make a will discriminating against them, and constantly resisting the importunings of this wife to make a will in her favor, down to within a few hours of his death. And yet, within two hours after the declaration that he wanted all his children to have the same if he should die or anything happen to him, he makes a will giving everything to his wife, and cutting his children off without a dollar. Mrs. Nolte admitted to Dorothea Adam that she had “ tried hard to get her husband to make his will, but I cannot get him to do so.”
All this testimony throws around the document great suspicion. But the mode and manner of securing its execution increases the suspicion that the will was forced from the decedent (while he was in a weak mental condition) by the beneficiary. She (Mrs. Nolte) sent for Mr. Howard to draw the will. She also sent for the witnesses, and she. herself admits that she sent for the witnesses: Mr. Hugo Adam, whom Mrs.
I am satisfied from the whole evidence that Mrs. Nolte exercised that great influence which she had acquired over him, and destroyed the decedent’s free will and agency, thereby making his mind subservient to her own, while he was in a condition so feeble as to make it necessary to give him stimulants to enable her to carry out her scheme. Again, I am not satisfied that at the time of making the will, about two hours before his death, the decedent had mental capacity sufficient to make a will. He lived but two hours and a half, and various witnesses testified lijhiat before the will was made he had rattling in his throat, indicating the near approach of dissolution. And at the time that Mrs. Nolte told Hugo Adam to go for the scrivener the doctor said to him: “ Do' you think he has his senses ?” The doctor himself has not been produced, and it.is the duty of Mrs. Nolte to throw all light possible upon the mental condition of
Probate denied.