5 N.Y.S. 295 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
It was claimed by the contestant in the court below (1) that the deceased was of unsound mind; (2) that the will was procured by undue influence; (3) that it was the product of an insane delusion writh reference to the contestant.
The first proposition as to general unsoundness is not pressed here. The evidence is of such a character that there is practically no doubt but that up to a period after the making of the will the deceased was, for general purposes at least, of sound mind, and so considered by all who dealt with him. He carried on and managed his farm, settled his accounts, and his business habits were substantially as they had been for many years. His conversation as to ordinary topics was rational.
• The other two propositions are pressed here with a good deal of vigor, and involve a wide scope both as to evidence and argument. The testator at the time of making the will was about 88 years old, had been a farmer for all or most of his life, and at his death his property consisted of-a farm of about 63 acres, which he had occupied for many years, and was of the value of about $4,000, and personal property to the amount of about $2,500, consisting of farm stock, tools, and some money or securities. The contestant was the son of a former wife, and he had not lived at home since his arrival at manhood. He had obtained a profession, and lived for 20 years or upwards at another locality, in the same county, and had been reasonably successful in his business. The daughter, Alida, was unmarried, and always lived at home. The testator, at or about the time of the death of his first wife, had incurred large expenses by reason of sickness in his family, and there is evidence that he was then considerably in debt. The surviving widow had some property of her own,—the amount does not appear.
The will in question was drawn by Mr. Horthrup, who was a miller, and lived about a mile from Mr. White, and had been for about 12 years a justice of the peace. He went to the house of Mr. White, apparently at the request of Mrs. White, and on his arrival there Mrs. White called her husband in from the barn.where he was at work. Upon his coming in, Horthrup, as he testifies, told him he had come to do the writing he wished. “He said he wanted to change his will, or add a codicil to it. I told him if he was going to change his will, he-had better have a new one made; that if he would tell me how he wanted it changed, I would take it down on a piece of paper. He told me how he wished it changed. I took it down, and read it to him, and he said it was correct. I took the old will and memorandum, and came away. He
It seems that Mr. White first made a will in 1868. This was testified to by Mrs. White upon the examination of the contestant, and is corroborated by the witness Reese, called by proponent. Mr. Reese says that Mr. White then told him that he had made up bis mind to make a will; that he had helped his son all he could afford to, and what he had left would go to his wife and daughter. Mrs. White says that the will then made gave her $2,000, to the son $200, and the rest to Alida, and, if she did not live to legal age, to go to Delos. After the will of June, 1884, and in October of that year, as the witness S. P. Smith who drew it puts it, another will was made, in which, as the witness Smith testifies, he gave to his wife the use of all his property for her life, and at her death it was to be-equally divided between his son and daugher, and in case the daughter died without issue it was to go to the son or his heirs. At this time, according to the same witness, Mr. White said that the statute divided a man’s property about as near equal as it could be divided, but he had promised his wife to make such a will, and he would make it; that his principal property had been accumulated before his marriage; that his wife was well off, worth twice as much as he was, and, if he should give it to Alida absolutely, it would go to the Seymour family, and he thought it ought to go to his family. Spoke of having made a previous will when he was sick, and he said he was Capt. White yet. This witness further testifies that the latter part of June or 1st of July, 1885, he drew two other wills for Mr. White on succeeding days, which were executed,—in the first one of which $400 were given to the son, and the balance either equally to the wife and daughter, or $2,000 to the
We have thus far referred to the main features of the case bearing on the question of undue influence, aside from the matter of delusion. In order to avoid a will on the ground of undue influence, it niust 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. It must not be the promptings of affection, the desire of gratifying the wishes of another, the ties of attachment arising from consanguinity, or the memory of kind acts and friendly offices; but a coercion produced by importunity, or by a silent, resistless power which the strong will often exercises over the weak and infirm, and which could not be resisted, so that the motive was tantamount to force or fear. Society v. Loveridge, 70 N. Y. 394, and cases cited. In Cudney v. Cudney, 68 N. Y 148, it is said that the declarations of a testator alone are not competent evidence to prove acts of others amounting to undue influence, but, when acts are proved, such declarations may be given in evidence to show the operation they had on the mind of the testator; that to invalidate a will there must be affirmative evidence of the facts from which such influence is to be inferred. It is not enough to show that a party benefited by a will had the motive and opportunity to exert such influence. There must be evidence that he did exert it. In the present case, facts sufficient are not shown to authorize the inference of any undue influence, within the rule above given. The directions for the will in question, as well as for the one of June, 1884, on which it was based, were given by the testator solely and intelligently. There is no evidence of any importunity on the part of the wife or daughter. Suppose the wife requested that she should be given a life-estate in the whole property; there was nothing improper in that as long as the husband acted from his own free will. The character of the man, as developed by the evidence, was such that very evidently his will was the strongest of the three. Although old, he was strong physically and mentally, and, as a witness on each side says, he was a remarkable man of his age. The will, as made, was. in harmony with his general intention as declared before. True, there is very material difference from the will of October, 1884, but that differed as materially from the will of June, 1884, and from the will of 1868. It was not unnatural that more should be given the daughter than the son.
In Society v. Hopper, 33 N. Y. 619, it is said by Judge Denio that a person persistently believing supposed facts, which have no real existence, against all evidence and probability, and conducting himself upon the assumption of their existence, is, so far as such facts are concerned, under an insane delusion, and if a testator at the time of making his will is laboring under any such delusion in respect to those who would naturally have been the objects of his bounty, and the court can see that the provisions of the will were or
At the time of making the will the eyesight of the testator was impaired so that he was not able to read, and the point is made by the appellant that it is not sufficiently shown that the testator knew the contents of the paper he signed. Mr. Northrup, who drew it, testifies he read it over to the testator at his house, and then he and the testator went to the house of the witnesses where it was executed. It was not read over then, but there is nothing to throw doubt upon the evidence of Mr. ¡Northrup that the same paper that was read over was executed. The testator was apparently with Northrop from the time it was read over till its execution. There is no circumstance of suspicion about it. The surrogate was satisfied with the evidence of Mr. Northrup on the subject, and we see no reason to disturb his conclusion.
Some exceptions to rulings upon evidence are presented by the appellant. In Snyder v. Sherman, 88 N. Y. 656, it was held that, under section 2545 of