220 A.D. 253 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
In this case the learned trial justice has found the facts in favor of plaintiff. He finds that in 1901 the plaintiff, the defendant Cronen, her half-sister, and Catharine M. Lally, now deceased, the mother of the defendant and the stepmother of the plaintiff, entered into an agreement, based upon due consideration, to execute mutual wills by which the property of each of the parties should pass to the survivors in case of the death of any one of the contracting parties, and that none of them would revoke such mutual will without notice to the others. The three separate wills were duly executed and were delivered to the defendant Cronen for safekeeping; they were inclosed in an envelope and placed in a safe in the office in which she was employed. At the time the agreement was made and the wills were executed the three parties were living together in close family relations. The stepmother had brought up the plaintiff, and the evidence shows that her relations with the plaintiff were affectionate and that the plaintiff stepdaughter and the defendant daughter shared equally in these affectionate relations. These mutual wills remained in the possession of the defendant for seven years. In 1908, because of some personal difference or dislike on the part of the plaintiff regarding one of the witnesses to the three wills — which seems to have been shared by the defendant — the wills were taken from defendant’s safe and new wills executed in the same identical language but with the substitution of a new witness; they were again returned to the defendant for safe-keeping, again placed in an envelope and put in the defendant’s safe. From 1901 down to November, 1921, a
In November, 1921, the plaintiff first learned that her mother, in 1913, had executed a new will in violation of the agreement made in the year 1901. When she ascertained that her sister had thus attempted to trick and defraud her by procuring her aged mother to execute this new will disinheriting plaintiff, she immediately went to her mother, and the mother executed a new will reinstating the agreement contained in the mutual wills. It is significant that the plaintiff, with the knowledge just obtained of the attempt of her sister to defraud her, did not attempt to do more than to reinstate the mutual agreement, which, -so far as the plaintiff was concerned, had been in force since 1901, during all of which time plaintiff had lived up to it. Mrs. Lally died in January, 1923. But the plaintiff was defeated in her attempt to prove the will executed by her mother in 1922. It was contested by the defendant, who claimed that Catharine Lally was incompetent to make a will in 1922, and, as asserted by appellant’s counsel in his points, “ In 1917 Catharine Lally commenced to have delusions, her mind became seriously affected.” A jury in the Surrogate’s Court rejected the will of 1922, and upon plaintiff’s appeal this court affirmed the decree of the surrogate refusing probate. (Matter of Lally, 209 App. Div. 824.) The defendant offered the 1913 will, surreptitiously obtained, for probate, and the plaintiff filed objections based upon the mutual agreement of 1901, but the learned surrogate held that this mutual agreement was not a bar to the probate. This court affirmed the surrogate’s decree striking out the objections of the plaintiff (Matter of Lally, 210 App. Div. 757), but said in its opinion (p. 761): “In an action in equity in the Supreme Court for the specific performance of a contract, the decree would simply uphold the validity of the contract and direct its performance, and would not direct the probate of the will ” (citing Hermann v. Ludwig, 186 App. Div. 287, 296; affd., 229 N. Y. 544; Matter of Hermann, 178 App. Div. 182; Phalen v. United States Trust Co., 186 N. Y. 178, 183).
The case at bar is the action in equity commenced in accordance with the suggestion in the opinion of this court (supra); the trial court has found that plaintiff was in fact defrauded and has directed the performance of the agreement of 1901. We agree with the views of the learned trial justice expressed in his opinion.
We have examined the points presented by the appellant. As already stated, we think the findings of the learned trial justice are sustained by the evidence and register the right and justice of
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Kelly, P. J., Manning, Young and Hagarty, JJ., concur.
_ The parties having stipulated in writing that this case may be disposed of by a court of four, the decision is as follows: Judgment and Order unanimously affirmed, with costs.