35 N.J. Eq. 437 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1882
These are appeals from the decree of the orphans court of Hudson county, admitting to probate a paper writing purport-, ing to be the last will and testament of. William P. Turnure, deceased, late of Jersey City, and an order directing that the costs and expenses of the litigation be paid out of the estate. The will is dated February 20th, 1873, and was drawn by Peter FT. Horsley, a scrivener of that city, at the request of the testator,, and its execution was witnessed by Horsley and two other persons, William F. Hulse and Charles Olsen. It gives to the testator’s daughter, Mrs. Julia Hard, $2,000; to his son John Lawrence Turnure, $8,000, and all the rest of the estate to his widow and his son James H. Turnure, in equal shares, and appoints the residuary legatees executors. The testator died August 2d, 1880. He was then over eighty-three years of age. The caveators are his son John and daughter, Mrs. Hard, and the will is propounded for probate by the executors. It will be seen that it was made seven years before the testator' died. Two of the witnesses to it, Messrs. Horsley and Hulse, were sworn before the court below; the other, Olsen, had left the state, and therefore could not be produced. The proof is clear that the will was drawn at the testator’s request and according to his directions. He applied to Horsley on the sub-,
It is further insisted, on the part of the caveators, that the testator, at the time of making the will, was not possessed of testamentary capacity, and that if he was, the will was the result of the undue influence of his wife over him, in her own favor and against the caveator. As to his capacity, it appears clearly, not only from the testimony of the two of the testamentary witnesses'who were examined, but otherwise, that he was entirely competent to make a testamentary disposition of his estate. He had, previously to the day on which the will was drawn, spoken to the scrivener about drawing his will, and on that day he gave him all the particulars of the disposition he desired to make of his property, and it appears from the testimony of the scrivener,
.IS!or is there any proof of undue influence. His wife appears to have been very kind and affectionate towards him, and to have been extremely attentive to his wants and comfort to the very last. In the will, he remembers all his children. His estate is all personal. To his daughter he gives but $2,000, indeed, and to his son John but $8,000, while he divides all the residue of his estate equally between his other son, James, and the widow. 'What the amount of the residue will be does not appear clearly, but out of the estate, is (it is said) to be paid to the testator’s children a considerable sum of money for their legacies under the will of his second wife. The widow was his third wife. That he had reasons for the difference which he made in the bequests to his children, is evident from the testimony, but if he was possessed of testamentary capacity, and was free to do as he would in the testamentary disposition of his estate, it is not necessary to inquire for his reasons. The law guaranteed to him the right to make disposition of his property according to his own pleasure. I have not deemed it necessary to discuss the evidence, either on the subject of capacity or undue influence. There is no evidence on either head, except what is produced by the caveators. The burden of proof is on them. Capacity in a man theretofore sane, will be presumed until the contrary is made to appear, and undue influence is to be established by