Aalholm v. People

157 A.D. 618, 142 N.Y.S. 926, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6677
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 10, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 157 A.D. 618 (Aalholm v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aalholm v. People, 157 A.D. 618, 142 N.Y.S. 926, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6677 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Clarke, J.:

William A. Kinnilly died in Brooklyn on or about April 16, 1868, leaving a considerable estate of both real and personal property and a will which was duly probated. By the terms of the will, after several small legacies, he left his brother “Edward Kinnilly (or Edward Kinnealey, as he used to sign his name) provided he shall have survived me,” the sum of $20,000 for his own use and benefit forever. There followed a bequest of the said sum to the widow and issue of his brother Edward in case he should predecease the testator, otherwise to the residue of the estate. The will contained this clause: “It is now about forty years since I parted with my brother Edward; the separation took place in Canada at a place called Amherstburg; he was going to the State of Michigan. Edward was born on the 30th of July, 1813, in England. Our father’s name was John; our mother’s maiden name was Mary Finn. Our parents were both natives of Ireland. I desire particularly my executors to make diligent inquiries and search, particularly about Ann Arbor, State of Michigan, and to discover, if possible, my long lost brother, or, in the event of his death, any of his legitimate offspring.” The residue of his estate was left in trust to his executors for certain charitable uses. The trust was declared void by a judgment of the Supreme Court dated the 9th day of December, 1870, and the decree provided: “ That [620]*620the People of the State of ¡New York, defendants in this action, are, after the passing of the accounts of the plaintiff’s executors, entitled to said moneys, real estate and property, subject, nevertheless, to the claims and rights of any lawful heirs or next of kin of said deceased who may be hereafter discovered or appear.”

Since the payment and delivery of the residue of the property of William A. Kinnilly to the People of the State, upwards of 100 petitioners have claimed this property, all of whose claims have been disallowed and the claimants declared to be not related to the deceased. The executors made the searches requested by the will and could learn nothing of Edward. In 1868 they sent a man by the name of Hoffmann to Canada and he testified, that he did not find anybody that had heard of Edward since he was fourteen years old.

The petitioner, John Kenneally of Idaho City, Idaho, claims tobe a half brother of the deceased William A. Kinnilly. The father of William A. Kinnilly, the deceased, was John Kinneally, a sergeant in the Sixty-eighth regiment of infantry in the British army. He enlisted at Castle Bar, County Mayo, Ireland, December, 1816. He went with his regiment to Canada in 1818, was stationed in different parts of Canada and was at Amherstburg, 1827 to 1829. He departed from Amherst-burg, leaving his wife and sons behind. William was left in care of Father Fluet, a priest, and remained with him about two years. Fluet’s testimony was that he first knew Kinneally in the latter part of 1828 and that his acquaintance continued until his regiment was withdrawn; that he appeared to be about fifty years of age. He had never heard from him directly after he left Amherstburg. He was a married man, his wife’s maiden name had been Mary Finn. He had two sons by his said wife Mary Finn, William and Edward. William was then fifteen or sixteen, and Edward a couple of years younger. His wife did not leave Amherstburg with him. She remained behind for a short time and afterwards left with her son Edward. He was informed at the time that she had gone to Arm Arbor, Mich. He never saw her afterwards. She was younger apparently than her husband, but the disparity in their years was not great. ¡Eíis son William used to assist him [621]*621at mass as an acolyte. As John Kinneally was about to leave he begged him to take William. He consented to do so, and William lived with him as a member of his household from the departure of his father until the year 1831. Edward clung to his mother, who separated herself from her husband when the regiment left. They did not agree together, and she went away from Amherstburg with Edward and William remained there with him. Edward was sickly.

The records of the war office show that Kinneally embarked for England on the 14th of August, 1829; that he was an invalid at Chatham, having arrived on the eighth of October. He was discharged at Chatham on January 13, 1830, on a pension of six pence per diem. His regimental discharge papers give his age “ about 38.” The hospital record states “looks much older than he is by discharge.” He was paid his first pension in London on the 29th of March, 1830, and on the thirtieth was .transferred to Quebec. His declarations are dated at York, U. C., and he commuted his pension in 1832. He received a grant of 200 acres of land as a discharged sergeant of the Sixty-eighth regiment. As appears by his discharge papers he was by occupation a servant.

The foregoing facts have been matters of record for many years in the various proceedings taken to secure this estate and were accessible to petitioner, who began a proceeding some nineteen years prior to that at bar, which was not pushed to a conclusion. It appears then that Sergeant John was back in Canada in 1830, about a year after he left there, leaving his wife and children. This was the state of the evidence when the referee received certain declarations testified to by the claimant and his witnesses.

The petitioner claims that he is the son of Sergeant John by a subsequent marriage and, therefore, the half brother of the deceased William. He testified that he was born August 29, 1833, at a place on the Canada side of Niagara Falls now called Falls View; that his father was John Kenneally and his mother was Margaret Kearns Hardiman; that his mother had a daughter by her first husband, Hardiman, by the name of Mary; that she came to live with his mother about two years before her death, and subsequently married James Moan, and thereafter [622]*622died in Cleveland about twenty-six years ago, leaving children; that he was twelve or thirteen years old when his mother died in 1846 at Cleveland, Ohio, and that his mother told him he was two years and two months old when his father died. She said he died at Cleveland. Petitioner says: “I don’t remember him at all; have no recollection of my father at all, not the slightest.” Without connecting his mother with Sergeant John or the decedent William, or any member of the Ivinneally family, claimant was permitted to testify as to what he said his mother had told him from the time he was able to remember until her death, when he was about twelve years old. He said his mother told him that his father was a soldier in the British army; that he learned that it was the Sixty-eighth British foot regiment not from his mother but when claimant was in Canada; that his mother said his father was bom in county Tipperary, Ireland; that he was a widower at the time she married him and had two sons, William and Edward; that one of them had gone to study as a priest; that upon leaving the army his father was head waiter for Adam Orysler; that instead of accepting a pension he commuted and took crown lands on the Penetanguishene road; that he and his mother had discussed the lands; that these lands were in the region west of Georgian bay. That his mother said that his father repeatedly said that these lands should be the claimant’s; that his mother told him that it was his father’s dying wish that the claimant should have the crown lands given to him on the Penetanguishene road.

There was testimony admitted from what were called the Cleveland witnesses, Eose Dangle, Margaret Coughlin, Jennie Moan, Katie West and John Moan.

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Related

In re the Estate of Leslie
175 A.D. 108 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1916)
In re the Estate of Leslie
18 Mills Surr. 337 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
157 A.D. 618, 142 N.Y.S. 926, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aalholm-v-people-nyappdiv-1913.