Barker v. Barker

36 N.J. Eq. 259
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 N.J. Eq. 259 (Barker v. Barker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barker v. Barker, 36 N.J. Eq. 259 (N.J. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

The Ordinary.

This is an appeal from the decree of the Warren orphans court, refusing to admit to probate a paper writing, purporting to be the will of Mrs. Anna M. Barker, deceased. The instrument is dated April 2d, 1880. The testatrix died in May of the following year. When the will was made, and thenceforward to the time of her death, she was living in her own house with her son, James H., commonly called Harvey, Barker, and his little child, a lame girl, who, at the date of the will, was about ten years old. Harvey was a widower. The testatrix had several other children, one of whom was Jacob, the caveator,, with whom, or with whose wife, she seems to have been at variance, and there is some evidence that she was not on good terms-with others of her children. The will was drawn by Isaac M.. Read, a neighbor. By it, after providing for the payment of her debts and funeral expenses, she gave to her son Harvey all her property for life, providing that if the personal property should be insufficient for his support, he might dispose of the real estate as he might think best, and that at his death the property should go to his daughter, the little girl before mentioned ; and she appointed Read and Harvey executors of the will. The will is propounded by Harvey for probate. The estate seems to be small. It consists of a house and lot in Jacksonburgh, in Warren county (the lot containing about an acre), and about $1,200 in money and household goods. Mr. Read, who drew the will, as before mentioned, testifies that it was drawn in her house at between eight and nine o’clock in the evening of the day on which it was signed; that he received from his wife information that the testatrix wanted him to go to her -house, and he went there, accordingly; that that was the first that he had been spoken to about drawing the testatrix’s will, and that when he arrived there the testatrix told him she [261]*261wanted him to write her will, and how she wanted it, and that he wrote it right ther'e in her room ; that she mentioned whom «he wanted to be the executors; that when she told him how she wanted the will, he desired her to get some one else to write it, but she said she wished him to write it; that she said that Harvey was the only one that had ever done anything for her, or taken care of her; that when he was away she would become needy, and that she had sent to Jacob’s for some flour, and that they had refused her, and would do nothing for her, and that she had got Harvey word at that time, and that he came over, or sent over some money to her; that Harvey had helped her to get the money, and that she wanted him to have the use of it for his lifetime, and that she wanted that crippled child of his to have it. He says he does not know that she gave any reason why she did not give anything to the others; that he spoke to her about her daughter, Susan Swisher, and said that she had been there to the house a good deal, and had been kind to her, to which the testatrix assented, adding that she had paid her for it, or something to that effect. Mr. Read says he has known her about twenty years, and, as before stated, he was a neighbor. The other witness was also a neighbor, Mr. Elias E. Beegle. Mr. Read says that the testatrix was in her own house when she signed the will; that he saw her make her mark in her name there, and that Beegle was present at the same time; that he, Read, read the paper to her before she signed it, and that she acknowledged that it was her last will and testament before she executed it, in the presence of himself and Beegle; that she requested Beegle to witness it, and that he, Read, signed his name there in the presence of the testatrix and of Mr. Beegle, the other witness, and that Mr. Beegle signed his name in his presence and that of the testatrix. He further says that, in his judgment, she was, at the time she executed the will, of sound and disposing mind and memory.

He further says that in making her mark she held the pen in her own hand, but he does not remember which hand it was; that it was a steel pen, and that she held it without any assistance ; that though she had been paralyzed on one side of her [262]*262body (he does not know on which side), she had the use of one hand. He further says he thinks she suggested the name of Mr. Beegle as a witness; that he mentioned Mr. McConachy as a witness, but she did not want him; that he then mentioned Elias J. Snover, but she said she did not care to have Mr. Snover, and then she said, “ Send for Elias Beegle,” and spoke about Beegle having done some writing for her; and that he then sent Harvey to tell Beegle to come. He testifies that no one else was present, and that Harvey was not in the room while he was there. He also says that the testatrix suggested his name as executor ; that he asked her whom she would have for executor, and she answered that she had thought of him and Harvey, and that she wanted them to be the executors. It appears from, his testimony that when he first went to her house on that evening he went to see what she wanted of him, and that when she told him what she wanted he went to his own house, which was only a few hundred yards away, and got paper, pen and ink to draw the will, and returned to her house, and then drew the will. He swears that she told him just how she wanted the will, and that he wrote it just as she wanted it; that she told him how she wanted her property distributed; that she spoke about the crippled grandchild, Harvey’s daughter, and that he said, “ Mrs. Barker, don’t you want to leave anything to the rest?” and that she answered “ No,” and gave her reasons why she wanted it so, mentioning her son Jacob’s name. He further says she spoke about several of her children, not the one living at Newton (William), and spoke about her daughter Jane going away mad, angry. He also says she did not mention her daughter Eanny or her grandchild in Illinois. Her children appear to have- been Jacob, William (living in Newton), Fanny, Jane Danly, James Harvey, Susan Swisher, Mary Ann Drake, and a deceased daughter, who left three children. He further says that after he wrote the will he read it over to her slowly, and then asked her if that was -the way she wanted it, and that she said it was. It also appears from his testimony that she had been paralyzed for a long time, and that he had been in her house to see her probably four or five times after she was stricken with paralysis. He [263]*263says the visits were three or four days, or three or four weeks apart, and that he had not seen her in three or four weeks when he drew the will. He also says that he never talked with Harvey about writing the will, nor did Harvey talk to him on the subject. He swears positively that she made the cross for her signature. Mr. Beegle, the other witness, lived within a hundred and fifty yards of the testatrix. He swears that he signed his name as a witness to the will at the testatrix’s request, and saw her make her mark on the will; that Read was present at the same time; that before she made her mark she acknowledged it as her last will and testament, and that Read signed his name there at the same time in his presence and that of the testatrix; and that he, the witness, signed his name also as a witness to her execution of the will at the same time. On cross-examination he says that Harvey came to his house about nine o’clock that evening and told him that his mother wanted to see him.

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Related

In Re the Will of Thompson
104 S.E.2d 280 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.J. Eq. 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barker-v-barker-njsuperctappdiv-1882.