Burke v. Burke

193 A.D. 801, 184 N.Y.S. 673, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5652
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 12, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 193 A.D. 801 (Burke v. Burke) 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
Burke v. Burke, 193 A.D. 801, 184 N.Y.S. 673, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5652 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Greenbaum, J.:

The decedent was at the time of his death, which occurred on February 4, 1914, forty-nine years and seven months of age. During his lifetime he was engaged in the manufacture of neckties at 425 East One Hundred and Forty-first street, where he also lived at the time of his death.

He left him surviving the plaintiff, his widow, and three daughters, the defendants Marie Welsh, Florence Flemming and Virginia Burke, his only heirs at law and next of kin. His father, the defendant James H. Bjurke, also survived him. The deceased was married to the plaintiff, his second wife, in September, 1912, his first wife having died in 1907.

Under the instrument above mentioned he bequeathed to his daughters Florence Flemming and Virgihia Burke, each the sum of $100 and gave to the plaintiff the income derived from one-third of the real estate in lieu of her dower rights. All the rest, residue and remainder of the estate he devised and bequeathed to his daughter Marie Welsh, wife of David R. [803]*803Welsh, requesting his daughter to maintain and provide a home out of the proceeds-of the estate for his father and mother and that his daughter Marie Welsh should minister to the wants of her sisters Florence Flemming and Virginia Burke should they require medical attention or board and lodging. He appointed David R. Welsh, husband of his daughter Marie, as his executor.

The evidence on behalf of the contestants was to the effect that in June, 1913, decedent had an attack of typhoid fever; that after his illness he went to the Berkshires and then to the Catskills, returning to his home 2390 Amsterdam avenue, New York, about September fifteenth, where he was then • living with the plaintiff; that he stated to various persons he had miserable treatment in the Catskills and that if he had had a gun he would have shot himself and that he further stated that “ people ” had put ground glass in his food at the Catskills; that he wept in speaking of these matters; that he said that he had terrible pains in his head and side and that negroes -were after him and chasing him; that he told his wife’s sister that his daughter Marie Welsh was trying to poison him; that he would not eat anything at the last-named address since he was afraid of the food; that he told his wife that some one in the room was fighting him and that there were people looking at him; that he saw pictures on the wall which did not exist; that when told he was mistaken about the things which he stated he saw, he cursed and swore and said that they were telling him a lie and fell back exhausted in bed; that on or about the 28th day of November, 1913, Thanksgiving day, he left his home, which was then 960 East One Hundred and Seventy-ninth street, to which place he had moved from his Amsterdam avenue house, and thereafter he lived with his father, James H. Burke, at 425 East One Hundred and Forty-first street, which was his place of business; that during this period he was violent and abusive; that while reading the newspapers he made profane comments upon what he read, and cursed and swore. It was also testified that he was a man who drank alcoholic beverages frequently and on some occasions was intoxicated.

On the part of the defendants the testimony was that he attended to his business quite regularly and personally attended [804]*804to details such as drawing checks and doing the cutting of the goods from which the neckties were made and generally supervised his business as had always been his custom; that during the last months of his life there were no indications of any delusions on his part or any acts which betrayed any lack of mentality. There was also testimony given on the part of a physician who attended him during the latter days of his life, who testified that the deceased was suffering from Bright’s disease, chronic catarrh of the stomach and intestines and a valvular heart but that he had no condition of arterio sclerosis; that deceased called at his office about once a week until about the middle of November, 1913, and he talked to him on these occasions and prescribed for him; that he thereafter * attended upon the deceased about once or twice a week, but never was told by him that he was pursued by colored people or saw imaginary things or that people were trying to annoy him; and that' the cause of his death was uremic coma into which he went twenty-four hours before his death.

An attorney of this court who had known the deceased for about thirteen years up to the day of his death testified as to the circumstances attending the execution of the will. According to this testimony he called upon the deceased as a result of the latter’s request made to one Lloyd, an intimate friend, to procure a lawyer as he desired to make a will. This attorney testified that the instructions which he received as to making the will were given directly to him by the deceased with whom he spent about two hours in his room without anybody else being present until the instrument was ready for execution; that he had never received anjr directions from anybody else as to the making of the will. The attorney testified that after he received instructions he stated to the deceased that he would go down to his office and have the will typewritten, but the deceased told him to “ Do it right now. I am sore.” After the lawyer had written out the will two witnesses were called from one of the other rooms in the house. The attorney testified that the deceased particularly referred to his daughter Marie Welsh, who he said had helped him in his business for many years up to the time of his death. He also spoke about his other two daughters to whom he bequeathed $100 each and stated his reasons for discriminating [805]*805against them, and also about his wife. It also appears that on the very day that the alleged will was made the deceased was served with a summons returnable before a Magistrate’s Court on the seventeenth day of December on a charge of non-support made by his wife, the plaintiff.

The testimony in behalf of the defendant tended to show that the deceased was not an habitual drunkard, although he was in the habit of drinking alcoholic liquors. Upon the testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses a hypothetical question was framed which was propounded to a physician who was admittedly an expert in mental disorders. This witness, who had never seen the deceased and had merely testified upon the assumed state of facts embodied in the hypothetical question, gave his opinion that upon the assumed facts the deceased suffered from a well-recognized form of brain disease known as psychosis, associated with a chronic disease of the heart and kidneys, in which the delicate nerve centers are often so poisoned that a man’s actions are not those of a sane human being and that the person so afflicted is at times very suspicious, with delusions of persecution and not infrequently accompanied by a desire to commit suicide; that his will power was weakened by kidney and heart diseases to a marked degree and he was usually more susceptible to the influences of people who got him into their power and control than would be a man in normal mental condition.

Plaintiff’s alienist testified upon cross-examination that his answer as to the mental condition of the deceased whom he had never seen in his lifetime would be different if the fact were that the deceased did not drink to excess; and he was asked if it appeared that he was not a chronic drunkard whether that would make a considerable difference in his brain. The witness responded in the affirmative. As a matter of fact there was no evidence disclosing that the deceased was a

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Bluebook (online)
193 A.D. 801, 184 N.Y.S. 673, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-burke-nyappdiv-1920.