Carroll v. Norton

3 Bradf. 291
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 3 Bradf. 291 (Carroll v. Norton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carroll v. Norton, 3 Bradf. 291 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1855).

Opinion

The Surrogate.

The first objections interposed against the probate of the will of the deceased, relate to the forms of execu[305]*305tion. The transaction took place at the store of John Axford, Ho. 168Bowery. The will is dated March ll,1854. Axford testifies that the decedent came in with the will in his hand, and stated that he wished him, his son and daughter, to be witnesses to his last will and testament. He says, “ I took the paper from his hand and read it all through. I think his name was already signed to it: when I took it, I asked him if that was his last will and testament, and he declared it was. I then signed it in his presence. It strikes me I asked him if he signed it, and he told me he did. I think my son and daughter were present all this time. They may possibly have been called one side in the store, and not heard all Mr. Horton said. I signed it and handed it to my son, who was standing by my side at the time, and he signed it— then my daughter signed it, Mr. Horton saying it required three.” On cross-examination Mr. Axford stated, that he thought he did not see Mr. Horton sign the will, but asked him “ if that was his signature, and he replied that it was.” Mr. Axford’s son testifies that the decedent asked them to witness the will, and said, “ that’s my name.” Mr. Axford’s daughter does not remember whether the will was signed by the decedent when she witnessed it, or that she heard him acknowledge his signature. This is about the substance of the evidence on the point of acknowledgment of the signature ; and I am satisfied by it, that as a matter of fact, the paper was already subscribed by the decedent when he came into the store, and that he acknowledged the signature to two if not all three of the subscribing witnesses. Such being my view as to the fact on that point, and the proof being clear as to the other statutory requisites, I think the formal execution satisfactorily established. There may be more than two witnesses, yet if the acknowledgment be made to two, it is enough, so far as our law is concerned. The testator having some claim against parties residing in the State of Bhode Island, it is not unreasonable to suppose that in requiring the attestation of three witnesses, he had regard to the laws of that State. In any event, I have no hesitation in ruling that [306]*306a compliance with the forms in the presence of two witnesses is all our law requires, even if a third witness attested.

The probate is resisted, howriver, on the grounds of want of testamentary capacity, and of undue influence. Mr. Norton was an old gentleman once in affluent circumstances, but retaining in his advanced age only the wreck of a handsome fortune. It does not clearly appear how he had become so much reduced, though there is evidence to show that towards the close of his life he had suffered heavily by endorsements, arid there is likewise proof that he had been liberal towards some members of his family.

In judging of the state of his mind, due allowance should be made for the difficulty in conversing with him consequent upon his loss of hearing, which latterly was almost total, so that it was necessary to communicate with him by writing. At the time the will was executed, he was over eighty years of age. He was not, however, so infirm as to be confined to the house, but was of active habits, and continued to go about the streets until the fatal accident which terminated his life. On the evening of the 22d of November last, he was run over by one of the Third Avenue Railroad cars at the corner of Forty-second street, and was taken to Bellevue Hospital, where he died. It was found by the Coroner’s jury that he was deranged, but on examining the testimony, I see no ground for such a conclusion. That after the occurrence of the accident he should have talked wildly, was quite consistent with entire sanity before, and that he did not hear the outcry of the driver of the car is readily explained by the state of his hearing. The rumblings or mutterings of a man in the agonies of death, or on the first shock of such a dreadful accident, weigh as nothing in the estimate of his intellectual vigor when in health. I proceed now to examine, in some detail, the evidence adduced to impeach his capacity, which is entitled to more serious consideration.

Mr. Wall rode with Mr. Norton from Brooklyn to Rockaway, about the first of March, 1854, and thought “ there was something or other wrong with his mind at that time.” He [307]*307“ took him to be flighty; that he did not exactly understand himself.” The reasons for this opinion were, that soon after starting, the deceased wished his son, John, to stop, that he might buy a fresh loaf of bread. This was done, the bread bought and placed in a basket, and he made the same request again and again, until they had got quite out of the city. During the course of the ride, Mr. Norton missed his handkerchief, and on a suggestion that it might be in the basket, he opened the lid, took out an old newspaper, crumpled it up, and put it in his pocket. This witness expressed the opinion that the decedent was “ wild ” in his motions, and he also specified an occasion, when making a call at his house, he said he wanted to go home to dinner, though as stated by his son, he had just risen from the table before leaving home.

Dr. Webb, who had known Mr. Norton many years, expressed an opinion unfavorable to the soundness of his intellect. He says : “ He has appeared to me for a number of years past to be a man of very varying and vacillating habits and manners. To go into the detail of all the facts would be impossible. I came to the opinion that Mr. Norton was not in a sound state of mind. I did not consider him competent to attend to business judiciously. He might do business in his particular way—not prudently or discreetly, probably.” He rests this opinion upon his vacillation, rapidity of movement, restlessness, incoherence, or wandering from one subject to another in conversation. The only special facts he mentions was his renouncing a contract for the purchase of a farm at Hempstead, and that after taking a seat in his carriage one Sunday to ride to the cars, upon proceeding three miles, he left the vehicle somewhere near the Episcopal Church.

The Rev. Mr. King met the decedent in the Long Island railroad cars in September, 1852. He attracted his attention by his fidgetty, restless conduct,” and having stepped to the front platform as the cars were starting, he lost his balance and fell against the front railing. The witness caught him, drew him in the car, and directed him to a seat. On another [308]*308occasion, at the Jamaica depot, as the train was starting, Mr. Norton followed it some distance bareheaded.

Julia Spence, who lived with her aunt at No. 250 Bowery, states that from May, 1853, to some time in March, 1854, Mr. Norton boarded there occasionally for periods of several days or weeks. She says he was forgetful, would leave his coat up-stairs and look for it down-stairs, left his trunk at a hotel and forgot where be had left it, and lost his over-coat in a similar manner. He was childish; used to cry a good deal about his grandson Carroll; acted queerly, walking around and appearing to be looking for something. Boswell D. King, who boarded at No. 250 Bowery, from October, 1853,' to January, 1854, observed the decedent crying over a letter he received from his grandson in Australia ; he said he was starving. The witness mentions some trifling circumstances evincing forgetfulness, or absence of mind.

Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hotaling v. Huntington
64 Ill. App. 655 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1896)
Corrigan v. Reilly
64 Ill. App. 124 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1896)
Cornwell v. Riker
2 Dem. Sur. 354 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1884)
Estate of Pfuelb
1 Myrick 38 (California Superior Court, San Francisco County, 1873)
Seguine v. Seguine
4 Abb. Ct. App. 191 (New York Court of Appeals, 1867)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Bradf. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-norton-nysurct-1855.