Cheney v. Price

97 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 238, 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 568
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 97 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 238 (Cheney v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cheney v. Price, 97 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 238, 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 568 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

The opinion of Lambert, J., was as follows :

Lambert, J.:

Spencer Cheney executed a paper writing February 1, 1892, as his last will and testament, and thereafter died on the twentieth of April of the same year, by the terms of which he gave to the defendant association $4,000, and the balance of his estate was left to be governed by the laws of descent and distribution. The estate consisted of $20,000 personalty and $7,000 in realty. The plaintiff and the defendants Cheney were the brothers and only heirs at law and next of kin of the deceased. The instrument was offered for probate in the Surrogate’s Court and the heirs at law filed objections to- its probate on the ground of incapacity and undue influence. Such proceedings were had that thereafter, and on the 30th of November, 1892, the instrument was admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court of Chautauqua county as a will of real and personal property. In December following this action was brought under the authority of chapter 591 of the Laws of 1892. By this statute the issue is limited to the question whether the writing produced is or is not the last will of the testator. While this statute defines and limits the inquiry in the action it was not intended to change the conditions under which a person is permitted to make a testamentary disposition of property by the Revised Statutes, providing that all persons, except idiots, persons of unsound mind, and infants, may devise real estate, and males upwards of eighteen years may bequeath personal estate (2 R. S. 56, 60), so that, notwithstanding the provisions of chapter 591 of the Laws of 1892, under which the action is brought, the range of inquiry, measure of capacity and freedom of action, as defined by the [241]*241Revised Statutes and interpreted by tlie courts, is to prevail in reaching a determination of the issues made in this action. There is no= claim made, nor could there well be under the proof taken, that tliedeceased at the time of the execution of the instrument in question, or at any other period in his lifetime, ivas suffering from the infirmities of idiocy, so that the issue is narrowed to the‘question whether the testator at the ‘time of the execution of the will in question was a-person of sound mind and was acting free from restraint and undue-influence. Within the meaning of the term “ unsoundness of mind,”' as mentioned in the statutes, the various phases of mental conditions-as defined by the terms “ insanity,” mental derangement,” unsoundness ” and “ monomania ” are held by the courts to be within the range of inquiry in determining whether or not h person at the time of executing an alleged will was a person of unsound mind.” These terms are of such variable significance that their value in any given case will depend entirely upon the relation that they bear to the particular person in connection with the particular act under inquiry. They simply represent or describe a sliding scale of mental disorder or enfeeblement, expressing different degrees of determination or its absence, mental ability or its absence. The precise line where disability or incapacity commences cannot be defined by the courts by an unvarying rule, and for that reason each case is tested in the light of general rules by the proof and circumstances attending it. From the multiplicity of decisions in this State upon this subject that have gone into the reports one general rule seems to have been so formulated in a decision of the Court of Appeals as to have met with favor by the courts pronouncing judgment in cases of this character. That definition of the law is as definite as the subject will admit of, and it seems to have been adopted by counsel on either side of this controversy as the basis lipón which their conclusions rest in the disposition of this case. In Van Guysling v. Van Kuren (35 N. Y. 70) Smith, J., speaking for the court, used this language': lie must, in the language of the cases, have sufficient active memory to collect in his mind, without prompting, the particulars or elements of the business to be transacted, and to hold' them in his mind a sufficient length of time to perceive, at least,, their obvious relations to each other, and be able to form some rational judgment in relation to them. A testator who has suffi[242]*242cient mental power to do these things is, within the meaning and intent of the Statute of Wills, a person of sound mind and memory, and is competent to dispose of his estate by will.”

With this rule in mind we come to the question whether or not the writing produced is or is not the last will of the testator; and the solution of that question depends on whether the testator was of sound and disposing mind and memory at the time of the execution of the instrument, and whether the will itself is the free and uninfluenced act of the testator.

The deceased ivas about sixty-eight years of age; had lived in the township in which ho died nearly all his life, and had never married. A short time before the 15th day of December, 1891, he had a fit of apoplexy which finally resulted in partial paralysis. He had been all his life an active, intelligent and industrious man, giving personal attention to the details of his business, which consisted in running a farm, loaning money upon securities, making investments and collecting interest accruing from the same; was reticent respecting his business affairs to a remarkable degree; was a person of determined will and positive in liis'opinions; on friendly terms with his relatives, consisting of his three brothers and their families, although they knew little about the details or nature of his business transactions; was a genial and social person with those of his acquaintance, but, having occupied rooms alone, had contracted the habit of reticence respecting his business affairs. His affliction, which occurred shortly before the 15th day of December, 1891, was first manifested by substantial unconsciousness and later by inability to articulate so that he could not be understood without great difficulty and had a changed expression and inability to move about. The evidence discloses that he rallied to a certain extent within a few days after the attack and that the disturbance of the vocal organs was less perceptible at periods up to within a short time before his death, which occurred on the 20th of April, 1892. It is fairly to be inferred, giving credit to the evidence of each and every of the witnesses who testified upon the trial, that on some days he could converse with greater ease and felicity than on others. It is equally clear from the undisputed evidence in the case that after the deceased suffered this affliction in December he did not give the attention to the transaction of his business that had been- his habit [243]*243before ; that in conversation with others he did not evince the interest in social affairs that he previously had, did not attempt to lead in conversation or introduce any subject as a topic of conversation with those with whom he came in contact. There was a noticeable and pronounced change in his life so far as the same could be evidenced by his manifestations towards others and himself. Nearly all of the witnesses, including the doctor in attendance during his sickness, advanced the opinion, based upon the circumstances attending interviews had with the deceased and his manifestations, that his conduct,, acts and sayings impressed them as irrational.

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Related

Van Guysling v. . Van Kuren
35 N.Y. 70 (New York Court of Appeals, 1866)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 238, 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheney-v-price-nysupct-1895.