Children's Aid Society v. . Loveridge

70 N.Y. 387, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 629
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 18, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by134 cases

This text of 70 N.Y. 387 (Children's Aid Society v. . Loveridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Children's Aid Society v. . Loveridge, 70 N.Y. 387, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 629 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The evidence upon the hearing of this case covers an extended field of inquiry. The testatrix during* her life made five different wills, the first one in 1857, and the last, which is the subject of this controversy, on the twelfth, but bearing date the eleventh day of July, 1874. She died on the 5th day of February, 1875, being at the time seventy-eight years of age, and possessed of an estate valued at about one hundred thousand dollars. She was a widow lady without any children, and with no very near relatives, in whom she took any particular interest.

The will in controversy bequeaths to Mary Elizabeth Noyes, of Boston, a daughter of a favorite cousin, Mrs. Sarah E. Noyes, all her stocks, bonds and securities, which constituted the bulk of her estate. And the remainder, consisting of her house and lot in the city of New York, in which she had resided for many years, and the furniture therein is devised and bequeathed to Elizabeth and Harriet Loveridge, daughters of James and Elizabeth Loveridge, who resided with the testatrix at the time of, and some time prior to her decease. She also appointed Mr. James Loveridge and one Coolidge Barnard, of Boston, her executors.

By her will executed in 1872, immediately prior to the will of 1874, the testatrix bequeathed to Miss Noyes, the principal legatee in the will of 1874, an annuity for life of one thousand dollars; a legacy of five thousand dollars to her cousin Sarah E. Hearsey, and of the same amount to Mr. Van Riper and his grand-daughter, and to Mrs. Holmes, her house-keeper at that time. She also bequeathed to Mrs. Blauvelt, a daughter of Mr. Van Riper, the house and lot. *391 where she lived and her household furniture ; and she gave the residue of her property in equal shares, to the benevolent societies hereafter referred to. She named Mr. Van Riper and the husband of Mrs. Blauvelt as her executors. Miss Noyes, the principal legatee under the last will, is therefore interested to a considerable extent in the will of 1872, and the principal contention lies between the qther parties referred to. Upon the hearing, the contestants of the will of 1874 were the Children’s Aid Society and the St. Luke’s Home, the residuary legatees under the will executed in 1872; and the contest is substantially narrowed down between the two wills.

The questions which were controverted relate mainly to the testamentary capacity of the testatrix, and the exercise of undue influence over the testatrix in procuring the execution of the will of 1874, by those who were beneficiaries, and who were present and took part at the time in the execution of the same.

An objection is urged as to the competency of the attesting witnesses to the will of 1874, Loveridge and Barnard, upon the ground that they were the executors nominated by the will. The objection to the testimony of Loveridge was somewhat general, being to any matter connected with the execution of the will, and is not made more specific by the motion to strike out all the testimony of conversations, or any interviews between the decedent and the witness. Some of these conversations appear to have been called out by the contestants, and hence the motion referred to could not properly have been granted. As to Coolidge Barnard, the other executor the objection was to calling for any communication between the witness and the decedent, because the witness was a subscribing witness to the will, and was interposed after proof had been given of the formal execution of the same without any objection, and no motion being made to strike out his testimony. It may perhaps be questionable whether the objection was presented in due season and as to this witness, as he was a non-resident of the State, it was not *392 necessary" to call him, and proof of his handwriting would have been sufficient. Conceding, however, that the question is now before us, we are of the opinion that no valid objection existed to the testimony of these witnesses. The statute (2 R. S., p 65, § 50), which is relied upon, does not expressly prohibit a devisee, legatee, or party in interest, from being a witness, and merely affects the right of such person to the benefit of the provision made. It is not manifest that the statute disqualifies entirely an executor from being witness to a will; and, as an original question, I should be inclined to hold that it was not intended to cover any such case. (See McDonough v. Laughlin, 20 Barb., 245.) Be that as it may, however, Ave think the provisions of the Code (§ 398 and § 399) so far modify and control the statute as to render an executor entirely competent. Such appears to be the rule adopted in the Surrogates’ Courts, and is no doubt the correct one. (1 Tucker, 87.) Independent, hoAvever, of the considerations last suggested, Ave are inclined to think that the execution of the will Avas duly proved by the other witnesses who Avere present at its execution, and who were sworn upon the hearing. The point, therefore, is not well taken.

Nor is there any valid ground for holding that Loveridge as a party to the proceeding Avas incompetent under § 399 of the Code, to prove the execution as a transaction between himself and the decedent, or that this provision covers any such case.

The evidence produced upon the hearing before the surrogate failed to establish satisfactorily a Avant of testamentary capacity in the testatrix at the time when the instrument, now the subject of adjudication, was executed. There was proof to establish that during the summer of 1874, subsequent to the execution of the will, the deceased on two or three occasions labored under the delusion that she was still living at her former residence in King street. At other times she was flighty at night, Avhile ill; and, upon one occasion, in the night time, she used irrational language, saying that a conspiracy was going on ; she imagined that she heard *393 voices, and said, as one witness testifies, many things which were not remembered. The delusion as to her residence is sought and claimed to be accounted for, in part, by proof that she had drank ale, which was discontinued, and after this no further symptoms of this character appeared. But, even if no particular explanation is given of the delusion referred to, it does not make very strongly to sustain^ want of testamentary capacity. As to the other delusion, she stated the next morning that she had dreamed there were robbers in the house, and was evidently frightened, and it appears that she had also drank ale the night previous. It is by no means remarkable that she should have been, at times, thus disturbed in her slumbers, and her fhghtiness may have been no more than a dream, which is common to persons of all ages and conditions, even when not laboring under bodily disease. There is proof, also, that she forgot that an intimate friend, Mrs.' Ginochio, was dead, and supposed she was still living in the neighborhood, when she had died several months previously. The old and infirm are necessarily the subjects of a loss of memory, and it is not very unusual that a single fact should have passed temporarily from the recollection of the testatrix.

The facts referred to are entirely insufficient to establish mental unsoundness; and, even if they have any bearing in that respect, are fully answered by the surrounding circumstances as well as the positive testimony produced by the proponents.

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.Y. 387, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childrens-aid-society-v-loveridge-ny-1877.