Claffey v. Ledwith

38 A. 433, 56 N.J. Eq. 333, 11 Dickinson 333, 1897 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 10
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 19, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 38 A. 433 (Claffey v. Ledwith) 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
Claffey v. Ledwith, 38 A. 433, 56 N.J. Eq. 333, 11 Dickinson 333, 1897 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 10 (N.J. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

The Ordinary.

James Ledwith died in the township of Saddle River, in Bergen county, on the 9th of July, 1894, at the age of eighty-four years, leaving a paper, which was executed as his will on the 15th of May, 1890, the validity of which is the subject of the present contest. His wife died many years ago. He had three children — a son, James, who died in Brooklyn, New York, on the 13th of January, 1890, leaving a wife and two children, one of whom was born after his death, and died within a few months after its birth, and two daughters — Julia, who, after a lingering illness, died of consumption in July, 1892, and Annie, who married one Claffey, from whom, during the time in question in this controversy, she was separated.

In early life Mr. Ledwith lived in New York City, and was there engaged in the business of selling liquors, from which, and through economy, he amassed enough money to enable him to own two tenement-houses, built upon a single city lot, fronting upon East Twelfth street, near Avenue A, in New York City, to buy a few building lots at Saddle River, and to purchase and stock a small farm, which lies partly in Bergen county, in this state, and partly in Rockland county, New York, [335]*335upon which he lived from 1868 until his death in 1894. The dwelling-house upon the farm is in New Jersey, and hence his legal residence at his death was in Bergen county. The proofs indicate that his yearly income was in the neighborhood of $2,500; and that his estate was worth something approximating $40,000.

The disputed will contemplates this disposition of his estate: The payment of his debts, a bequest of $1,000, charged upon his entire estate, to his brother Thomas and his two daughters, who are the executor and executrices, in trust, to be divided into as many parts as there shall be children of his son James, and invested and paid to those children respectively upon their reaching twenty-one years of age, together with accumulations of interest, the mother of the children to take the $1,000 in case they should all die before reaching twenty-one years of age, and the gift of the residue of his estate to his two daughters, or to the survivor of them, at distribution, and should they both predecease him, to “ their heirs or next of kin.” Power to sell land is given to the executor and executrices. Prior to the residuary clause of the will, provision is made that the daughter’s shall have the right to continue to “ use and keep” the farm so long as they or either of them shall continue to live on the place.

The will was proved ex parte before the surrogate of Bergen county, and admitted to probate on the 10th of July, 1894. On the 24th of September in the same year an appeal was taken to the orphans court by Mary Ledwith, as the guardian of her infant son, Vincent Ledwith, who was the surviving son of the testator’s deceased son James, and thereupon such proceedings were had that in 1896 it was decreed that the paper admitted to probate by the surrogate was not the will of James Ledwith, and that the order of the surrogate admitting it to probate be reversed. The matter is now heard upon appeal from such decree of the orphans court upon voluminous proofs taken in that court. The appellant is the testator’s daughter, Annie, and the respondent is his daughter-in-law, Mary, widow of the deceased son, in her capacity as guardian of her infant son, Vincent.

[336]*336The insistence upon which the contest is based, primarily, is, that at the time of the execution of the will James Ledwith, suffering from senile dementia, lacked capacity to make a will, and, in that condition, had the disputed paper imposed upon liim by his daughters, his brother and the subscribing witnesses; and, secondarily, is, that even if the proofs should be held to be insufficient to establish incapacity to make a will under favorable circumstances, they at least exhibit an intellect so far enfeebled as to present a fit subject for the imposition -which the proofs establish ; and, thirdly, is, that if actual fraud by imposition be not shown, the proofs warrant the rejection of the will as a product of undue influence.

It is admitted that prior to his death in 1894 Mr. Ledwith completely, or almost completely, lost his mind. It is not disputed that he suffered from senile dementia. The inquiry through the evidence has been as to the stage the disease had reached when instructions for the will were given and the instrument was executed.

The respondent here and appellant in the orphans court insists that she noticed a change in Mr. Ledwith as early as 1886. Charles H. Armstrong and William Kruse testify that in June, 1886, Mr. Ledwith came to their houses, some eight miles from his home, and insisted, first at one and then at the other, that he lived there, and, being refused admission, that he remained in the neighborhood all the night and was taken by them to the poorhouse the next morning. They attribute his conduct to mental derangement. In the fall of the same year William W. Oldfield, a restaurant keeper of Spring Valley, says that Mr. Ledwith got off a train of cars from New York and was so bewildered that he started to go home the wrong way. The witness attempted to send him home, but failed to do so, and, as a result, he was again taken to the poor-house. Mr. Oldfield entertains the opinion that Mr. Ledwith was not under the influence of intoxicants, but, for the time, was mentally deranged.

George Saarosy, a merchant of Spring Valley, and Peter J. Christopher, a near neighbor of Mr. Ledwith, both witnesses for the respondent, testify that in 1887 Mr. Ledwith was in posses[337]*337sion of his mental faculties. Jennie Gillespie, on the contrary, who had frequent opportunity to see Mr. Ledwith, thinks that his mind was giving way in 1887, and John Christopher, a son of Peter J. Christopher, expresses the same opinion. In support of his opinion John Christopher gives an instance which appeared to him to indicate mental impairment in 1887 or 1888. He, then being seventeen years old, drove Mr. Ledwith to Spring Valley, and there, among other things, stopped at an express office to get a bundle for Mr. Ledwith. He says that he got out and tried to get the bundle from the express agent, but, because the agent did not know him, he was sent out to bring Mr. Ledwith in the office. He tried to induce the old man to get out of the wagon, but failed, whereupon the express agent came out and saw Mr. Ledwith, who got out of the wagon and went into the express office. There the agent wanted him to sign his name in a book, and upon Mr. Ledwith saying that he could not do so, the agent asked him to make his mark, and the old man took up a pen and made a cross in the place indicated by the agent. It seems to be well doubted whether the instance, instead of supporting young Christopher’s opinion, does not evince intelligence in Mr. Ledwith. The old man would not obey the boy’s direction to get out of the wagon, but when the agent came and he saw the necessity of it, he went into the office. When he was asked to sign his name, he shrank from a task which he had rarely performed, taking refuge in a falsehood, and when told to make his mark, 'with an intelligence which exhibited an appreciation of that which was required, took a pen and made the cross which is usually adopted for a mark.

As to the year 1888, the respondent testifies that Mr. Ledwith then exhibited mental enfeeblement by carrying about brush, pieces of wood and other things from place to place uselessly and apparently without object. Mr. Saarosy remembers that then Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
38 A. 433, 56 N.J. Eq. 333, 11 Dickinson 333, 1897 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claffey-v-ledwith-njsuperctappdiv-1897.