Clarke v. Schell

31 N.Y.S. 1053, 91 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 28, 65 N.Y. St. Rep. 83, 84 Hun 28
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 N.Y.S. 1053 (Clarke v. Schell) 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
Clarke v. Schell, 31 N.Y.S. 1053, 91 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 28, 65 N.Y. St. Rep. 83, 84 Hun 28 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

FOLLETT, J.

This action was brought July 13, 1893, pursuant to section 2653 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to set aside the probate of the last will and testament, and of a codicil thereto, of Richard J. Clarke, on the ground that they were not the voluntary acts of the decedent, but were procured by the fraud, coercion, and undue influence of Alice A. Schell, William Mitchell, and others. Richard J. Clarke was bom October 1,1810, and died June 10, 1892, aged-81 years, 8 months, and 9 days. He had never been married, and he left no ancestor nor descendant, but left George B. Clarke and William J. Clarke, plaintiffs, his first cousins, only heirs and next of kin. He left realty valued at $41,000, and personalty valued at $110,000. He left a will, executed November 9, 1889, and a codicil executed September 3, 1891, which are the subject of this controversy. By the first clause of the will his executors were directed to pay his debts and funeral expenses; by the second he bequeathed $25,000 to Mrs. Alice A. Schell; by the third, $1,000 to her daughter, Alice Schell; by the fourth, $1,000 to her son, Richard M. Schell; by the fifth, $250 to William Etgen, a clerk in the law office of Mitchell & Mitchell; by the sixth, $1,000 to Samuel H. Hopping; by the seventh, $1,000 to Eugene M. Berard; by the eighth, $5,000 to.Edward Mitchell; by the ninth, $5,000 to William Mitchell; by the tenth clause the foregoing legacies were charged upon the testator’s real estate; by the eleventh the residue was divided into two equal parts, one of which was given to Alice A. Schell, and the other to his executor, who was directed to apply the income, or such portion thereof as "he saw fit, to the use of Anson Clarke House during his life, with authority to convey all of such portion of the half .so placed in trust to said Anson Clarke House; by the thirteenth he directed that, in case the trust should be held invalid, thé oné-half left in trust should go absolutely to Anson Clarke House; and by the fourteenth, if Anson Clarke House - should die while any portion of the half was held in trust, that the trust estate so held should go to Alice A. Schell; by the fifteenth he directed that during the settlement of his estate his executors should pay Alice A.'Schell'and Anson Clarke House each $1,200 annually; by the last'clause Alice A. Schell and-William Mitchell were nominated as executors, and given power to sell his realty. Anson Clarke House, for whose benefit the trust was created, died August 9, 1891, and on the 3d. of September, 1891, the testator executed his codicil, in which he referred to the death of Anson Clarke House, and revoked the eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth clauses of his will, and gave to Mrs. Mary Divins, $1,000; to Miss Emma Naylor, a sister of Mrs. Divins, $1,000; to Mrs. Mary Naylor, $1,000; to Miss Mamie Naylor, daughter of Mrs. Mary Naylor, $1,000; to Frank Naylor, $1,000; to George Naylor, $1,000; to Mrs. Eliza T. Wilson, $1,000; to Cecelia R. Burford, $1,000; to Mrs. Clara Lavery, $500; to Richard Divins, $500; to Miss Mamie Coonan, $500. The remainder he devised and bequeathed to Mrs. Alice A. Schell. The fifteenth clause of the will was modified by striking out the name of Anson Clarke House, and directing that $50 a week should be paid Mrs. Alice A. Schell while his estate was being settled. The general legacies, aside from those [1055]*1055to Mrs. Schell and the Mitchells, amounted to $13,750, and, including those, to $48,750.

The main facts relied on to establish the issue tendered by the plaintiffs are that the testator gave nothing to his first cousins, the plaintiffs; that he gave $10,000 to Edward and William Mitchell, his legal advisers and the draftsmen of the will; $2,250 to employés in their office; and the remainder of Ms estate to Mrs. Schell and her relatives. Considering the circumstances of the testator and Ms surroundings, we tMnk these facts do not give the slightest support to the contention of the plaintiffs. In 1819 the testator’s father and his eldest brother, William B., came from England to this country, and were followed the next year by the testator, his mother, his brother Thomas G., his sister Elizabeth, and Ms maternal uncle John P. Brown. Subsequently a brother Robert and a sister Rose, were born in tMs city. In 1820, John P. Brown and the testator’s father established a hotel or restaurant in Maiden Lane, and' the business was continued by them, and by the testator and his brothers, until 1858, when it' was abandoned. The testator’s father died in 1833; his mother, in 1835; Ms eldest brother, William B., in 1837; Ms sister Rose, in 1844; his brother Thomas Gf., in 1865; his brother Robert, in 1884; and his sister Elizabeth, in 1887. None of his brothers or sisters left descendants. For more than 40 years prior to 1884 the testator lived at “Anson House,” a hotel or boarding house in Canal .street, .kept by Anson House and Ms wife, Sophia, and there his brother Robert lived for many years, until his marriage, when he left. Mrs. House was an aunt of Mrs. Alice A. Schell, and Anson Clarke House was an illegitimate son of Anson House. Mrs. Schell was much at “Anson House,” and had known, the testator from her .childhood. About 1884 Anson House died, leaving his widow, and subsequently the hotel wMch they had kept for many years was .abandoned, and the testator and the widow, Mrs. Anson House, took separate rooms at the St. Nicholas Hotel, on Washington Place, in .this city, kept by Julius A. Robinson. Mrs. House "remained in this hotel until her death, wMch is stated by one witness to have occurred June 25, 1886, and by another June 20, 1887. The evidence .is that until Mrs. House’s death the testátor and Anson Clarke House occupied room 88, and, after her death, room 72, sleeping in the same bed, until Ánson Clarke House became ill, when they occupied single beds in the same room. During all this time Mrs. Schell and her daughter frequently visited the testator, and cared more or less for his wants. It is charged, but the charge is not supported .by evidence, that the testator and Mrs. Anson House, and, after her death, the testator and Mrs. Schell, sustained improper relations. The evidence called out in behalf of the plaintiffs shows conclusively that the relations existing between the testator and Mrs. Schell and her family were for many years most intimate and friendly, but, as before stated, does not sustain the charge of improper intimacy. The testator’s cousin George B. Clarke lived in Brooklyn. They seldom saw each other, and had little or no intercourse. The other cousin, W7illiam J. Clarke, the testator never saw. Under such circumstances, .we do not think that the fact that the property was given to those [1056]*1056with whom he had sustained most intimate relations for half a century, to the exclusion of two cousins, one of whom he never saw, and the other whom he seldom saw, and with whom he had little intercourse, is a circumstance tending to show that the testator was unduly influenced, coerced, or defrauded into making his will.

Under the circumstances of this case, we do not think that the bequest of $10,000 to his attorneys, and of $2,250 to their employés, raises a presumption of undue influence on tiie part of his counsel who drafted the will. Prior to 1885, James B. Bullock had been the testator’s legal adviser, and Mitchell & Mitchell had been employed to assist in conducting a litigation in which the testator was involved. About 1885,. Bullock died, leaving a will of which Richard J. Clarke was the executor, and the estate was settled through the aid of Mitchell & Mitchell, who succeeded Bullock as the counsel of the testator. Besides this, the Arm assisted Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.Y.S. 1053, 91 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 28, 65 N.Y. St. Rep. 83, 84 Hun 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarke-v-schell-nysupct-1895.