Collister v. Fassitt

23 A.D. 466, 48 N.Y.S. 792
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 A.D. 466 (Collister v. Fassitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collister v. Fassitt, 23 A.D. 466, 48 N.Y.S. 792 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The question as to the construction to be given to the 4th ■clause of the testator’s will, and the obligation imposed upon the testator’s wife for the support and benefit of the plaintiff, was •determined by this court upon an appeal from a judgment sustaining the defendant’s demurrer to the complaint, and it was held that the duty of supporting the plaintiff was imposed upon the wife, leaving only the details as to the amount and the time of payment to the wife’s discretion, the court saying: “It.is impossible, therefore, reading the entire will in the light of the surrounding circumstances, not to come to the conclusion that the testator had assumed and meant to continue the duty of providing support for his niece; and the discharge of this duty after death he confided to his wife, and she having admittedly repudiated what should have been regarded as a sacred trust the court can compel her to fulfill it in a fair and reasonable manner.” (Collister v. Fassitt, 7 App. Div. 26.) After this decision the defendant, having answered the complaint by admitting the death of the testator, and his having made, published and declared his last will and testament, and denying each and every other allegation of the complaint, the case was brought on for. trial at a Special Term of the court. Upon such trial the plaintiff testified to her relations to the testator, the support which she had received from him during his life and to the receipt of a letter from the defendant upon the morning of the trial in which the defendant said: “I have concluded to exercise the discretion vested in me under the will of my late husband, Gerard B. Scranton, deceased, dated the 11th of September, 1888, and to allow you the sum of $400 a year for your support and benefit, the same to accrue to you from November 1st, 1895.” Upon the plaintiff’s resting, the defendant’s counsel offered no testimony, and the court filed its decision directing an entry of an interlocutory judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and deciding “that plaintiff is entitled to be paid by said defendant out of any property which said defendant has received, under or by virtue of such will, a sum sufficient for her necessary and suitable support, in view of her condition and necessities, and the condition and amount of the estate received by defendant under the will of said Scranton, and for an amount which shall equal the amounts she should have [468]*468received from defendant since the death of said Scranton, with interest thereon from the time when such amounts ought to have been paid.” The said judgment further directed a reference to take proof and ascertain the amount and condition of the estate which the defendant received from the said testator under the will; the amount hitherto paid by defendant to the plaintiff, and the amount and time of such payments; the amount necessary to be applied to the necessary and suitable support of the plaintiff in each year, and how and when the same should be paid. Upon the proceedings before the referee, evidence was taken as to the amount necessary for the plaintiff’s support, and the amount of the estate of the testator which was received by the defendant under the will. On behalf of the defendant there was testimony taken before the referee tending' to contradict the testimony of the plaintiff as to her relation to the family of the testator at the time of his death, and also tending to show that the plaintiff had intended to leave the testator’s family before his death; that she did actually go to live with her grandmother four days before the making of the will, and between three and four weeks before the death of the testator, and remained with her grandmother until her death, sometime after the death, of the testator. The' plaintiff, at that time, was an infant. She first became a member of the testator’s family when she was. about six years old, and at the tim'e of the testator’s death was .about seventeen years of age. In the year 1888, the year of the testator’s, death, he took his family, including the plaintiff, to Europe, and returned to • this country in September of the same year, several months; before he died. The testator had then no house in New .York, but went to the Windsor Hotel, where the plaintiff accompanied him, she staying with him at the Windsor about two weeks,, when she went to her grandmother’s and the testator went to Lakewood With his wife and daughter. It appears that the grandmother' was over eighty years old and had nobody else with her, and that the-plaintiff went to stay with, her, to pay her a visit. The plaintiff testified that there was no intention, so far as she knew, at the timo she went to her grandmother’s; that 'she should not return to her uncle’s as before, and that she still considered herself a member of the testator’s family. Upon the hearing before the referee, the: defendant testified .that the plaintiff made up her mind to leave her-[469]*469family and to go to live with her grandmother before they left for Europe in the spring of that year; that it was all talked over and settled ; that she made up her mind in Europe that when the family arrived in America she would be called by her father’s name and would make a permanent home with her grandmother.

There was no evidence' either before the court or before the referee as to whether or not this alleged intention was communicated to the testator; but as this will was made several days after the plaintiff left to visit her grandmother, the testator at that time being in poor health, it seems to be clear that the testator’s intention as to providing for the support of the plaintiff continued after the plaintiff went to her grandmother’s. . The fact of her going to her grandmother’s was not a change in the relation that existed between the plaintiff and the testator which could alter the effect to be given to this clause of the will.

Assuming that this testimony, introduced before the referee in the proceeding under the interlocutory judgment, would affect the final judgment as to the intention of the testator as expressed in this will, we fail -to find anything in this evidence to show that the testator had any different intention, or that, after he made the will, his relations to the plaintiff were so changed as would prevent our giving to this clause of the will the construction which was placed upon it upon the former appeal. There is nothing to show that the intention of the testator changed after the making of the will, or that the relation between the plaintiff and the testator was in any degree changed before, his death. That the testator had supported the plaintiff from the time she was six years of age to the time of his death was conceded; and, so far as the evidence-shows, she was .treated as a daughter, her wants supplied, and all sums necessary for her support and maintenance paid by the testator. It could hardly be conceived that the fact that the plaintiff went to pay a visit to her grandmother, who was the testator’s mother, or, in fact, to live with her, would be considered by the testator as a severance of their relations, or an act that would change the feeling of the testator towards her, so as to make this provision of the will any the less obligatory upon the defendant who received the main portion of the testator’s estate. .

The only other question before us on this- appeal is as to the [470]*470amount allowed by .the court for the support and maintenance of the-plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 A.D. 466, 48 N.Y.S. 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collister-v-fassitt-nyappdiv-1897.