In re Estate of McDowell

137 A. 823, 5 N.J. Misc. 605, 1927 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 5
CourtEssex County Surrogate's Court
DecidedMay 12, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 137 A. 823 (In re Estate of McDowell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Essex County Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of McDowell, 137 A. 823, 5 N.J. Misc. 605, 1927 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 5 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Flannagan, J.

This is an appeal from the probate by the surrogate of Essex county of the alleged last will and testament of Edward McDowell, deceased. The alleged will was executed August 4th, 1925. The ground of appeal is that the deceased lacked testamentary capacity.

The deceased was a man of considerable means, possessing some $25,000 in personalty and having the power under his father’s will to dispose, by his own will, of the income of some $200,000, which income he himself enjoyed thereunder during his lifetime.

He was in poor health, had little occupation, did some painting, was much interested in- art and spent a large part of his time in travel with his wife, who was his devoted and almost constant companion.

To those with whom he came in ordinary contact he betrayed no mental peculiarity amounting to any disorder; he ordinarily attended to his own investments and went about [606]*606his daily affairs in a way which might be called irritable, finnicky, suspicions and perhaps eccentric, but nothing more.

He was, however, a monomaniac, the subject being his wife’s loyalty.

The testator was twice married. His widow, whom he married in 1913, was some years his junior, being his second wife. His first wife he had divorced on the ground of adultery, and he was under the fixed delusion that his second wife was inconstant in her affection and loyalty to him.

He had told his wife that she was to succeed to his wealth, but without indicating to her any change in his intention; he employed a stranger, who was a New Jersey attorney, to malee the will in question without her knowledge, cutting her off with $5,000 and leaving the remainder of his estate to the Art Students League of New York in memory of his father and in trust for the education of deserving and talented art students abroad and providing that this disposition should stand notwithstanding the birth thereafter of any children.

At one time, suddenly leaving his wife, he secretedly went to Europe and wrote his sister not to disclose his whereabouts. Nevertheless, immediately upon his arrival in Europe he cabled his wife to join him there, which she did.

At a time when a physical examination by a physician of his wife was required he stood outside the door with a drawn revolver; he employed a lawyer and caused his wife to be frequently shadowed by detectives; caused certain slips of paper, written by a Japanese servant in that language, to be translated, suspecting that they concerned his wife; discussed his wife’s fidelity with an officer of the bank with which he did business, and left a letter to be delivered to her after his death.-referring to a man in Switzerland and indicating his jealousy of her in respect to attentions from him or others.

It is not maintained that there are anjr facts upon which any suspicions or accusations against his wife could be rationally founded. She was constant in her affection and loyalty and in spite of all her reasoning he persisted in harboring his insane notion against her.

[607]*607The deceased died childless, possessed of no real estate and leaving his widow as his only next of kin. There is no doubt but that deceased’s monomania affected his will as to the provision concerning his wife and that it was the direct cause of those provisions.

There is no objection raised, however, by the widow to the probate of the will but the appeal is taken by decedent’s married sister, Mrs. E. Clayville-Smith, who is the sole objector to its probate.

The sister claims to- be interested because under the provisions of her father’s will the Income from the $200,000 above referred to passes to hex in the absence of the exercise by her brother (the deceased) of the power of disposition thereof. If no valid will by bim exists, then no power of disposition has been exercised.

In May, 1913, some two years prior to the making of the instant will, the deceased had employed a New York lawyer, who was his regular- counsel, to prepare a will. The draft of this will (which, apparently, was never executed) made no provision for the sister and left her nothing, as does the instant will. The sister was already well provided for by her father’s will, enjojdng the income upon some $200,000 for life, and though she lived in Baltimore and the deceased was ordinarily unoccupied and was frequently in or about New York City, they had not seen each other for a period of some nine years before deceased’s death though writing to each other from time to time. The only occasion during the nine years preceding his death when the deceased saw any member of his sister’s family was a recent one when the sister’s daughter was in New York and was invited with a friend of hers to luncheon by decedent, and when at or about the same time, she, with the same friend, stopped for a week at the hotel in Summit, New Jersey, where the deceased was staying, not as his guest but at her own expense.

It is quite manifest that the deceased had no desire to leave Ms sister anything. If he had, it would have been reflected in the draft of one or the other of these wills. The natural result of the monomaniacal delusion, which excluded [608]*608the wife from any substantial part of his bounty, would be. to invite a testamentary disposition favorable toward the sister rather than to prejudice or repel one. Moreover, it was not altogether unnatural that the decedent who had studied art at the Art Students League, who was himself an artist, interested in art matters and whose father was interested in art before him, should have preferred to create from his father’s estate a trust in memory of his father for the education of art students, rather than to further enrich a sister who was married, well provided for in her own right, and whom he had not seen, or made the slight effort necessary to see, for a period of nine years before his death.

' I am fully satisfied that although his partial derangement affected the mind of the deceased adversely to his wife and rendered him incapable of right reason as to her he was fully competent to reason rightly in regard to his sister and that his monomania had no adverse effect whatever upon his testamentary attitude towards her.

Under these circumstances the question is whether the court will refuse probate of the will at her instance alone.

Two views are suggested: First, that if a will is affected by an insane delusion, then it is the product of an insane mind, hence,, is invalid, and any heir, next of kin or interested party is entitled to have it so declared. Second, that an insane delusion to be fatal to a will of a monomaniac must not only affect the will but must adversely affect the objector.

The objector, in the instant case (the sister, Mrs. ClayvilleSmith), takes the first view while the proponent urges the second, contending that the presence of the delusion against the loyalty of the wife, not having adversely affected decedent’s disposition towards the sister, does not entitle the sister to set aside the will in the absence of objection on the part of the wife.

A single ease, that of Stackhouse v. Horton, 15 N. J. Eq. 202, is cited by proponent in support of that contention. That case was decided in the prerogative court by the then ordinary, Chancellor Green.

[609]*609In the Stackhouse Case

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 823, 5 N.J. Misc. 605, 1927 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-mcdowell-njsurrctessex-1927.