In re Gross

7 N.Y. St. Rep. 739
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 7 N.Y. St. Rep. 739 (In re Gross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York 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 Gross, 7 N.Y. St. Rep. 739 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Rollins, S.

This decedent, an unmarried woman, died in the city of New York on November 27, 1884, at the age of 57 years. A paper purporting to be her last will and testament was soon afterwards propounded in this court. Its admission to probate has been strenuously opposed by John L. Gross, her brother, and by her two sisters, Marie L. Van Woert and Rachel B. March. These three persons constituted at her death, and still constitute, her only next of kin.

The disputed paper does not include them, or any one of them, in its list of beneficiaries. It gives $20,000 to a cousin of the decedent residing in Paris, France and $5,000 to each of two other French cousins. It gives to five specified benevolent or reh'giou ' ocieties sums amounting in all to $7,000. It gives $5,000 to John L. Moore, who is named as executor, and makes him sole residuary legatee.

The other bequests are as follows:

To Rev. Dr. John Hall, minister of the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian church, whom Miss Gross characterizes as her “beloved pastor,” $5,000;

To Dr. Leroy M. Yale, to whom she refers as “my faithful friend and medical adviser,” $1,000;

To William L. Moore and James A. Moore, her “friends,” $2,000 each;

[740]*740To Ellen M. Johnson, who had acted for about three years as her seamstress, $250;

To Elizabeth Bush, a colored woman, who testified that she had sewed for Miss Gross at intervals “since seven years before the riot,” $1,000;

To Sarah B. Courtney, formerly a housemaid in her employ, $1,000.

To Carolina Syoberg, to whom she refers as “my maidservant, who for many years has been my constant and faithful friend, $12,000, and a quantity of clothing whose value is not disclosed.

First. The contestants’ objection that in the formal execution of this instrument there was a failure to comply with the requirements of law has not been pressed by their counsel. The evidence upon this question is so clearly in favor of the proponent that I think it unnecessary to discuss it.

The objection must be overruled.

Second. Was Harriet Gross possessed of testable capacity when she executed the paper here in controversy, or, on the other hand, is it true, as the contestants insist, that in ignoring their claim to partake of her testamentary bounty, she was governed by an insane delusion that that claim had been forfeited by their unworthy conduct towards herself ?

From the date of her birth up to the year 1875, the decedent was a member of a household which for many years prior to 1870 had consisted of her father, her mother, her unmarried sister Charlotte and herself, and had been dwelling at No. 109 East Seventeenth street, in this city. It was there that her father died in 1870, her mother in 1872, and Charlotte in 1875. Within a year after the death of the latter, Harriet moved away from the homestead, and for the remainder of her life she resided either in some hotel or in some private lodging-house, at or near New York.

The precise nature of the relations between herself and these contestants in the lifetime of their parents, and sub sequently in the lifetime of their sister Charlotte, is not disclosed by the evidence. But it is entirely clear that after Charlotte died there subsisted at all times a most plentiful lack of harmony.

John was one of the executors of his father’s will, and the interests of Charlotte and Harriet thereunder were held by him uninterruptedly until Charlotte’s death. Indeed, he continued in possession and control of Harriet’s share until March, 1877, when he surrendered it, pursuant to her demand, to Mr. John C. Shaw, as her attorney.

[741]*741It is claimed by the contestants that this demand was unreasonable and that there were no solid grounds for the decedent’s dissatisfaction with her brother’s management of her affairs.

It appears, however that although the sums he had paid out on her account up to the time of his dismissal exceeded slightly, if at all, the income of the funds which he had been holding as her agent, he had charged her—it would seem, without very just cause—with extravagance, and had on some occasions put her to inconvenience by delay in honoring her requests for money required for the defrayment of her current expenses.

There was another circumstance that probably had great weight with the decedent in inducing her to dispense with her brother’s services.

Before she had retired, in April, 1876, from the house in Seventeenth street where she had so long resided, a portion of the furniture and household goods which that house contained had been sold at auction and the proceeds had come to the hands of her brother John. The remaining portion, together with a quantity of wearing apparel, jewelry and personal ornaments were sent away to storehouses, where, without her knowledge, they were deposited in the name of John L. Gross, administrator, he having theretofore taken letters of administration upon the estate of his sister Charlotte.

These articles were of no great value, but they proves to be a prolific source of family discord and dissention. Some of them Harriet claimed as hers by actual purchase, others as gifts from her father or her mother or Charlotte, and others still as obtained by herself and Charlotte in common, and with a mutual understanding that when either should die the property should belong to the survivor.

Soon after Charlotte’s death John became possessed, as her administrator, of a certain bond for $2,500, which Harriet insisted was a gift from her deceased sister to herself.

In the inventory of Charlotte’s estate filed in January, 1876, and in an account filed in January, 1877, John recognized the existence of these claims without either acknowledging or disputing their validity. To this account Harriet filed objections. The issues were referred to an auditor on January 29, 1877, and there ensued before him a long and animated controversy. At some time prior to April 5,1873, he made a report which sustained Harriet’s right to a part of the property in dispute, but held that as to other parts her claim was untenable. Certain articles were found to be hers exclusively; certain others to be assets of her sister’s [742]*742estate; others still to be the common property of that estate and herself. On April 5, 1878, a decree was entered con firming this report and directing a division in accordance with its terms.

For at least a year before that decree was entered, friendly intercourse between Harriet and the contestants had utterly ceased. Like herself, they were all living in the city of New York, but she had paid no one of them a visit, and no one of them had visited her or had made any attempt to do so; which of the four was most at fault for this unhappy state of affairs I shall not undertake to determine.

Within three weeks after the entry of the decree above referred to, the decedent was advised by Wetmore and Bowne, attorneys for the administrator of Charlotte’s estate, that the assets of that estate were about to be distributed and that her own share therein was $15,000 or $16,000.

That this money might not be lodged in the hands of her brother John, for whom she had long entertained both distrust and aversion, she gave to Mr. William L. Moore her power of attorney for its collection.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.Y. St. Rep. 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gross-nysurct-1887.