In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Cutter

14 Mills Surr. 84, 89 Misc. 663, 154 N.Y.S. 250
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 Mills Surr. 84 (In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Cutter) 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 Proving the Last Will & Testament of Cutter, 14 Mills Surr. 84, 89 Misc. 663, 154 N.Y.S. 250 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Cohalan, S.

Henry T. Cutter, a large, if not the largest, stockholder in the drug house of Hegeman & Co., .and his wife, Amelia G. or A. Gertrude Cutter, lived for about thirty-eight years in a large old-fashioned corner house at No. 781 Lexington Avenue, in this city. The house was sumptuously furnished with (as one witness described it) the best that money could buy.” In this home Mrs. Cutter gave many entertainments. Her own and her husband’s relatives were received there by her. They seemed to be interested in her and she in them. The Cutters had no children. Up to about the last ten years of her life Mrs. Cutter lived as women in her circumstances usually do. She had servants and entertained her friends “ in style,” asi one witness expressed it. She dressed well, even extravagantly. She [86]*86attended the opera and the theatre. She had horses, employed a coachman and went driving regularly. She gave to her toilet and appearance -the care and to the amenities of social intercourse the attention that is naturally expected from a woman of refinement. When Cutter was about seventy-five years old, his wife then being about sixty-five years of age, a change came over their habits and method of living. Mrs Cutter abandoned largely her social interests and duties. She lost her interest in the niceties of dress. She gave" up her attendance at the opera, disposed of her horses, discontinued her entertainment© and' discharged her servants. Eventually Cutter and she became practically recluses, almost unattended. In 1913 we find that they bad reached a condition where they lived by themselves', using only two rooms ‘and a pantry on the second floor of their house, at ISTo. 781 Lexington Avenue, their only attendant being a furnaceman named “ Beamish.” His attention to the old couple was irregular, owing to an unfortunate addiction to drink. Mrs. Cutter, at times «©sited1 by “ Beamish,” prepared the meals for the household on a two-burner' gas stove in a pantry or passageway between the living room and the sleeping room on the second floor of the house. v

After a serious illness: Cutter died January 20, 1914, about two months prior to the execution of the paper herein propounded. At the time of his death he was- eighty-three or eighty-four years of -age. He was helpless, feeble and diseased.

The upstairs rooms of the house were always in great disorder. Except for the basement, the other parts of the house were kept locked. During this period the aforementioned “ Beamish ” looked after matters generally and attended to the furnace and marketing (when he was not too drunk to do ©o). There was no other servant. “ Beamish ” called in the morning and obtained admission to the house by the use of a key which Mrs. Cutter let down on a string from a front window on the second floor of the house. Empty, unclean milk bottles, milk bottles in [87]*87which the milk had soured, empty and partly filled cans, old vegetables, scraps of food which had not been! eaten, used, unwashed dishes, soiled clothing, old rags and unclean vessels were scattered -about the rooms or put away in the closet-. Mrs, Cutter was 'averse to taking a bath or to having her body touched with water. She wore the same dress and petticoat and the same-nightgown for the last two weeks of her life; in fact from January to March these articles of clothing seem to have been worn by her continuously, and were always soiled and unkempt. She wore her hair hanging, uncombed and unkempt. She ate raw oysters out of a pail with her fingers. When Cutter lay dying on the bed in January, 1914, Loretta McLaughlin, a seamstress, who remained in the house with Mrs: Cutter the last night of Cutter’s illness and for a short time after his death, suggested to her that she moisten Cutter’s lips: Mrs. Cutter' declined to do so and told Miss McLaughlin she could do so if she wished to, hut that she, Mrs. Cutter, was going to fix up the parlor for the funeral, which she then proceeded to do. "The night before Cutter died Miss McLaughlin stated to her that her husband was dying and suggested that she sleep that night on a couch in the living room. Mrs. Cutter refused to' do this, and said she was going to sleep with “ Buhbv; ” whereupon -she got into bed with the dying man and spent the night there. The next day . Cutter died. Mrs: Cutter stated to Miss- McLaughlin that she was afraid he would haunt her, owing to the fact that she had kicked him the night before he died 'because he had threshed around in the bed and bothered her. During Cutter’s illness, and in spite of the fact that he was worth upwards of $1,500,000, Mrs. Cutter failed to call in a trained- nurse or an attendant to wait on him. She had Beamish ” cut a hole through the mattress, upon which Cutter lay ill, and placed rags on the floor underneath the bed to receive the excrement from him. The day of Cutter’s funeral Miss McLaughlin offered to-assist Mrs. Cutter in dressing for the funeral. She refused to-[88]*88take off, or permit to be taken off, the soiled nightgown she was wearing, and put on her outer clothing over this nightgown. After Cutter’s death Miss McLaughlin remained with Mrs. Cutter for a few days. When Miss McLaughlin left, Beamish,” the man of all work, used to dress and undress Mrs. Cutter and used to- take her- to the bathroom. After the making of the will of March twenty-first, Mrs: Jaeger, the wife of .a neighborhood grocer, came in and looked after Mrs. Gutter as best she could until the death of testatrix on April 3, 1914. Beamish ” and Mrs. Jaeger were the only nurses Mrs. Cutter had in her last illness. During this period there were filth and ordure on the floor-, on the chains' and in the vessels which were left unclean in the upstairs rooms: Mrs. Cutter objected to having the windows open, 'and the rooms always had a foul odor, due to their unsanitary condition.

Ini one of these rooms she received visits from Ramsey, Mills, Tiehenor, Bradner, Frauenthal and other actual and potential beneficiaries. In one of these rooms the paper propounded for probate was signed. Testatrix suffered from cancer of the uterus, chronic nephritis, toxemic poisoning, due to -obstruction of the bowel®, general anemia and' arterio sclerosis: ' During this period she habitually took large quantities of morphine and codein. She used these drugs up to within a day or two- of her deatih. There is no evidence that the doctors ever attempted to procure for her a trained nurse, nor did Ramsey, Milk or Tiehenor ever attempt to bring i-n- a trained nurse to take charge-of this dying and suffering old woman. In spite 'of the filthy condition of her bed land clothing and though one of these doctors was a beneficiary, and must have been aware of her condition, she was not removed to a hospital, where she would be forcibly bathed, nor was -any -action taken in her -behalf which common humanity would require. Was this because, aisi one of the witnesses sa-id, Mrs. Cutter was cranky ” and would not submit to the ministrations of a trained nurse, or was it because [89]*89the beneficiaries in the propounded paper desired no outside interference with the scheme that had been concocted by them to divide among themselves an estate which may amount to upwards of $1,500,000 ? Their sole ambition seems to have been to get the largest possible bequest from Mrs. Cutter; their sole endeavor to vie with each other in attempting to obtain the last will signed by this diseased, drug-eating, dying old woman. On March 21, 1914, to the house above described came Ramsey and the attorney for proponents to have the propounded paper signed by this woman.

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Related

In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Cutter
100 Misc. 130 (New York Supreme Court, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
14 Mills Surr. 84, 89 Misc. 663, 154 N.Y.S. 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proving-the-last-will-testament-of-cutter-nysurct-1915.