In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Martin

11 Mills Surr. 295, 82 Misc. 574, 144 N.Y.S. 174
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 11 Mills Surr. 295 (In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Martin) 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 Martin, 11 Mills Surr. 295, 82 Misc. 574, 144 N.Y.S. 174 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

When this cause was heard before at the chambers of this court (80 Misc. Rep. 17; 141 N. Y. Supp. 784) it was held that the motion to consolidate the several proceedings for the probate of different paper writings, purporting to be the last will and testament of John C. Martin, deceased, was premature, and that such motion should be brought on before the surrogate presiding at the trial term of this court. When the matters accordingly came on again at the trial term, the surrogate decided that the later paper should be first proceeded on and the other reserved, as in the event that the later paper was not established as a testamentary script, duly executed under the appropriate Statute of Wills, the devisees, [297]*297legatees and next of kin and heirs at law of John C. Martin, concerned in the earlier will only, would be relieved of much unnecessary litigation and expense. When the standing of those who may contest an earlier testamentary script depends solely on rights to be derived from the probate of a later paper, the validity of the later paper, if at issue, must first be determined. 80 Misc. Rep. 27.

This present proceeding is one for the probate of the paper writing, dated 31st of July, 1912, and alleged to be the last will and testament of John C. Martin, deceased, executed in due form of law. The allegations or objections interposed to the probate state that the paper writing is not such last will and testament, and that on the date it purports to be executed John C. Martin lacked testamentary capacity and was unlawfully restrained and influenced in and about the testamentary act of execution. The testimony produced by the parties on the trial was unusually extended, and the cause has been presented with the utmost precision, ■ learning and professional insistence ■—the briefs alone number some 650 pages—and yet the issue is a narrow one. The matter might be very briefly decided, were it not for the fact that tradition and custom exact from the official presiding in courts of this character a somewhat extended review of the evidence, and the reasons for his application of legal principles, in order that the tribunals charged with the ultimate solution may be the more easily and better informed of the scope and incidents of the matter.

John C. Martin, the alleged testator, was a native of Pennsylvania, but at the time of his death he was a resident of this county of New York. He had in' the course of his business career been successful in coal mining ventures at Portage, in his native state, and at the time of his death had accumulated an estate conceded to be upward of $750,000. Mr. Martin died on the 3d of September, 1912, in about the sixty-seventh or eighth year of his age. He was then a widower, and without [298]*298children. His next of kin and heirs at law consisted of a brother and seven sisters of the whole blood.

The paper now here for probate was executed at Portsmouth, in the state of New Hampshire, on the 31st day of July, 1912. Portsmouth was not Mr. Martin’s home. It appears that he had left Yonkers in this state, where he was on a visit to his sister, on July 5,1912, intending to stop at the Hotel Champernowne at Kittery Point, on the coast of Maine. He arrived there on the sixth day of July. It was while he was summering on this part of the Maine coast, that the Portsmouth will, now offered for probate, came into existence. Portsmouth is within easy distance of Kittery Point, and Mr. Martin, during July, 1912, frequently visited Portsmouth.

In the summer of 1910, Mr. Martin had been out of his mind, and for a time was actually confined and under medical restraint of some kind. It is proved by contestants that from July to October, 1911, a similar mental malady, whatever it was, recurred, as it did beyond all controversy in some part of the summer of 1912. Whether the last recurrence was before or after the making of the paper writing of 1912 is the great question. That during several of these attacks Mr. Martin was insane is not really disputed in this cause, and it cannot be from the evidence. But it is claimed by proponents, in substance, that the mental malady which affected Mr. Martin was of a periodic or acute kind, and that in the intervals between his acute attacks Mr. Martin was possessed of a sound and disposing mind. Upon this issue- it is incumbent on proponent to •establish with particularity that testamentary capacity which is always involved in the legal act of testamentation. Matter of Will of Gedney, 142 N. Y. Supp. 157. In this particular case the ordinary presumption of sanity has little place for precise application, as it is demonstrated that at times in his life Mr. Martin was manifestly not possessed of a sane mind.

The medical evidence adduced on both sides discloses that [299]*299Mr. Martin was afflicted with what is termed by the experts called to the stand “ manic depressive insanity.” Manic depressive insanity was testified to be “ that form of insanity which is characterized by a maniacal state, followed by a state of depression, or vice versa” The depression it seems may precede the mania or follow it. I infer from the medical testimony that depression of spirits, mania and periodicity are features of this type or species—if species it can be termed— of mental derangement. While the medical evidence adduced was very good of its kind, it failed to disclose to me the precise symptoms which distinguish “ manic depressive insanity ” from other forms of mental derangement. Mania and depression are I think characteristic of many forms of insanity. That “ manic depressive insanity ” is yet sufficiently specialized or differentiated from other types or forms of mental disorders I had some doubt on the trial; a doubt which is confirmed by my inability to find the word “ manic ” in either recognized works of science or recognized books of linguistic authority. Manic ” is evidently a Greek form, not sanctioned by English or Latin usage. This shows that the disease itself is somewhat novel in classification, for scientists generally resort to the Greek for their new terminology. The precise nature, duration and extent of the malady affecting Mr. Martin is of the utmost importance upon the issue of his capacity to testaméntate on the 31st of July, 1918. If manic depressive insanity ” is an acute rather than a chronic mental disorder, his disorder did not necessarily incapacitate Mr. Martin at all times from making his will. Manic depressive insanity was, I think, first differentiated by alienists of this country from other types of insanity in a much litigated and comparatively recent case in this state. It was perhaps recognized before then by a German scientist. Whether it is in fact invariably periodic and has a definite beginning and a definite ending I have some doubt from the medical testimony.

[300]*300It has been often, I know, said by alienists that the law, in respect of its attitude toward the mentally irresponsible, has not kept pace with modern specialization and scientific development, and that the law lingers behind and is really in the century of Coke. This criticism I do not regard as altogether justified, and I shall take the liberty, at the risk of invading the domain of other professions, of attempting to point out what I conceive to be the reason for the divergence of the two professions of law and medicine on an important question. The difficulty—and there is a difficulty—with the much to be desired rapprochement between jurisprudence and medical scientists is that each views “ mens sana ” from entirely different points of view.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Mills Surr. 295, 82 Misc. 574, 144 N.Y.S. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proving-the-last-will-testament-of-martin-nysurct-1913.