In Re Proving the Will of Coleman

19 N.E. 71, 111 N.Y. 220, 19 N.Y. St. Rep. 501, 66 Sickels 220, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 1006
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 27, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 19 N.E. 71 (In Re Proving the Will of Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals 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 Will of Coleman, 19 N.E. 71, 111 N.Y. 220, 19 N.Y. St. Rep. 501, 66 Sickels 220, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 1006 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Ruger, Ch. J.

The probate of the will of William Coleman, deceased, was contested before the surrogate by his widow and several of his children and grandchildren, upon the ground that he was not of sound mind and memory at the time of its execution, and its execution was procured through undue influence, fraud and intimidation exercised over him by Bobert S. Coleman. The will was admitted to probate, and the decree was affirmed upon appeal by the General Term.

*223 It is urged, upon this appeal, that the evidence produced before the surrogate by the contestants, as to the mental and physical weakness and incompetency of the testator to make a valid will, is so strong and conclusive, that this court should reverse the decision of the court below upon the facts.

It is not our purpose to go into a detailed history of the evidence, or comment upon the weight and force of the various facts and circumstances proved on the trial by the respective parties, to sustain their several positions, as it is not even claimed by the appellants, that there was no evidence to support the decree of the surrogate. Their utmost contention is that the evidence is so persuasive and convincing, either of the mental incompetency of the testator or of the exercise of undue influence by the proponent in procuring the execution of the will, that the court should hold, as matter of law, that it was error for the surrogate to admit it to probate.

The argument of the appellants is based, to a large extent, upon evidence which was admitted on the trial against the objection of the proponent, and which we deem to be clearly inadmissible. While we consider the case made by the contestants upon the evidence to be strong, and as presenting a serious question whether the testator was competent to make a valid will or not, yet the exclusion of the evidence improperly received on their behalf by the surrogate, would impair the force and strength of their case, and leave the evidence as to the testator’s competency more nearly balanced than it would otherwise be.

A general outline of the facts will be sufficient to present the views we deem it necessary to express upon the determination of this appeal. Eobert S. Coleman, the only son of the testator, was the proponent of the will and one of the three executors named therein; the others having renounced or declined to act in that capacity. The testator, at the time of its execution, was upwards of eighty years of age, and died within a year thereafter. He was then possessed of property mainly consisting of real estate, of the value of about $40,000, and had several children and grandchildren who were in needy *224 circumstances, partially dependent upon him for support, hut were not mentioned in or provided for by the will, although apparently the natural objects of his bounty. That instrument, after making slight provisions for two of his grandchildren, gave his personal property, together with a life estate in his homestead, to his widow, and the remainder thereof, together with a remainder in the homestead, to the proponent. Robert was by profession a lawyer, and, although living in his father’s family and being supported by him until he was nearly forty years of age, had never rendered material assistance to the testator, in his business affairs and was not apparently regarded by him with favor, or as a proper or fit person to have the management and control of business, such as that in which the testator had theretofore been engaged.

Upon the trial much evidence was given on both sides in regard to the mental and physical condition of the testator during the three or four years preceding his death; but no direct evidence was produced as to any effort, on the part of the proponent, to procure the making of a will by his father, or to influence or dictate the nature of its provisions. The proof, on the part of the contestants, as. to the exercise of undue influence, is based wholly upon inference sought to be drawn from the apparently unfriendly relations existing between the testator and his son; the alleged unnatural and inequitable disposition of the property, the advanced age of the testator and the absence of any apparent reason, except the assumed existence of some extraneous influence, for excluding the other children from a share in his estate. There was much evidence produced by the contestants as to the impairment of the mental and physical condition of the testator subsequent to 1877, when it was claimed that he had experienced a paralytic affection, which caused a gradual but continuous impairment of his faculties, down to the time of his death in April 1881.

This evidence was met on the part of the proponent by nearly an equal number of witnesses, who testified to facts and circumstances showing the continued mental soundness of the *225 testators faculties, and his capacity to transact business affairs until after the execution of the will.

The evidence on the part of the contestants is subject to the criticism that much of it was given under the objection of the proponent, and was of doubtful admissibility upon the questions litigated. Aside from the evidence of Mrs. Coleman, the most material and important facts on the part of the contestants were undoubtedly proved by the witnesses, Mrs. Seelye, the daughter of the testator, and the two physicians, Drs. Clark and Little, who testified to the unsoundness of mind of the testator during the year 1877 and subsequent thereto, from knowledge acquired by them while attending him respectively in a professional capacity. This evidence was duly objected to by the proponent, but was admitted against such objection. So far as the evidence of the medical witnesses is concerned, there can be but little doubt of its inadmissibility, and it should have been disregarded by the surrogate in Metermining the question of the testator’s mental ■ and physical condition. It' seems to us that this evidence falls clearly within the prohibition contained in section 834 of the Code, as illustrated and applied in recent decisions of this court. (Grattan v. Met. Life Ins. Co., 80 N. Y. 296; Edington v. Mut. Life Ins. Co., 67 id. 185; Westover v. Ætna Ins. Co., 99 id. 56; People v. Schuyler, 106 id. 318; Renihan v. Dennin, 103 id. 574.)

It is perhaps not important that we should comment upon the propriety of the rulings on the trial in reference to the evidence on the part of the contestants, since, in any event, whether it be considered or not, we are of the opinion that the question of the testator’s mental condition, and the exercise of undue influence over him, in respect to the execution of the will, was one of fact to be determined by the trial court. Whatever may be said of the evidence, we are clearly of the opinion that not only was there evidence upon which the decision of the surrogate could properly be supported; but there was no such preponderance as to the testator’s mental *226 incapacity to make a valid will, as would have authorized a reversal by an appellate tribunal of the surrogate’s decree determining that fact in favor of the proponent. (In re Ross, 87 N. Y. 514; In re Cottrell, 95 id. 333;

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.E. 71, 111 N.Y. 220, 19 N.Y. St. Rep. 501, 66 Sickels 220, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proving-the-will-of-coleman-ny-1888.