In re Skaats' Will

26 N.Y.S. 494, 81 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 462, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 698, 74 Hun 462
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 26 N.Y.S. 494 (In re Skaats' Will) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Skaats' Will, 26 N.Y.S. 494, 81 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 462, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 698, 74 Hun 462 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

O’BRIEN, J.

Upon the question of testamentary capacity the law is well settled, and in the leading case of Delafield v. Parish, 25 N. Y. 9, is stated as follows:

“It is essential that the testator has sufficient capacity to comprehend perfectly the condition of his property, his relation to the persons who were or should or might have been the objects of his bounty, and the scope and bearing of the .provisions of his will. He must, in the language of the cases, have [496]*496sufficient active memory to collect in his mind, without prompting, the particulars or elements of the business to be transacted, and to hold them in his mind a sufficient length of time to perceive at least their obvious relations to each other, and be able to form some rational judgment in relation to them. A testator who has sufficient mental power to do these things is, within the meaning and intent of the statute of wills, a person of sound mind and memory, and is competent to dispose of his estate by will.”

Weeks, running into months, were consumed in eliciting facts bearing upon the questions of the testamentary capacity of Schuyler Skaats, deceased. It would exceed the bounds of any option to collate from the three large volumes of testimony all the details of the life of the deceased, partly brought out on behalf of the contestants, which it is claimed tend to establish mental weakness, and partly on behalf of the proponents to refute such theory. We must therefore content ourselves with grouping together the most salient features of the case, and thence deduce our conclusions.

It appears that the testator had been a man of regular habits, and was a painstaking and marvelously accurate bookkeeper, and kept by his own hands, by a system of double entry, one of the most perfect sets of books that the experts had ever seen, which balanced year by year down to a penny, he having made the last balance January 1, 1883; that during 1883 he made the entries in the different books correctly, and continued to correctly enter his items down to April 30, 1884; and that in the fall of that year the accounts were kept in a more irregular manner, which irregularity gradually increased until his death. They also attach great weight to the diaries kept by the testator, commencing with January, 1884. and running to within two days of his death, which contain minute entries of his daily life; contestants especially relying upon numerous entries of calls of nature, and of his having taken doses of tonics, liver invigorators, and purgative medicines, and of his symptoms in consequence, and other, trivial incidents. Again, reference is made to photographs of the deceased, introduced in evidence, taken at different periods of his life, one in 1878, one in 1886, and one in 1890. which certainly show that as years went by he changed in appearance and became older looking, but which are of no assistance to us in determining whether or not in 1884 the testator was of weak mind. It is further contended that weakness of mind is shown from the fact that in his latter years, beginning in 1883, the testator had occasional spells of unconsciousness, called by bis wife “indigestible turns;” that he would sometimes scream or shout apparently without cause; that he had many odd manners and habits, such as making puns, reciting poetry in a showy manner, pasting pictures in books, shaking hands with hotel waiters, smoking in bed, wearing cap and gloves while eating, etc. As against all this it is shown that he impressed people outside his family as being somewhat eccentric, to be sure, but neat in appearance, pleasant and cheerful, a good joker, well read, intelligent, a good judge of pictures, very shrewd in matters of business, and hard at a bargain; that many of his peculiarities were the habits of long years,—such, for instance, as his punning propensities, and conversing with waiters and shaking them by the hand; arid that his diaries for the [497]*497years 1843 and 1853, which were produced, contained entries substantially similar to those in the diary for 1884. His occasional screams would appear to be explained by the fact that he suffered from a bad rupture, which at times gave him great trouble, causing him to cry out with pain. Even his failure to keep up his books after the summer of 1883 may be sufficiently accounted for on another theory than failure of intellect. He had then passed his sixty-fifth year, and had long been out of business; his digestion was much impaired; he was troubled and sometimes tortured with rapture; and he was constantly dosing with powerful medicines, which he sometimes took -under protest to allay the anxiety of his wife, at whose suggestion also, in the fall of 1883. he commenced the habit of driving out about 10 o’clock in the morning for the benefit of his health. His diary shows further that in 1884 he and his wife generally drove out in the afternoon a second time, and that he was accustomed to take a short nap in the daytime. Under these circumstances it would be entirely natural in him to gradually give up the superfluous labor of keeping such an elaborate set of books. But, more than anything else, when it is made to appear that the testator, during the very years when he is alleged to have been imbecile, had the control and management of a large amount of property, buying and selling bonds, and that he never made a bad investment, but that the market value of his securities had increased considerably at the time of his death; that he constantly watched the fluctuations in the values of1 his securities, the principal part of which fluctuated wildly during the years 1883, 1884, and 1885, and frequently recorded the fact in his diary,—these facts show such firmness- and sound judgment as could not have been exercised by a man of feeble mind. Moreover, the person most intimately associated with him, Mrs. Skaats, the principal contestant, both before and after the making of the will, reposed the utmost confidence in his business sagacity, trusting him with the management of all her fortune, which he kept invested, and from which she received a large income. By reference to the dates it will be noticed that the more marked features of physical and mental weakness relied upon by contestants appeared subsequent to 1884; and, while it was entirely proper, as bearing upon the impairment of the testator’s mind and body, to admit such testimony, it must be remembered that the will was made in May, and the codicil in August, 1884, about seven years, prior to testator’s death, and that these are the important dates. It is conceivable that by reason of physical and mental weakness one might be deprived of testamentary' capacity just prior and subsequent to a period when such capacity existed, and the question in-all such cases necessarily must be as to the mental condition of the testator at the date when the will was made. In regard to the period prior to 1884, although some evidence was presented bearing upon the nervous results to the testator growing out of the panic of 1873, it appears that his recovery was sufficiently marked to make this simply an episode in his life, which did not permanently imeither his body or mind. So that in January, 1883, concededly., [498]*498the testator was in sound mind, amply competent not only to make a will, hut to enter into any contract.

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Related

Horn v. . Pullman
72 N.Y. 269 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)
Delafield v. . Parish
25 N.Y. 9 (New York Court of Appeals, 1862)
Marx v. . McGlynn
88 N.Y. 357 (New York Court of Appeals, 1882)
In re Bedlow's Will
22 N.Y.S. 290 (New York Supreme Court, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.Y.S. 494, 81 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 462, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 698, 74 Hun 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-skaats-will-nysupct-1893.