In re the Contested Will of Dwyer

1 Mills Surr. 290, 29 Misc. 382, 61 N.Y.S. 903
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 Mills Surr. 290 (In re the Contested Will of Dwyer) 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 the Contested Will of Dwyer, 1 Mills Surr. 290, 29 Misc. 382, 61 N.Y.S. 903 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Varnum, S.

This case was tried before my predecessor, Mr. Surrogate Arnold, and submitted to him in 1897, but, not having been decided by him, comes to me for decision. The paper propounded as decedent’s last will was bitterly contested upon the grounds of undue influence and lack of testamentary capacity, and also upon the claim that one or more alterations had been made in the instrument after its formal execution by her. The gravity of these contentions, especially the latter, has necessitated a most careful and laborious examination of the voluminous testimony — more than 1,200 typewritten pages — and of the exhibits, including four prior wills, and also of the authorities bearing upon the questions of law involved. The decedent, Mrs. Dwyer, known until about six months before her death as Jane Tamajo, Duchess della Castellucia, died on August 2, [292]*2921895, being then about seventy years of age. She resided at the Burlington, an apartment house in Thirtieth street, which was owned by her and constituted the bulk .of her estate. She seems to have had a special predilection for matrimony and for the making of wills, as it appears that she was four times married, and it is in evidence that she made at least five wills during the last few years of her life. The last marital adventure occurred in Florida, where, in February, 1895, some six months before her death, she married one Dwyer, a man about half her age, who promptly left her on the day after the marriage, and, as the testimony shows, never lived with her on her return to Hew York. He made her a few apparently amicable visits here until she forbade him access to her apartment, chiefly, as it would seem, because of his coming there on one or two occasions in an intoxicated and maudlin condition. This Hr. Dwyer is now one of the contestants of the will propounded for probate, the only other contestant being a granddaughter of the decedent, Jennie Caldarazzo, nee Ungaro, the child of a deceased daughter. The testatrix left, as her only heirs at law and next of kin, in addition to the granddaughter above named, a son, Frederick F. Beals, and a daughter, Evelyn J, Hndnut. The testimony shows clearly that at different times specified the decedent was not on good terms, either with her granddaughter or with one or the other of her children. This is clear, also, from the provisions for disinheritance in the wills. It likewise appears that she was deeply interested in the management and success of the Burlington, which had been managed for many years for her by one William T. Coale, and that in 1892, during the lifetime of her third husband, Tamajo, she and the latter executed an agreement with Coale, engaging him to continue the management of said house for ten years, at a salary of $1,800 a year, such agreement not to terminate with the death of either or both of them. In this connection it is proper that I should state, as far as material and as briefly as [293]*293possible, the dispositions contemplated by her said five wills. The paper now propounded as the last will bears date July 16, 1895, about two weeks before her death. In it she provides that said William T. Ooale, who is described as having for a number of years been a faithful and efficient manager of the Burlington apartment house, shall continue to conduct and manage the same during the term of his natural life in the same manner, so far as practicable, as before, he to have the use of the house, furniture, etc., for that purpose, without impeachment for waste. Out of the income of said premises he is first to pay himself a sum equal to the amount that he had been receiving as manager, together with the further sum of $1,000 each year during his natural life. Next he is to pay all necessary expenses of carrying on the business, such as taxes, repairs and interest on mortgages, and from the balance of income, after such payments, to pay to Jennie Caldarazzo, the granddaughter above-named, $2,000 each year during her life. After this annuity he is to divide the residue of said income in substantially equal shares between Evelyn J. Hudnut and Frederick F. Beals, children of the testatrix. Upon Co ale’s death the said apartment house is devised to the two children above named (subject to the payment of the annuity of $2,000 to said granddaughter), and to said children is also given any residuary estate. It is further provided that there shall be no interference with Coale in the management of the said house by any of the parties in interest, and that the share of any party contesting the will shall be forfeited. Mr. Dwyer, above named, is mentioned only in the following language: “ Having already given my husband, Edward L. Dwyer, at various times, money and other property, I hereby give to him the sum of $10 and nothing more.” Finally, Mr. Coale and the decedent’s lawyer, Mr. William V. Simpson, are designated as executors, and all prior wills revoked. Of such prior wills there are, as already indicated, four in evidence. The earliest one, that of [294]*294October 3, 1890, was made during the lifetime of her former husband, Tamajo. After creating sundry annuities for the lives of the respective annuitants, decedent thereby gave the use of the apartment house for life to her said husband (“ to be conducted, so far as possible, as it now is by me”), said husband to pay one-half of income to her grand-daughter, who is to have the whole income upon his death or remarriage. The residuary estate is also given to the husband, and Coale, Simpson and he are appointed executors, the first named receiving a legacy of $1,000. In this will Beals, the son, is cut off with $10 because of unkindness, ingratitude and other specified wrongs. Decedent’s third husband, Tamajo, otherwise known as the Duke della Castellucia, died in the spring of 1893, and on June nineteenth of that year his widow made another will, whereby she gave the apartment house to Coale for life on the same general terms as in the will of July 16, 1895. The net rentals, after a small annuity to a sister, are to be divided between her granddaughter, Jennie, and her son, Beals, and his four children, share and share alike. They are likewise to divide all the property after Coale’s death. Messrs. Coale and Simpson are made executors, and any contestant is to forfeit his or her share as in the will of July, 1895. By this will of 1893, it is her daughter, Mrs. Hudnut, that is cut off with $10, and Mr. Coale is given $1,000 a year in addition to his regular compensation, the same as in the will propounded. On March 19, 1895, a new will was made. Precisely the same provision is made for Coale and against interference with his management of the Burlington as in the will now under contest, except that he is not given the extra annuity of $1,000 a year. The net income of said property is given, seventy-five per cent, to the son, Beals, fifteen per cent, to the granddaughter, Jennie, and five per cent, each to a nephew and niece, with division of the principal on Coale’s death in substantially the same proportions, the shares of nephew and niece, however, on their respec[295]*295tive deaths, to go to her son. Simpson and Ooale were again named as executors, and the daughter, Mrs. Hudnut, again cut off with $10, as in the will of 1893. Ten days later on March 29, 1895, a fourth will was made in substantially the same terms as that of March nineteenth, except that it contains provisions for small annuities to her late husband’s sisters, and for certain specific legacies and also the same provisions regarding' Dwyer, her last husband, as found in the will here contested. Moreover, the clause giving Ooale his extra compensation of $1,000 a year is restored.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Cravens'estate
1952 OK 104 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1952)
In re the Probate of the Will of Dalton
185 Misc. 785 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1945)
City Nat. Bank v. Slocum
272 F. 11 (Sixth Circuit, 1921)
In re Carver's Will
1 Pow. Surr. 316 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Mills Surr. 290, 29 Misc. 382, 61 N.Y.S. 903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-contested-will-of-dwyer-nysurct-1899.