In re the Estate of Colton

166 A. 521, 11 N.J. Misc. 410, 1933 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 19
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 29, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 A. 521 (In re the Estate of Colton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Colton, 166 A. 521, 11 N.J. Misc. 410, 1933 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 19 (N.J. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

The orphans court of Essex county filed the following opinion:

“Katherine Vance Colton, the decedent, died July 19th, 1930, a spinster, at the age of eighty-seven years. She was born with a silver spoon in her mouth, was eccentric, isolated, inexperienced in any business or other competitive undertaking and a stranger to those subtle and faithless practices which too frequently accompany opportunity where large sums of money tempt the trusted. She had had the good fortune to have her business affairs taken in charge and well cared for by her brother, Mr. Charles S. Colton, up to the date of his death, September 23d, 1920.

“After the death of Mr. Charles S. Colton, Mr. Abel I. Culver took charge of her business affairs. Mr. Culver was married to the sister of Charles S. Colton’s widow, Mrs. Kate Parker Colton, who was also a second cousin of the decedent as well as her sister-in-law. Mr. Culver was an able and forceful man; by occupation a certified public accountant, a financial adviser and an ardent Wall street stock operato-r.

“Subsequent to the death of Charles S. Colton, Mr. Culver continued to act as the confidential business agent, adviser and factotum of the decedent, Miss K. Vance Colton, until the day of her death. At the time Mr. Culver took charge of [411]*411Miss K. Vance Colton’s business affairs she was a woman of large means, owning property aggregating some $800,000 to $1,000,000 in value, and enjoying an annual income of some $40,000 to $50,000. She lived in a large and handsome home at 151 Clinton avenue, Newark, in a manner commensurate with her estate.

“Before the death of Charles S. Colton he and his wife lived with decedent, Miss K. Vance Colton, at the Clinton avenue home, but after his death his widow, Mrs. K. Parker Colton, became a member of Mr. Culver’s household, making her home with his family at their residence in Montclair, but maintaining at the same time a desultory connection with the home of Miss K. Vance Colton in Clinton avenue, Newark. Mrs. K. Parker Colton had no children and her nearest relative was her sister, Mr. Culver’s wife, Mrs. Lizzie Vance Parker Culver.

“Mrs. K. Parker Colton was also a rich woman, probably more so than Miss K. Vance Colton, as, in addition to inheriting through her husband an equal basis of relationship from the same original sources, she was an heir under the Winner estate from which Mrs. Culver received an annual income of $10,000.

“Mr. Abel I. Culver became also Mrs. K. Parker Colton’s business agent and factotum, assuming the management of her financial affairs.

“Mr. Culver’s relations to Miss K. Vance Colton were of the closest, confidential and most potent character. In conversation with one of the witnesses, who wanted to see Miss Colton, to obtain her signature to a deed, he himself described those relations as follows:

“ ‘I don’t think you had better see her because you must bear in mind that she is a very old lady. Sometimes she does things that she doesn’t know what she is really doing, and I am managing all of her affairs. You can readily see how peculiar and odd she is when she insists upon driving through the city of Newark in her carriage driven by horses.’ ***❖❖*#

“CI manage all of her affairs. You better not go to her. She does everything that I ask her to. She doesn’t do any[412]*412thing on her own initiative. She does everything that I ask her to, and I am very busy managing her affairs.’

“I am impressed with the idea that his words substantially picture the situation.

“After Culver assumed the control of the business affairs of Mrs. K. Parker Colton and of Miss K. Vance Colton, and on August 9th, 1922, Miss K. Vance Colton made a will, in which she made Mrs. K. Parker Colton and her favorite niece, Caroline West Colton,- her principal beneficiaries, and made Abel I. Culver one of her executors, with William I. Cooper as the other. Mr. Cooper was the president of the National State Bank, at which bank Miss Colton kept her account. This will is not the subject of controversy and has been admitted to probate by agreement of all parties to this proceeding subject to two codicils subsequently made, which codicils are the subject of this controversy and against which caveats have been filed.

“This will be followed from time to time by transfers, without consideration, of property of Miss K. Vance Colton to Mrs. K. Parker Colton and by transfers to Culver himself.

“By these transfers and by the disappearance of other property, the whereabouts or disposition of which is unknown or not revealed, Miss Colton during Mr. Culver’s stewardship was separated from the ownership of her home, 151 Clinton avenue, and her entire estate, except some $69,000 to $100,000.

“The interest of Culver in these transfers to Mrs. K. Parker Colton is manifest. She was his sister-in-law, his wife being her nearest relative. She was a member o-f his household, consisting of himself, his wife and his two children; she was a widow, childless and old, and leaned upon him and them for practically everything. He was in control of her property and financial affairs. There could be but one natural outcome of such a situation, namety, that his wife and children would succeed to her property or the major part of it. These hopes were well calculated, for on July 17th, 1928, Mrs. K. Parker Colton made a will leaving six-tenths of her property to Culver’s wife, Mrs. Lizzie Vance Parker Culver, and two-tenths to his children, Winthrop Parker Culver and Katherine P. [413]*413Culver, appointing Culver sole executor without security fin any jurisdiction/ and on August 3d, 1929, she died.

“On June 12th, 1924, Miss K. Vance Colton executed a first codicil to her will and coincidentally therewith made the deed oí gift to her home in Clinton avenue to Mrs. K. Parker Colton, which has already been mentioned above. The codicil substitutes a bequest of the entire household goods and personal effects to Mrs. K. Parker Colton, instead oí the former bequest, under the will, to her and to Miss Caroline West Colton equally. It recites and fortifies the transfer of the Clinton avenue home and revokes the provisions dealing with this property. It also revokes the provision dealing with a cemetery lot.

“At this time Miss Colton was eighty-one years of age, failing in capacity and memory. Sometime previous Culver had called upon the attorney, the scrivener of the codicil and deed, and given instructions as to what the deed should contain and the codicil should provide, and on the occasion of the execution of these documents he brought Miss Colton to the attorney’s office, where she executed them. The drafting of the codicil was in such form that its effect could not be grasped by reading it alone and could only be understood by reading it in conjunction with the will.

“No major purpose is revealed, as accomplished by, or as calling for, this codicil save a fortification of the transfer made by the deed of the Clinton avenue property.

“The transfer of this home property, with the transfer of a large number of securities to Mrs. K. Parker Colton, was further fortified by a gift tax report which was prepared by Culver and executed by Miss K. Vance Colton about March 14th, 1925. By this document she reported, for gift taxes, her home and securities, transferred to Mrs. K. Parker Colton, aggregating $361,000 in reported value.

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Related

In Re Weeks
103 A.2d 43 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1954)
In re the Estate of Nixon
32 A.2d 355 (Warren County Surrogate's Court, 1943)
In Re Probate of the Last Will & Testament of Colton
170 A. 610 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1934)
In Re Romaine
167 A. 683 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
166 A. 521, 11 N.J. Misc. 410, 1933 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-colton-njsuperctappdiv-1933.