In re the Estate of Hayes

146 Misc. 660, 263 N.Y.S. 730, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1078
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedFebruary 24, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 Misc. 660 (In re the Estate of Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts 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 Hayes, 146 Misc. 660, 263 N.Y.S. 730, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1078 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Kaufman, S.

This proceeding strikingly illustrates the risk which persons not versed in the law, even though highly educated otherwise, take in drawing their own wills. Ellen Hayes, the testatrix, was for many years professor of astronomy and applied mathematics in Wellesley College and attained considerable distinction in educational fields. In 1923 she published a book called How Do You Know,” which contains a chapter entitled “ Words and Their Meaning.” Thereafter she wrote her own will which, ironically enough, is now the subject of bitter controversy in this court as to its meaning.

Omitting the preamble and testimonium clause and paragraph I which devises a small parcel of real property to two nephews of the testatrix, which are nowise in dispute, the controverted will reads as follows:

II. My lots in East Washington Park, D. C., are to be sold and the net value in cash deposited with my bankbooks now held by the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company. The numbers and location of these lots will be found recorded with the Registrar of Deeds of the District of Columbia.

“ III. My home in Wellesley, Mass., consisting of dwelling-house and thirty-nine thousand (39,000) feet of land more or less to be sold at the earliest available time and the results of this sale added to moneys already in charge of the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company.

IV. My property in West Park, N. Y., consisting of several acres of land, and a new dwelling-house, the Sycamore, I leave to my friend, Louise Brown, for her sole use and convenience, during her life-time. If at the end of that time, the school known as the Vineyard Shore School for Women Workers in Industry, shall have become duly incorporated with a responsible board of trustees, the property shall pass into the hands of this board. Failing incorporation, the entire place shall be offered for sale, and [662]*662the proceeds passed into the hands of Roger Baldwin, and Harry F. Ward and Arthur Garfield Hays who shall make this a permanent fund from which only the interest shall be spent for such objects as they deem worthy. Provided that under no circumstances while the school has control of the property is any man, single or married, to occupy for residence, the Sycamore or other domestic buildings on the aforesaid property for a longer or shorter time so long as one stick of the Sycamore remains nailed to another. This building is solely for the use of female students of the Vineyard Shore School and women members of the faculty.

“ V. (a) From the fund above mentioned in charge of the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company, I desire my executor, Stanley Wolcott Hayes, to administer two thousand dollars ($2,000) to each of my sisters, Anna Hayes Hollister and Mariquita Hayes Wallace, in payments of two hundred dollars ($200) each per annum per person.

(b) One thousand dollars ($1,000) outright payment to the Free Press Association Ltd., 628 Johnson’s Court, Fleet Street, London. This is to be paid in one flat sum to the treasurer of the F. P. A.

“ (c) One thousand dollars ($1,000) to the Freethought Press Association, 250 West 54th Street, New York.

“ (d) Any remainder after these bequests have been made, I leave to Arthur Garfield Hays to use at his discretion in promoting the ends of justice.

“VI. I do not wish any funeral services — music or flowers; though if the students will sing one stanza of the Internationale, I should like it. You will find a silk traveling gown in the middle bureau drawer. Get the cheapest and plainest wooden box. Immediately upon death, notify Doctor Howard P. Carpenter of the State Hospital in Poughkeepsie, who is hereby authorized to take full charge of my brain and body in accord with a letter of instructions to me from Doctor Florence R. Sabin, dated October 22, 1930.

“ VII. I nominate Stanley Wolcott Hayes of Richmond, Indiana, to be the executor of this my Will, and I request that he be exempted from giving a surety or sureties on his official bonds.

“ And I do solemnly request my executor, Stanley Wolcott Hayes, of Richmond, Indiana, to faithfully administer this my estate according to my obvious wishes.”

The principal questions raised are as to the construction of paragraphs II, III and V. To understand the precise nature of these questions it is necessary to refer briefly to the facts. After the death of Miss Hayes there were found in a safe deposit box [663]*663in the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company at Boston bank books evidencing savings account deposits in various banks totaling $18,251.19. There was also a checking account in her name in the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company showing a balance of $278.31. In her home at West Park, N. Y., were found other bank books showing balances in other banks totaling $12,706.16.

It is urged in behalf of the executor and by the special guardian that by paragraph II of her will the testatrix intended to set up a fund consisting of the proceeds of sale of her East Washington lots added to the amount of the bank deposits evidenced by the books in the safe deposit box at Boston and that by paragraph III she intended to set up another and separate fund consisting of the proceeds of sale of her Wellesley real property plus the $278.31 on deposit in the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company. It is then urged that the $12,706.16 represented by the bank books found at West Park was not included in either fund and that she must be held to have died intestate as to that fund and that not having made any disposition in her will of the fund created by paragraph II she must also be declared to have died intestate as to that, thus leaving only the fund created under paragraph III to be distributed under paragraph V and its respective subdivisions.

Counsel for Arthur Garfield Hays on the contrary assert not only that these proposed constructions are in themselves fallacious, but that the ultimate result is not in any event affected, because under subdivision d of paragraph V, properly construed, Hays is entitled to take the entire residuary estate of the testatrix, into which these funds, if not otherwise disposed of, must of necessity fall. I am fully convinced that this last contention must be upheld.

Reading the will of the testatrix in the light of her personal history and activities and of her demonstrated proclivities and beliefs, there can be little doubt as to the purposes she had in mind. Ellen Hayes was an unusual woman. A mere perusal of her will will convince the most skeptical of this fact. While she was highly educated, her convictions and beliefs, measured by present day standards, were radical. She associated with radicals and radical organizations. She espoused radical causes with almost fanatical fervor. That provision of her will which requests that the only music at her funeral be the singing of the Internationale is extremely significant of her beliefs and actvities as are her bequests to the Free Press Association, Ltd., and the Free Thought Press Association and her devise of her West Park property for the establishment of a school for women workers in industry. Miss Hayes was a free thinker of pronounced type. Her sympathies were with the masses, whom she believed to be the victims of oppression and injustice. [664]*664She believed that existing conditions were wrong and should be remedied. She not only had these convictions, but the courage of them. She acted as well as thought along these lines.

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

Related

In re Hayes
240 A.D. 744 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 Misc. 660, 263 N.Y.S. 730, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-hayes-nycountyct-1933.