In re the estate of LeVan

123 N.J. Eq. 463
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedApril 11, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 123 N.J. Eq. 463 (In re the estate of LeVan) 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 LeVan, 123 N.J. Eq. 463 (N.J. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Beeky, Vioe-Okdinaky.

This is the most gruesome case ever before me. At twelve-thirteen A. m. on September 19th, 1935, the police head[464]*464quarters telephone operator in Newark received a call and heard a voice say, “I have just killed three men at 938 South Twentieth street, come and get me,” or words to that effect. Within seven minutes a half-score of policemen, detectives and physicians were breaking down the door of a second floor apartment at that address, where they found four men shot to death. Three of them were sprawled on the kitchen floor and the fourth, the murderer of the other three, was lying on a couch in an adjoining room, a suicide. All had been shot with a sawed-off six-shooter repeating shotgun which was lying on the floor beside the couch on which the suicide-murderer lay. The deaths had resulted instantly and the bodies were still warm. Rigor mortis had not begun. Each had been the victim of one shot fired at close range. There were three empty shells on the kitchen floor, one empty .and two loaded shells in the gun. The dead men were Orlando B. LeVan; his brother, Benjamin LeVan; a.nephew by marriage, John S. Geary, and Charles Russell Geary, brother of John, who had murdered the other three. There were no eye-witnesses to this multiple tragedy and the first knowledge of it came with the telephone call to the police station.

Orlando left a will naming his wife, Kate, or, in the event of her prior death, his nephew, John, beneficiary. His only next of kin is a surviving brother, Joseph H. LeVan. John was survived by his brother, Charles, who immediately committed suicide, and by his brother, Harold, who has been appointed administrator of his estate. Who takes the $20,000 estate of Orlando depends upon whether he or John died first, and that is the sole question to be here determined. If Orlando died first, John’s administrator takes; but if John first expired, Orlando’s brother inherits. The known facts touching this tragedy are that Charles Russell Geary left his home in Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania, about four p. m. on September 18th, 1935, in a borrowed automobile, telling his wife he was going' to Newark to see his Uncle Orlando, and that he would return soon. About nine o’clock that evening he joined Benjamin LeVan in a Newark saloon where they remained talking and drinking until about eleven-thirty [465]*465p. M., when they left together. Neither of them was again seen alive. The automobile was found parked in the rear of the LeVan home. A back stairway leads from the yard to the second floor and a small foyer of the LeVan apartment. Prom this foyer a door opens into the kitchen where the three murdered men were found. The kitchen is about eight by twelve feet. The body of Orlando lay sprawled near the center of the room, face downward, in front of the door leading to the dining room, his head under a chair, his unshod right foot under the table and the other doubled under his right leg. Benjamin was in a partly kneeling position across the threshold of the door leading from the kitchen to the dining room, directly opposite the door from the hall to the kitchen, and a matter of inches from Orlando. John was lying on his face to the extreme left side of the kitchen near the radiator and with his feet and legs entirely under the table. The furniture was not disarranged and there was no evidence of a struggle. The unexploded gun shells each contained nine buckshot. Both Orlando and John had been shot in the back with a gun the muzzle of which was not more than three to six inches distant as evidenced by powder marks and burns. Some of the slugs had gone clean through the bodies — others lodged therein. Benjamin was shot in the left side of his chest, a few inches to the left of the left nipple and some of the slugs had gone clean through his body and out on his right side. The gun was more than a foot distant from his body when fired. There were no powder marks or burns. All had been shot through the heart. The wounds of John and Orlando were of about the same size — one inch in diameter, and were accompanied by like powder marks; that in Benjamin’s side was the largest of the three, with a maximum diameter of two and one-half inches, and a minimum of one and one-half inches. Evidently the shots which killed John and Orlando were fired from a point equally distant from both, and that which killed Benjamin was fired a further distance away — not closer than one foot.

Shortly after this tragedy the murderer’s widow found, at her home, amongst some insurance papers, an undated letter of which the following is a copy:

[466]*466“Dear Dorothy:
.Tust a few lines to let you know the gun I bought I planned to kill Aunt Kate & Uncle Orlie as they spoiled the lives & happiness of our lives also Johns & Mother & many others. Dont think I went mad I planned this all only God took Aunt Kate before I got a chance. If she would have lived she would have been shot the day she went to go home. Uncle Orlie with her. They were planing on moving Beulah after promising Mother to let her lay at rest beside her Show this letter to John and ask him not to break his Mothers promise. Mother cried many times the way Aunt Kate and Uncle Orlig were useing John. They did not want him when he had no work and could not use him. Dorothy when I am dead have Buss Frey bury me in the cloths I have home. Bury me from Tobyhanna Pine Grove Cottage Coffin like Mothers, No flowers look after Kate. Adaliade has a husband Dorothy don’t weap over me unless you begrudge me the rest, So Long all of you. My last wish is that you enjoy yourself as you have been wonderful for putting up with me for as long as you did.
Good Bye
Charles Bussell Geary.”

The letter is in the handwriting of, and signed by, the suicide-murderer.

These are all the known facts pertinent to this inquiry. It is stipulated that “Charles Russell Geary fired one or more of the shots in the kitchen in the direction of the wall separating said kitchen from the dining room.”

The advisory master to whom this matter was referred by the Essex county orphans court found that Orlando had predeceased John and awarded the estate to John’s administrator. He based his finding upon the theory that when Charles Russell Geary left his home at Tobyhanna he did so with the definite intention of killing Orlando; that there was no evidence of any intention to harm his brother John; that there was no evidence of any ill-feeling toward anyone other than Orlando; that the three fatal shots in the kitchen were fired from a point near the center of the room but towards the back entrance; that the murderer “entered from the rear and the person directly in his path was Orlando; that he shot him first is most probable and reasonable — the probabilities are that from the spot where Orlando fell, with'the dimensions of the kitchen, the location of the furniture, the length of the gun, one or two steps were sufficient to bring his gun [467]*467within one foot or less of the body of his brother when the killing mania broke forth; turning, he shot Benjamin as he attempted to escape into the dining room.” ■ From the decree of the Essex county orphans court entered pursuant to this finding an appeal was taken to this court.

In this court, the trial is de novo, notwithstanding it be on the record below. Rusling v. Rusling, 36 N. J. Eq. 603; Smith v. Smith, 48 N. J. Eq. 566; In re Koss, 105 N. J. Eq. 29.

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123 N.J. Eq. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-levan-njsuperctappdiv-1938.