In re the Probate of a Paper Propounded as the Last Will & Testament of Hedges

57 A.D. 48, 67 N.Y.S. 1028
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 A.D. 48 (In re the Probate of a Paper Propounded as the Last Will & Testament of Hedges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Probate of a Paper Propounded as the Last Will & Testament of Hedges, 57 A.D. 48, 67 N.Y.S. 1028 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Woodwabd, J.:

We are unable to find any definition of undue influence which fits the facts in this case, conceding them to be the most favorable possible in support of the decree. Esther M. Hedges was a widow, • • without children, and was, at the time of making and executing the paper now under review, approximately seventy-four years of age. The beneficiary, if this paper is sustained as the last will and testament of the deceased, was the daughter of a deceased sister of the testatrix, and was given into the care of Mrs. Hedges at the time of the mother’s death. She has been regarded, if not as a daughter, at least as the special charge of the testatrix, who has educated and cared for her much of the time during her minority. That the beneficiary, Mary Dominy, was the favorite of the deceased is evidenced by a former will put in evidence by the contestants, in which, •after making bequests ranging from $100 to $500 to other relatives, aggregating $3,600, the remainder of the estate, estimated at about •$10,000, is given to Mary Dominy. This will was made and published on the 20th day of November, 1895, and in May, 1898, a codicil was added, in which bequests of $600 were made, leaving the residuary estate to be disposed of as before. Sometime in July folr lowing this codicil Mrs". Hedges fell and sustained serious injuries, [50]*50. which compelled her to take refuge in a hospital or sanitarium for some time, and which left her in a position where it became necessary to board or to have some one live with her. Mary Dominy had, some time prior to this, secured employment as a school teacher in Brooklyn. The evidence brought forward to show undue influence consisted in showing that this woman, advanced in years and-afflicted by accident, had complained to some of the neighboring women that Mary was ungrateful; that she would not give up her position, as a teacher and come to live with her, unless Mrs. Hedges would consent to make her the beneficiary of her will. It is conceded by counsel for the contestants “ that Mary Dominy had a perfect right to fix the terms on which she would comply with the wishes of the decedent,” but it is urged that “ she had no right, by constant. pressure, persuasion 'and effort, either directly or through her officious friend, Miss Bell, to overcome the manifest desire, will and purpose of decedent, and secure to herself the entire estate.” The witnesses in behalf of the contestants did not show aiiy importunities on the part of Mary Dominy; the most that could be inferred from their testimony was that Mary Dominy, who was apparently obliged to provide for her own support, was-unwilling to leave her employment and engage to live with the. decedent during the remainder of her life, unless she should be-placed in a position where she would be cared for; but several of . them testified that Mrs. Hedges had told them that Miss Bell had urged her to make a will in behalf of her friend Mary Dominy, and that Miss Bell had offered to draw the will for her. Miss Bell > was called as a witness in behalf of the proponents, and testified that. • she had had conversation with Mrs. Hedges ; that Mrs. Hedges had declared her intention of giving Mary Dominy all of her property that Mrs. Hedges asked her to draft a will for this purpose, which the witness declined to do; that she then asked her to go for Judge- ' ■ Hedges for the purpose of having him draw the will, and this the. witness refused to do,' declaring that she thought it improper, and that she knew nothing about wills.

In a much stronger case (Horn v. Pullman, 72 N. Y. 269), where a witness had testified that the testator had replied to a question by his son as to why he had given all his property to Cornelius, that. Sarah Pullman (Cornelius’ wife) had hell-pecked him all the time [51]*51until he was obliged to do what he did,” Mrs. Pullman testified that she had never talked with the testator in reference to making his will or the disposition of his property ; and the court say that “ aside from this declaration of the testator there is no evidence that she ever did, and his declaration is mere hearsay and no evidence of the facts stated.” The same may be said of the matters alleged in reference to Miss Bell. But even assuming that Miss Bell had done the things which are alleged, there is nothing to show that she went beyond a reasonable representation of the facts and circumstances in behalf of her friend. It is apparent, if the testimony that she offered to draw the will was true, that Mrs. Hedges had sufficient control over her own mind to reject this offer, as the paper offered for probate was drawn by a lawyer who was sent for by the testatrix. If Miss Bell could not control her in an incidental detail, it is difficult to understand by what process of reasoning it can be assumed that she exercised an undue influence in determining the contents of the will which was drawn by another, and not in the presence of this yotmg woman, whose relations with the testatrix were not such as to raise any presumptions in the premises. Jarman on Wills (2d Am. ed. 39) sums up the authorities, and says that “ it seems to be the result of the cases that the influence to vitiate an act must amount to force and coercion, destroying free agency; it must not be the influence of affection and attachment; it must not be the mere desire of gratifying the wishes of another, for that would be strong ground in support of the testamentary act; fur- " ther, it must be proved that the act was obtained by this coercion by importunity which could not be resisted ; that it was done merely for the sake of peace; so that the motive was tantamount to force and fear.” There is absolutely no evidence that the will offered for probate was procured by the importunities of Mary Dominy or of Miss Bell in her behalf, or that this importunity on the part of Miss Bell or others was such as could not be resisted. On the contrary, it appears from their own evidence that Mrs. Hedges was so far in control of her own faculties and will that she did not accept the offer of Miss Bell to draw the will. If we add to this the testimony of Miss Bell, which is not impeached, the conclusion is irresistible that Mrs. Hedges was in nowise determined in her conduct by anything said or done by her.

[52]*52If we accept the rule urged by the contestants’ counsel, upon the authority of Matter of Soule (1 Connoly, 18), that what constitutes undue influence must necessarily .depend in each case upon the means of coercion or influence possessed by one party over the other; upon the age, sex, the mental and physical condition, and the dependence of the other,” and “ in which the mind of the person. is wrought upon through constant ¡persuasion and mental and moral pressure or appéals to hope or fears, continued until the victim, for the sake of peace, is compelled to surrender his own wishes and do an act which he would not do, or desire to do if left freely to act his'own pleasure,” we find no facts which bring the present case within the purview of the rule. Mrs. Hedges was a woman seventy-four years of age, possessed of at least $10,000 of property; she was abundantly able, therefore, to care for herself and to employ such companionship as she might desire in a rural community during her natural expectancy of life. Mary Dominy appears to have been a young woman engaged as a school teacher, and Miss Bell was her intimate friend. At the time the will was' made Mrs. Hedges was at the home of her nephew, one of her heirs at law, and a beneficiary under the prior will, and' neither Miss Bell nor Mary Dominy was present when the will was drawn.

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68 A.D. 225 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1902)

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57 A.D. 48, 67 N.Y.S. 1028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-a-paper-propounded-as-the-last-will-testament-of-nyappdiv-1901.