In re the Probate of a Paper Propounded as the Last Will & Testament of Van Den Heuvel

9 Mills Surr. 177, 76 Misc. 137, 136 N.Y.S. 1109
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 9 Mills Surr. 177 (In re the Probate of a Paper Propounded as the Last Will & Testament of Van Den Heuvel) 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 Probate of a Paper Propounded as the Last Will & Testament of Van Den Heuvel, 9 Mills Surr. 177, 76 Misc. 137, 136 N.Y.S. 1109 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

This is a consolidated proceeding for the probate of the last will and testament of Charlotte A. Van Den Heuvel. There are three petitions for the probate of testamentary papers. The Hon. George W. Wickersham (now the Federal Attorney-General) is the petitioner in one of the proceedings, and he seeks to have admitted a will dated October 7, 1896, and a codicil thereto, dated October 20, 1897. Concerning the validity of these testamentary papers there is no contention. Their factum has been adequately established.

Mr. Raymond is the petitioner in the second proceeding;, •and he seeks to have probated a testamentary paper executed, by the deceased as her will on October 31, 1903, in which paper he is named as executor.

Caroline, or “ Karolina ” Koch is the petitioner in the last proceeding, and the paper which she seeks to have admitted is, upon its face, only a codicil to a previous will executed by the deceased, and there is named no executor therein. This codicil is dated February 9TI, 1904.

The testamentary capacity of the testatrix at the time of [180]*180the execution of the first will of 1896 and the codicil thereto of 1897 is not disputed, and the claim of undue influence, in respect thereof, has likewise been withdrawn by all parties in interest. Therefore, the only issues undisposed of .arise in relation to the probate of the will of 1903, and the codicil of 1904.

Charlotte A. Van Den Heuvel, whose testamentary intentions are the subject of very serious dispute in this proceeding, died in this county in January, 1910, seised of the freehold property in which she had lived and died, and possessed of a very considerable amount of personalty, conceded to be approximately $85,000. At the time of her -death, Miss Van Den Heuvel was in the eighty-sixth year of her age. She was the last of her immediate family, and the only survivor of a once numerous household which had ¡dwelt in the old-fashioned house in which Miss Van Den Heuvel lived and died. Sprung of a conspicuous race, as the evidence discloses, a race which deserved well of the republic, and possessed of the best American traditions, which antedated the Republic itself, the deceased lady was always very conscious of her claim to a distinction merited by the facts stated. Such facts figure much both in the direct evidence, and in the briefs of counsel. The surrogate, however, need not refer to these accidents of birth further than to point out their relations to the testimony. Simple in her life, as became the good traditions noticed, Miss Van Den Heuvel bore the marks of the more rigorous seclusion and training characteristic of the women of her ¡school in this country, and, singular to note, these marks she preserved when the vigor of her youth and intellect had vanished. As testified to by her kinsman’s wife, Mrs. Stark, ■of New Hampshire (for it appears in evidence that the Robert .Morris family to which Miss Van Den Heuvel’s mother be[181]*181longed had in some way intermarried with the family of the celebrated Revolutionary General Stark, of New Hampshire),. Miss Van Den Heuvel had, in her best days, been always a submissive and helpless daughter and sister, very dependent upon others for all practical directions. Her claims on her friends and relatives seemed to turn on a certain undefined and indefinable charm of manner and good breeding which never deserted her, and which stood the helpless lady in good stead in the days of her adversity and utter loneliness. When the last of her natural protectors, her brother John, died in 1894,. her retiring lawyer and man of business, the late Mr. James F. Ruggles (much respected in this community), entrusted Miss Van Den Heuvel’s affairs to Mr. Wickersham, of the law firm of Strong & Cadwalader of this city. Never was trust better bestowed or better fulfilled. With infinite patience, and generous solicitude, these gentlemen not only watched over Miss Van Den Heuvel’s pecuniary affairs, but ultimately, when occasion required it, they charged themselves voluntarily with the task of seeing that their helpless client was cared for and protected in all the vicissitudes of her lonely old age. Their conduct in this respect does great honor not only to the profession of the law, but to the unselfish impulses which prompted such lofty and magnanimous conduct toward the incompetent. Miss Van Den Heuvel’s nearest relatives (her cousins in some degree) seem to have recognized the wisdom of delegating the care of their relative to the professional gentlemen mentioned, and to all except a consultative degree they abdicated both their duty and their responsibilities, and they left Miss Van Den Heuvel entirely to the charge of these very loyal and responsible lawyers.

In about the seventy-second year of her age Miss Van Den Heuvel made the will and codicil which is now in dispute, and which must be taken to represent her deliberate [182]*182and sufficient testamentary intentions. She had about this time offered to leave her estate to Mr. Wickersham himself, or, failing that, to charities. The gift to himself Mr. Wickersham, of course, promptly declined, and he suggested that her relatives should be regarded rather than charities in her testamentary disposition. The relátives she selected were some cousins more familiar to testatrix, but not including Mr. Stark. By the codicil of 1897, this cousin, Charles F. M. Stark, received a portrait of Mrs. Thomas Morris, but he received nothing more. The poorer, or best known cousins, were generally preferred to the richer in the scheme of the first will. Up to this time Miss Van Den Heuvel had enjoyed nominal control of her affairs, and she had been the custodian of her own property, some of which she improvidently gave away, in several instances without Mr. Wickersham’s consent or knowledge. In 1900 Miss Van Den Heuvel’s waning mind collapsed altogether, and Mr. Wickersham then consulted Mr. William H. Bibby, her nearest male relative in blood and residence, and then Mr. Wickersham himself took over the custody of Miss Van Den Heuvel’s securities. Her personal bank account was soon closed, and her means were henceforth faithfully expended in her care and support under the supervision of Mr. Wickersham, or the gentlemen connected with him in his office.

In February of 1900, Miss Van Den Heuvel’s mind having collapsed, as stated, she was 'examined by several eminent alienists of character and standing. They recommended her commitment to custody, finding that she was suffering from senile dementia and delusions of persecution; a kind of delusion I believe most characteristic of paranoia and general insanity, and inconsistent with partial insanity. While papers were then actually prepared for proceedings to sequestrate her estate, or to commit her in some way to custody, Miss Van Den Heuvel [183]*183never was, in fact, committed; the proceedings were abandoned and by a family compact or arrangement an attendant, Miss Karolina Koch, the proponent and beneficiary of the last codicil propounded, was employed as a substitute, and in order to guard and care for the person of Miss Van Den Heuvel, Miss Koch, a German by birth, came from a hospital for mental derangements in this city, and was presumably thought a proper person for the trust in question, although little evidence seems to have been required of her past history or qualifications. At least none was given to me. However this was, she thenceforth, until discharged, lived at Miss Van Den Heuvel’s house, where she assumed general charge and oversight while caring for Miss Van Den Heuvel under the supervision of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mills Surr. 177, 76 Misc. 137, 136 N.Y.S. 1109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-a-paper-propounded-as-the-last-will-testament-of-van-nysurct-1912.