In re the probate of paper purporting to be the last will & testament of Carter

51 A. 65, 60 N.J. Eq. 338, 1900 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 33
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 26, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 51 A. 65 (In re the probate of paper purporting to be the last will & testament of Carter) 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.

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In re the probate of paper purporting to be the last will & testament of Carter, 51 A. 65, 60 N.J. Eq. 338, 1900 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 33 (N.J. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

The Vice-Ordinary.

This is an application to have admitted to probate a paper dated December 14th, 1899, executed by Mary A. Carter, then .and at her death domiciled in the city of New Brunswick, Middlesex county.

A caveat was filed in the surrogate's office of -that county, and the will is now produced in this court for probate.

The paper was executed in conformity with the statutory requirements. The grounds urged against the validity of the instrument are — first, want of testamentary capacity in the testatrix, and second, that its execution was unduly influenced by two of the beneficiaries, in conjunction with the attorney who drew the will.

The objection to the validity of the will, upon the ground of want of testamentary capacity, has no substance. Although the testatrix was about eighty-one years of age, and from an injury to her hip, was somewhat of an invalid, and although she was unable to read and write, she yet had strength of mind and a natural sagacity which was rather remarkable in a woman of her age and education. All the testimony exhibits her as one thoroughly conversant with her own affairs, and with the kind and value of her property, and with a full knowledge of the [339]*339number and degree of kinship of her relations. Eurther consideration of this phase of the case may be dismissed.

In the second place it is charged that the provisions of the will were the offspring of the influence of Michael Hearn and John Eitzgerald, two of the principal beneficiaries, in the interest of whom was the attorney who drafted the instrument. It is also charged that this influence was unduly exerted upon the mind of the testatrix.

The charge that the draftsman of the will was operating in the interest of Hearn and Eitzgerald to secure a testamentary disposition in their favor by any influence, undue or otherwise, is unsupported by any testimony whatever. The gentleman thus charged is a practitioner of this court, of unblemished reputation and acknowledged learning, who has twice held important judicial positions by ajipointment, and whose character alone would refute a charge of the exertion of undue influence upon the mind of any person, by whom he was called in to advise.

But apart from the character of the draftsman, there is no evidence that would impute to any person, standing in his stead, and acting as he did, such a course of conduct. Eor a considerable period this old lady had had in mind the settlement of her affairs, in view of her death. She had spoken of it to her attorney, who afterwards drew the will. She was waiting for the final settlement of a litigation and negotiations in which she, as an executrix of her husband’s estate, vras concerned. The attorney who had been the adviser of herself and Eitzgerald, the other executor of her husband, had stated to her that in view of the amount of business that he had already done, he would, whenever she concluded to execute her will, draw it without charge. She told him, in an interview upon another matter, a short time before the will was executed, that she would send him a memorandum of instructions. This memorandum was afterwards prepared in the handwriting of Michael Hearn, and by Hearn taken to the office of the draftsman. The provisions, so far as they concerned the beneficiaries Michael Hearn and his wife and John Eitzgerald and his son, were the same in the memorandum as afterwards in the will. There is no evidence [340]*340that previous to the forwarding of this memorandum to the draftsman there was ever one word between the latter and the testatrix in respect to the manner in which, or the persons to whom she should'leave her property. After receiving the memorandum he visited the testatrix, read it over to her, and asked her if it was all right, and she said it was. At that time she made some additions to the memorandum, which additions are in the handwriting of the attorney.

Again, on. the 13th of December he went to the house of testatrix to get her acknowledgment to a deed. He had written the-will, had it with him, and he then read it over to her, and she said it was what she wanted.

On the next day the will was executed, when it was again read over to her in the presence of the other witness to it. The only suggestion made by the scrivener was in' calling testatrix’s attention to William J. Fitzgerald, a grand-nephew, whose name was not upon the memorandum. At the close of the interview she concluded to insert his name for a legacy of $500. The-suggestion was entirely proper and creditable. Previous to the execution of the will, the testatrix had made, as a part of her scheme for the final distribution of her property, three deeds, one to John Fitzgerald for a property in George street,- another to Michael Hearn of a half interest in the property in which she lived, and' a third to William J. Fitzgerald for the property in which he lived, reserving a life interest to herself in each of the properties. These deeds were all drafted by the gentleman who-subsequently drew the will.

■Voluminous testimony was introduced as to what occurred at the time of the execution of these deeds, with the design of imputing some misstatement then made by the draftsman of the subsequent will. But the order of events in the execution of these various papers, the condition of affairs at the time, the conversations alleged to have occurred, and the explanation of the witnesses for the proponent, relieve the case of the slightest imputation of misstatement or collusive conduct by the attorney who conducted the affair.'

The case of the caveators then must rest upon the alleged’ undue -influence exercised by Michael Hearn and John Fitzgerald, or either of them.

[341]*341Michael Hearn had married, as his first wife, a niece of the testatrix. For a number of years Michael Hearn had occupied ■apartments in a part of the same building of which the testatrix •occupied another part, Hearn conducting a saloon business on the first floor of the said building. The testatrix kept her own ■house, having a servant of her own. The relations of Michael Hearn towards the old lady was that of a friend, who had been related to her by marriage, and who had looked after such business affairs as needed attention, principally the collection of the rents of the property of the testatrix, and payment of the bills of the old lady. He says the rents he collected were turned over to her in money, and the bills that he paid were paid from moneys which he received from her at the time of payment. He denies having ever introduced the subject of making a will to the testatrix; he says that she spoke of the matter to him, ■and asked him to take paper and pencil and write down an estimate, made by the old lady and himself, of the value of her property remaining after the execution of the deeds already referred to, to be disposed of by will. He says that they together went over the different items of property and discussed their value; that then she directed him to put .down the names •of the legatees and the amounts of the several legacies, as they .appear upon the memorandum, afterwards taken to the draftsman of the will. He says that he had never asked her to leave him or his family anything, but she had indicated her intention to leave him the one-half interest in the property in which they lived; that the bequests of $1,000 to himself and to his wife were first made known to him at the time she directed him to place them upon the memorandum, and that he then thanked her for her kindness.

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51 A. 65, 60 N.J. Eq. 338, 1900 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-paper-purporting-to-be-the-last-will-testament-of-njsuperctappdiv-1900.