In re the Probate of the Last Will & Testament of Le Breton Brough

4 Mills Surr. 15, 41 Misc. 263, 84 N.Y.S. 41
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Mills Surr. 15 (In re the Probate of the Last Will & Testament of Le Breton Brough) 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 the Last Will & Testament of Le Breton Brough, 4 Mills Surr. 15, 41 Misc. 263, 84 N.Y.S. 41 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Marcus, S.

Jane Le Breton Brough died- October 6, 1902, leaving personal property valued at about $14,000. She left her surviving, Mary Le Breton Mitchell, her sister, who is her sole next of kin. The instrument propounded for probate as •and for her last will and testament, was executed July 15, 1902. In that will the decedent bequeathed all her property to Samuel M. Stuart, his wife and children. The legatees are not relatives of the deceased, either by blood or marriage.

The probate of the will was contested by the sister upon the ground that it was not her free, unconstrained or voluntary act, [16]*16and upon the further ground that the decedent was not of sound mind and understanding.

Out of the voluminous testimony presented for my consideration, the following are regarded as the essential facts:

The deceased was horn in 1827; she came from ancestors distinguished in the public service of this State in the early period of its history; her father died in 1830' and her mother in 1833. She was reared and educated by relatives as became her station in life and according to the custom and practice of early days. In 1840 she married. In 1865 she became insane through the birth of a child, and was thereafter confined in a lunatic asylum until 1878, although from 1872 until her discharge in 1878, she was in the convalescent hall attached to the hospital, attending to various duties that had been assigned to her. Upon leaving the asylum she went to live with her aunt Emma Sanford in Gowanda. In 1881 on account of treatment and under the belief that her aunt intended to send her back to the asylum she left the home of Mrs. Sanford, to live with the family of Samuel M. Stuart, in Hamburg. In 1881 she applied to the Supreme Court for the removal of one George J. Greenfield, then her committee, for the restoration of her property. The proceeding resulted in the continuing of the committee, but allowed the deceased to select her residence and the persons with whom she desired to live. In 1888 her sister— this contestant—was substituted for Greenfield as committee of her person and estate. In 1889 the deceased again applied to the Supreme Court for the discharge of her sister, as committee, and also asked that the property held as such committee be transferred to the deceased. Then followed a protracted litigation between the sisters. Mr. George Gorham, to whom the matter was referred, reported that the deceased was competent to manage herself and her affairs. His report was confirmed by Mr. Justice Lambert, and on appeal to the General Term, the same was affirmed; and in 1895 the Court of Appeals die-[17]*17missed the apptal of Mrs. Mitchell to that court. In 1893 the decedent received from her committee, after deducting costs and expenses, approximately the sum of $64,000. About that time the decedent gave to Samuel M. Stuart a power of attorney to act for her, and Stuart seems to have continued to do business for her until she died.

In one of the decedent’s letters she saya: I have this day given to my uncle Samuel M. Stuart, a power of attorney to act for me. I have known him since May 25, 1873, and he never betrayed my trust. It was the wish of Honorable Edward Sanford, my uncle, that I should cling to him, and I shall follow his advice.”

Through all her trials the evidence discloses the Stuarts to be steadfast in their friendship. In a postscript to a letter written by the deceased to Mrs. Blackmon in 1893' she says:. “You speak of my generosity to uncle Samuel’s family. I never shall have money enough to reward them for services rendered me for the past thirteen years. They have watched and protected me constantly from enemies fax and near. They have advanced money to carry on a long litigation not knowing that they would ever be compensated for either money or services, and were it not for their true friendship I would to-day be in an asylum or in my grave. Yours was the service of a day. Theirs for years.”

The Stuart family undoubtedly from time to time received large sums of money from the deceased, causing her property to diminish from the amount which came to her in 1893 to the amount she possessed when she died.

The deceased was a woman of refinement and intellectuality; she had a feeble mind; she was afflicted with deafness; she was shy of strangers, and lived a quiet and secluded life in the family of the Stuarts and their children, and in their society and in the society of their friends.

Under all the circumstances of this case, the contestant con[18]*18tends that because of the confidential relations! existing between the deceased and the Stuarts, the proponents must establish affirmatively that the will asked to be admitted to probate is the product of the mind of the deceased and is her free, voluntary and unconstrained act.

While not sustaining the contention of confidential relations, it seems to me that the proponents have.affirmatively established that the testamentary dispositions of her property, as found in the will, emanated from her mind, and that the execution thereof was her free, voluntary and unconstrained act.

The proceedings in the Supreme Court settled the question of her competency to manage herself and her property. She made a will before that time, for in 1894, she writes in a letter to Mr. Stuart, I desire to make a new will, because the one I have, calls for more money than I have. Please give this your immediate attention. I am so happy in my new home and my every wish is gratified.” Again, in the same year she writes, in another letter to Mr. Stuart, “ I am desirous of making a will which will secure my money in the possession of you both and your children.”

In 1896 the deceased called on Eobert 0. Titus, then a justice of the Supreme Court in this county, in his chambers in the City and County Hall in the city of Buffalo, and he prepared a will under her directions, by which she bequeathed all her property to the Stuarts.

The will in question in this proceeding was drafted by Judge Titus, who sent Frank J. Titus, an attorney in his office, to the deceased to witness the will and superintend its execution.

While I realize that a substantial argument might be made from which directly opposite conclusions would be warranted than those reached by me, along the lines of an enfeebled mind, long confinement in the lunatic asylum, and certain eccentricities developed either through the encroachments of old age, or from such feebleness and enforced confinement and the dis[19]*19tressing effect such, circumstances might have made upon the decedent who was a woman of an extremely delicate and nervous temperament, and that the beneficiaries under this will are not blood relatives or relatives by marriage, and that such beneficiaries have received in the course of their association with the deceased many substantial gifts of large sums of money, with all the pathos and struggles which mark the life history of this woman, it nevertheless seems to me that the deceased, from motives of affection and gratitude, chose the Stuarts to be the objects of her bounty, rather than her sister, and this view of the case, I am constrained to follow.

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4 Mills Surr. 15, 41 Misc. 263, 84 N.Y.S. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-the-last-will-testament-of-le-breton-brough-nysurct-1903.