In re the Probate of the Last Will & Testament of Stoll

14 Mills Surr. 343, 90 Misc. 266, 153 N.Y.S. 362
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 15, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Mills Surr. 343 (In re the Probate of the Last Will & Testament of Stoll) 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 Stoll, 14 Mills Surr. 343, 90 Misc. 266, 153 N.Y.S. 362 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Ketci-iam, S.-—

The decedent left him surviving his wife and the son of a former wife. His will is wholly in favor of the son and is contested by the widow upon the familiar allegations.

The jury has found, among other .things, that the testator was without testamentary capacity; and the proponent, the son, moves for a new trial upon grounds which were adversely disposed of on the argument, except that one assignment of error was reserved for the present discussion.

Proof was made by the contestant of declarations of the testator which both in express and topical form tended to show that he believed that his wife was unchaste. Ho direct evidence was given as to whether the testator had any basis or justification for this belief.

When the will was made the testator and his wife had by agreement lived apart for years, the husband in Hew York city and the wife in Albany.

In rebuttal, questions were asked by the proponent, .which, with the answers thereto, were as follows: “ Q. Did you ever see Mrs. Stoll under the influence of liquor? A.-I did. Q. Where and when ? A. At her own home.”

After the giving of these answers an objection made thereto [345]*345was sustained, under exception. jSTo motion was made that the testimony be stricken out.

Another witness was then -asked whether she had ever seen the wife intoxicated. Objection to this question was sustained and exception was taken to the ruling. Before the disposition of this objection, counsel for the proponent disclaimed that he was about to show that what had been the behavior of the wife was known to the husband. There was no evidence tending to prove that the testator had at any time become either actually or constructively aware of any intoxication upon the part of his wife, or that the testator expressed or maintained, a belief, sane or insane, that his wife was given to intoxication or was ever intoxicated.

The only claim by the contestant as to the testator’s insanity-on the subject of his wife was that he declared a belief in her unchastity, and that there was evidence tending to show that such belief was unfounded and irrational.

It is apparent that instances of drunkenness of the wife, without any circumstance to indicate that' her condition was the cause or concomitant of a grosser fault, would not save the belief as to her virtue from the likeness of delusion, even if the fact of mere intoxication were shown to have come to the knowledge of the testator. Indeed, a jury might well determine that it was insanity on the part of the decedent to regard acts of drunkenness as a basis for the conclusion that the drunken person was unchaste.

Moreover, the proposed testimony would seem' to be forbidden by the absence of any evidence that the inebriety which the proponent sought to show came to the testator’s attention and by the avowal that no such evidence was within the proponent’s command.

The court remains persuaded that it is impossible to test the state of a man’s mind by a fact which never approached his mind. To measure a consciousness by something of which it [346]*346was never conscious would require from the court more than an acquaintance with insanity; it would involve a personal intimacy.

There are cases, entirely foreign to the present question, where the fact as to which the subject has formed a belief may be shown without express proof that it became known to him. Where the belief has been indulged notwithstanding facts which occurred in the home or the community of the believer, or under other conditions which would give rise to the presumption that he knew that which was generally known, the presumption is itself evidence tending to show his knowledge, and the existence of the facts may well be shown without proof, other than the presumption, that they came to his attention. If the belief was extravagant, contrary to human experience or forbidden by recognized physical laws, the facts which would tend to show that it was irrational are presumed to háve been known to the person entertaining the belief, and neither the fact nor the knowledge thereof need be shown otherwise than by the presumption.

In none of these cases have the courts suggested that facts unknown to the person whose mind is under observation may be regarded in determining the state of his mind. On the contrary, these instances, and the rule which they have. provoked, support rather than defeat the proposition that nothing which is not shown to have been apprehended by the mind in question can be used as a standard for its analysis.

Any presumption in this case that the testator became aware of the matters offered in evidence is excluded by the proven circumstances, and it is confessed that there is nothing directly tending to show his acquaintance with his wife’s conduct or' habits with respect to drunkenness. ¡Neither by demonstration nor inference is it shown that any of the transactions which are alleged as a just measure of his mental state came within his apprehension.

[347]*347If it be conceded for a moment that drunkenness alone has anything to do with unchastity, the question at bar is reduced to these terms: Can proof of an external fact be used to determine that a belief in its existence was sane, when it must be found upon all the evidence that the belief was conceived and maintained without knowledge, either actual or constructive, as to the fact ?

If this may be answered in the affirmative, medical science will be afforded novel resources, both of diagnosis and of therapeutics. Of course, a fact of which the patient is unaware becomes at once a symptom of his disorder, and hope is inspired that the condition will be palliated, if not cured, by the removal of the thing which causes and demonstrates the malady.

There will then be judicial assurance to a suspected wife that if she will debase herself with drink her sacrifice will establish her husband’s reason. She will find herself under the dread burden of regulating his mental condition from day to day according to the scope of her devotion and her endurance. It will, of course, result that the suffering husband will oscillate between sanity and insanity just as his belief does or does not conform to the alternations of sobriety and drunkenness which his fellow sufferer may maintain, but always with the serene incentive to the wife that if without his knowledge she is able to sustain a perennial inebriety he will be redeemed to permanent health.»

Definitions taken from the opinions of judges are cited in support of the contention that a belief is sane or insane according to its correspondence with the actual fact, even though the fact is not shown by presumption or primary proof to have come to the knowledge of the believer. These definitions are detached from the setting of fact to which they were confined, and in many instances from their qualifying context. In some cases cited by the proponent this meaning is imposed upon opinions which have dealt only with the truth or untruth of the sub[348]*348ject’s belief as to matters directly affecting his own person or presence and necessarily open to his knowledge. (Dobie v. Armstrong, 160 N. Y. 584 ; Matter of White, 121 id. 406 ; Seamen’s Friend Society v. Hopper, 33 id. 619 ; Matter of Townsend, 73 Misc. Rep. 481 ; Hoyt v. Hoyt, 9 N. Y. St. Repr. 731.)

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Related

Dobie v. . Armstrong
55 N.E. 202 (New York Court of Appeals, 1899)
In re the Estate of Townsend
8 Mills Surr. 380 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1911)
Commonwealth v. Wilson
67 Mass. 337 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1854)
Burkhart v. Gladish
24 N.E. 118 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1890)
Stevens v. Leonard
56 N.E. 27 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1900)
O'Dell v. Goff
117 N.W. 59 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1908)

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14 Mills Surr. 343, 90 Misc. 266, 153 N.Y.S. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-the-last-will-testament-of-stoll-nysurct-1915.