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

11 N.Y. St. Rep. 103
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 103 (In re the Probate of the Last Will & Testament of Tracy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme 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 Tracy, 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 103 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

—The opposition to probate in the surrogate’s court was put Upon the ground that the papers propounded were the product of a disordered and diseased mental condition which rendered the testator incapable of making a, will, his mind and" moral sense having become impaired and enfeebled, and he having become subject to delusions in consequence of the excessive and continued use of alcoholic drinks. Upon the subject of the testator’s habits in respect to the use of intoxicating liquors, and their general effect upon his system, intellectual, moral and physical, a, large amount of testimony was given, which it would be neither convenient nor useful to refer to in detail. The bulky volumes constituting the appeal book have been read attentively, and the entire testimony has been considered, carefully, as I think, with the aid of the very able arguments submitted by counsel on each side, orally and in print.

In stating my views upon this branch of the case, to wit, the condition of the testator with respect to the testament- ' ary capacity, except as he may have been affected by delusions, I shall not attempt to do more than to summarize the case briefly and to state concisely my conclusions. The examination has convinced me that the testamentary provision made by the deceased for his daughter, the contestant, although so small in comparison with the amount of his estate, or even with the portion of it which she would have been entitled to if he had died intestate, as that, under ordinary circumstances, it would have seemed harsh and unjust, not to say unnatural, towards her, was, nevertheless, the expression of his will, founded upon reasons which seemed to him good when his mind was active and he was in all respects capable of disposing of his estate. The evidence shows very clearly, I think, that his action in respect to his daughter was largely influenced by a determination on his part to dispose of his estate in such a way, if possible, as that, while her needful wants- should be provided for, no portion of his property should in any event be enjoyed or controlled by the mother of Harriet, from whom „he had been divorced.

That he disliked and distrusted the mother and the influences by which she was surrounded, especially after her marriage with her cousin, appears by conclusive evidence. It was doubtless with a view to securing that result that he bequeathed to his daughter the income of a specified sum of money, during her life, instead of giving her such sum absolutely. The sum named—$100,000—he evidently thought would produce an income sufficient with her other means to supply her wants. As he is proved to have stated on some occasion that the sum thus set apart for bis [105]*105daughter’s use was about what she would have inherited from him if he had died intestate while her mother was liis wife—and in that he was probably correct—it may be supposed that he considered that circumstance in fixing the amount. Whether the conclusions he reached, assuming that they were the product of a sane mind, were the result of just and proper views of his relations to his daughter and of the feelings and designs of her mother; whether he had lost affection for his daughter by reason of her absence and estrangement from him, and whether a wise course of action on his part while she was growing up, might have prevented such estrangement, are questions foreign to the issue. It is impossible to read the case without a feeling of sympathy for this young lady whom circumstances beyond her control made a stranger in her father’s house from her early childhood. But as her father had the legal right to dispose of his own, even to the total disinheriting of his only child, if he saw fit to do so, we can only inquire whether the testamentary papers left by him were made in the free exercise of a sound and disposing mind. And the fact that the provision made by him for his daughter is much less than" she would have received in case of his intestacy, however unreasonable or unjust it may seem, is not of itself evidence that he lacked testamentary capacity. Van Pelt v. Van Pelt, 30 Barb., 134; La Bau, v. Vanderbilt, 3 Redf,, 384.

That the testator was addicted, for years, to the excessive use of intoxicating drinks, induced in great part by the disease known as diabetes, with which he was afflicted, is an unquestioned fact. The usual tendency of the habit, long continued, to impair the intellect and the moral sense, cannot be denied. But proof of the habit, and the fact of such tendency, are not enough for the contestant’s case. In order to invalidate the will by reason of such habit and the tendency of it above mentioned, it must appear that at the time of its execution the testator was so enfeebled in mind by his habitual use of intoxicants, or was then intoxicated to such a degree as to be incapable of making a will. At this point the contestant fails. So far as the subscribing witnesses to the will or either of the codicils speak upon the subject, their testimony is ah the other way. It does not occur to me that any witness in the case testifies that or near the time of the execution of the will, or either of the codicils, the testator was intoxicated to any degree.

In respect to the question how far the habit of excessive drinking had effected him at the different periods of his life, when the several testamentary papers were executed, [106]*106there is a conflict of testimony, medical and lay. But running through almost the entire case is a current of proof, of which his letters are a conspicuous part, justifying the conclusion that down to á time later than the date of the last codicil, and almost to the day of his death, his naturally vigorous intellect was active and bright, and he was capable of attending, intelligently and carefully, to the business of his estate and his affairs, except at such hours of the day as it was plainly to be seen that he was inebriated. And, as has been said, it was not at such hours that the will or either of the codicils was executed. In short, the testimony taken as a whole, although conflicting in many respects, seems to warrant the conclusion that at the time ■of the execution of the will and the several codicils respectively, the testator had the mental capacity to execute the same, unless, as is contended on the part of the contestant, the partial disinherison of his daughter was the result of certain delusions by which it is claimed his mind was possessed and controlled.

The testimony respecting the alleged delusions is substantially as follows:

First. During the year or two succeeding the divorce, which was procured in May, 1871, Mr. Tracy availed himself of the provision contained in the decree, permitting him to have interviews with his daughter at all proper times. She then resided with her mother, in or near New York, and was five or six years of age. The interviews were at a hotel in New York, and the child was accompanied by her nurse, who was present at the several interviews. Mr. Tracy is shown to have said, in substance, on ■several occasions, referring to those interviews, that the servant told him he could not see his daughter alone, that such were her orders. One witness, Mrs. Reed, testified that on one occasion in the winter of 188A5, when witness breakfasted with Tracy, he told her that there was a detective with the nurse and child; that he saw the detective when he went to the door. Margaret Dooley testified that she was the nurse who went with the child, that she never told Tracy he was not to see his daughter except in her presence, and was never requested to do so; and that no detective ever accompanied her.

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Related

American Seamen's Friend Society v. Hopper
33 N.Y. 619 (New York Court of Appeals, 1865)
Stanton v. Wetherwax
16 Barb. 259 (New York Supreme Court, 1853)
Van Pelt v. Van Pelt
30 Barb. 134 (New York Supreme Court, 1858)
Merrill v. Rolston
5 Redf. 220 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.Y. St. Rep. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-the-last-will-testament-of-tracy-nysupct-1887.