In re the Probate of the Will of Alexander

27 N.J. Eq. 463
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 27 N.J. Eq. 463 (In re the Probate of the Will of Alexander) 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.

Bluebook
In re the Probate of the Will of Alexander, 27 N.J. Eq. 463 (N.J. Ct. App. 1876).

Opinion

The Ordinary.

Thomas Alexander, late of the city of Newark, in this state, ■died there in December, 1873. On the 2d of January, 1872, lie executed, at the office of Messrs. Frelinghuysen and Kirkpatrick, in the presence of two witnesses, one of them the first named of those gentlemen, a paper purporting to be his last will and testament. This document had been drawn for him by the other member of the firm, who is named therein as one of the executors. By it he gave to his brother Reverdy $300, and to his sister Margaret, $600. He also gave to his nephew, Stewart B. Linthicum, $1000, and to his niece, Eliza Kerr, $500, to be held in trust for them respectively, by the executors, until they should respectively have attained the age of twenty-one years, and then to be paid to them, with all accumulations. These two legacies were to lapse and fall into the residue of his estate, in case of the death of the legatees in his lifetime or before attaining the age of twenty-one years. To Allen Griffith he gave a chest of tools, which belonged to him, the testator, before the death of his father, Thomas S. Alexander. All the rest of his property he gave to his sister Mary, now Mrs. Bingham. Erom the decree of the Orphans Court of Essex county, admitting this document to probate as his. last will and testament, this appeal was taken.

The testator, though at the time of executing the instrument in question, was of mature years, being then thirty-night years old, was, as he had been from his childhood, of a very low grade of intellect. His boyhood and youth had been spent in Maryland, where his father long practiced the legal profession, of which he was a distinguished member. In 1866, the latter removed to Newark, bringing the testator with him as one of his family, and the testator resided with him there .until his father’s death, which occurred on' the 4th of December, 1871. His father, by his will and the codicil thereto, after certain specific legacies and a small pecuniary one, gave .all the residue of his estate to his four children and his granddaughter, the child of his deceased daughter. As to Thomas’ share, which was one-sixth of'the residue, he made the 'follow[465]*465ing provision : “ I desire and empower my executors to retain my son Thomas’ part or share of my estate, and invest the same in some interest-bearing public stock or evidence of debt, and to apply the income or profits of such investment, or such part or parts thereof as they, in their discretion, may think necessary and expedient, to the support of my said son for and during the term of his natural life. I vest in them.' this large discretion because of the facility of the disposition of my said son, and to protect him against the practices of designing-men. I desire that any surpluses of income, which may, at any time, remain over what may be expended on his proper maintenance, shall be invested in like manner. He is to have the power of disposing of the said principal fund and its accumulations, by last will, to and among his brothers and sisters and niece and their descendants, or such of them as he' may prefer, and as he may think proper; and in the absence of any valid disposition thereof as aforesaid, the said fund and its accumulations are to go to the person and persons who, at the time of his death, may be designated by law as his personal representatives, and in proportions as determined by law.” He appointed Thales A. Linthicum (to whose wife, his daughter Emma, he gave one-third of the residue,) and his nephew, Julian J. Alexander, his executors. Both of them proved the will and codicil and accepted the trust. After the death of his father, Thomas, the testator, whose will is under consideration, continued to live in the family mansion in Newark, with his sister Mary, who was then unmarried, for many' months, and until she left this state. The testator was, at best, a semi-imbecile. His very personal appearance indicated his deficiency in mental capacity. While the testamentary witnesses and others, sworn before the Orphans Court, testify to his competency, in their opinion, to make a testamentary disposition of his property, it is, from the .evidence, too clear for question, that he was, at best, a very feeble-minded man. His father anxiously endeavored by means of his own association with him and otherwise, to strengthen his intellect. He placed him in a training school- .under au [466]*466experienced and skillful educator of the feeble-minded. At one time, partly to break up habits of intemperance, which .he had formed, the testator was sent by his father to the Maryland Hospital, where he remained for a considerable period; While the result of these efforts was, probably, some improvement, he nevertheless, up to the time of his death; was justly regarded as a person of very feeble intellect. Mr. Haines, one of the testamentary witnesses, speaking of his condition at the time of executing the will, says, from what he observed of him, he had “ no reason to think he was anything but sound.” His acquaintance with him, however, was, he says, but very slight. The other testamentary witness, Mr. Erelinghuysen, was somewhat acquainted with him. He says that while the testator, in his opinion, had not a sound mind, he had sufficient intellect to dispose of his property; that he knew what he was doing, what disposition he was making of it, and to whom he was giving it. Mr. Kirkpatrick, one of his executors, by whom the will was drawn, says he thinks that he perfectly understood the manner in' which he disposed of his property, and he adds that he gave his directions clearly. Numerous witnesses testify on the subject of the testator's capacity. Of these, many are persons of high social position in Maryland and elsewhere, some of whom were acquainted with him from his childhood. Their testimony leads to the conclusion that before he came to this state, he was of so low a grade of intellect as to be incapable of transacting any business whatever, and if he had testamentary capacity, it was merely such as would satisfy the lowest requirements of the law. I deem it unnecessary to refer particularly to their testimony. The testimony of those witnesses who speak on the subject from their knowledge of him after he came to Newark to reside, makes it evident that his capacity had not materially increased. Mr. Thomas T. Kinney, one of these witnesses, who knew him well, and whose opportunities for observation were good, says he used to hear him spoken of as an idiot, .and .thought the matter over, and concluded he was not [467]*467■exactly that, but thought he was of rather a low grade of. Intellectual development — a feeble-minded young man, but not .an imbecile. He says, in explanation, “ I thought he was of ■a very low grade of mind, though not. an idiot, because I .always had the idea that an idiot had no mind at all, and Tommy had a mind up to a certain point.” It is in evidence that Vis late as July, 1872, five months after the making of the will, his sister, Mrs. Bingham, contemplated placing him in a training school for feeble-minded persons. It was urged by the counsel of the proponents, on the hearing of this .appeal, that the fact that his father had, with full knowledge •of his mental condition, provided in his will for the exercise, by the testator, of the power of testamentary disposition of his share of his father’s estate, should have great weight in ■determining the question of capacity. It is, however, only •evidence of the opinion of his father, and is of no legal value in determining the question.

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