In re the Will of Lang

1 Gibb. Surr. 127, 9 Misc. 521, 30 N.Y.S. 388, 61 N.Y. St. Rep. 675
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1 Gibb. Surr. 127 (In re the Will of Lang) 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 Will of Lang, 1 Gibb. Surr. 127, 9 Misc. 521, 30 N.Y.S. 388, 61 N.Y. St. Rep. 675 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Fitzgerald, S.

The subscribing witnesses, Frederick H. Steinbrenner and Charles A. Appleton, testify to the facts essential to a due execution of a will. The paper is in the handwriting of the decedent, and was brought by him to the office of D. Appleton & Company, with which house the witnesses were connected, was presented to them with a statement that it was his will and the request that they sign it. He did not in their presence sign the paper, nor did he in expressed terms acknowledge [128]*128his signature. But its presentation to them with his signature in plain sight, as testified to by them, was a substantial acknowledgment. Matter of Phillips, 98 N. Y. 267.

Objections were filed in behalf of decedent’s brother, Johann Nepomuck Lang, alleging that the execution was not a voluntary act of the decedent, and that he was not of sound mind and memory. No evidence of undue influence was produced. The only issue to be determined by me is the question of mental capacity, except that which arises on the validity of the instrument which is called in question on other grounds, and which I will hereafter consider.

Louis Lang was by birth a German, and was unmarried. He was an artist, and had resided for nearly fifty years in New York. By thrift he had accumulated a competence more than sufficient to supply his wants. His surplus'moneys he deposited with Messrs. Appleton & Co., with some of the members of which house he was on terms of intimacy. Against the account he drew checks. Under the advice of Mr. William Appleton he made investments, and the securities were left with the firm for safe keeping. He was a member of the Artists’ Eund Society and of the Century Club. In later years, by reason of increasing infirmities, he visited the club with less frequency. He became untidy in personal appearance, and his memory was somewhat impaired, a condition not uncommon in aged people, and at the age of eighty-one he died.

A competent testator, free from undue influence, may malee whatever disposition, of his property by will that he chooses, though unjust and unreasonable. He may divert his. estate from those who would be regarded- as having a natural claim upon his testamentary consideration, and give it to strangers. If capacity and formal execution and volition appear, the will must stand. Seguine v. Seguine, 4 Abb. Dec. 191. As concisely stated by Rollins, Surrogate, the question of capacity is whether a decedent is capable of sufficient thought, reflection and judgment to know of the property he has and to decide and declare what shall [129]*129be done with it. Cornwall v. Riker, 2 Dem. 354. And an unjust belief by a testatrix that her brother, the contestant of her will, had obtained more than a fair share of the property left by their father, to her detriment, and which caused her to have an intense dislike for the brother, was a mistake in judgment, and was no ground for rejecting her will. Matter of Bull, 6 Dem. 123. Even a monomaniac may make a valid will if the delusion has no relation to the subject or object of the will or the persons who would be likely, ordinarily, to be the recipients of his bounty, where the provisions of the will are entirely unconnected with or uninfluenced by the particular delusion. Lathrop v. Board of Foreign Missions, 67 Barb. 590. Nor is a lack of -testamentary capacity to be assumed from the fact that one is far advanced in years. Horn v. Pullman, 72 N. Y. 269. In the light of these principles, I will consider the case on the evidence produced.

In 1889 or 18-90' — the date I will consider hereafter — Louis Lang himself wrote the paper now under consideration as his will. He also wrote another in the German language, purporting to be a will, and which in the paper itself he claimed expressed the meaning of the one in English.

He was conscious that he was near the end of life. He stated to Mr'. Roelker, whom he named as one of the executors, that his bonds and valuables were in a tin box in the possession of Mr. Appleton. In the box were also found the will and the German ■copy. He explained to Roelker some of the provisions of the instrument, and gave him instructions, stating that his death might occur at any time. He told him where, in his apartment, other important papers were, that he might readily find them. He further stated to Mr. Roelker that Mr. Ounningham would attend to the details of his funeral. On a sheet of note paper with the caption “ Last memoranda of Louis Lang to Patrick Ounningham,” whom he addresses as his friend, he gives instructions in respect to the disposition of his remains-, to provide an inexpensive headstone for his grave and he designates Mr. Wil[130]*130liara W. Appleton as his first and Mr. John L. Eitch his second executor. On a similar sheet, dated September 12th, 1891, he makes the same request, and asks Cunningham to see Mr. Eitch, his “ second executor,” who will send documents referring fo his will to his native town, and will sell his pictures and other things in his room at auction for the benefit of the poor artists’ widows. On October 17, 1892, he wrote to Mr. George W. Yewell, as “ secretary of the Art Eund,” stating that he had made his will, and in it made a disposition of everything in his apartments to be collected and prepared to be sold after his death for the benefit of the “Artists’ Widows of the Art Eund established in the city of New York.” On December 5, 1892, he wrote to Mr. Alfred Roelker a letter, in which he referred to his important papers and the necessity for Mr. Roelker to see where they were. Besides these documentary proofs, is the testimony of Mr. George H. Story and Mr. Yewell, who called on Lang in 1893, long after his will was executed, and of Messrs. Augustine Smith and Thomas W. Wood, who had had a long acquaintance with him, which continued to near the period of his death. From their testimony, and that of Mr. Roelker, there can be no doubt of the mental competency of the decedent.

Against this evidence are facts which appear upon the face of the will and other papers produced showing a tendency to decay of memory and of mental power. In the will, as in the two letters written to Cunningham, he refers to Mr. Eitch as one of his “executors,” to whom he had Intrusted the collection and disposal of his pictures for the benevolent fund of the Artists’ Fund Society, though further on in the same instrument he states that “ William W. Appleton and George H. Roelker had volunteered to be his executors.” But “ George H.” is stricken out with the pen, and above in red ink is written the word “Alfred,” but leaving on the next line “George H.” as part of Mr. Roelker’s name, with a statement that he is 'to conduct the correspondence in German. On the fifth page [131]*131lie again writes the name “ George H. Roelker.” The residence of Mr. Roelker lie states to be “ 202, 45 West street,” instead ¡of 202 West Forty-fifth street, where it is and' has been for many years. ■ No such person as George H. Roelker is known to Alfred Roelker. Besides, no one of that name resided in his house. The name of the society to be benefited by the proceeds of the sale of his effects is differently expressed, as “ the Artists’ Fund Society,” and

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Bluebook (online)
1 Gibb. Surr. 127, 9 Misc. 521, 30 N.Y.S. 388, 61 N.Y. St. Rep. 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-will-of-lang-nysurct-1894.