Kastell v. Hillman

53 N.J. Eq. 49
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 53 N.J. Eq. 49 (Kastell v. Hillman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kastell v. Hillman, 53 N.J. Eq. 49 (N.J. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

Frank Kastell, the complainant, files this bill against his nephew, Frank T. Hillman, and his niece,. Meta Hillman, [50]*50asking the court to set aside a deed of conveyance made by Philip Kastell, the father of the complainant and the grandfather of the two defendants, to the two defendants, dated the 22d of March, 1893. It covers about two acres of land, situate within the corporate limits of the city of Passaic, and on it are the dwelling and outbuildings constituting the homestead of the late Philip Kastell. He died on the 1st of April, 1893, nine days after the execution of the deed. By his will, executed outlie 2d of October, 1891, and admitted to probate after bill filed, ,he had devised this homestead, with other lands, to his son .Frank, the complainant herein.

The complainant rests his right to relief on two grounds— first, that the premises in question were so devised to him by his father, in pursuance of a contract made between the two many years before, by the terms of which his father agreed to so devise the premises to him in consideration of his living with him, attending to his business and taking care of him during his lifetime, and he alleges that he performed the conditions on his part. The second ground is that at the time of the execution of the deed his father had attained the advanced age of about eighty-two years, was very feeble in health, both in mind and body; that his mind was so far enfeebled as to render him incompetent to transact business of that character, and that the • deed was procured from him by undue influence brought to bear upon him in his enfeebled condition by the two defendants, his •grandchildren, who were members of his family at that time.

I. With regard to the first point, it seems to me .that it is •clearly sustained by the proofs. The devise itself is in these •words:

Third. I give, devise and bequeath unto my son, Frank Kastell, my farm on which I now reside, situate in said city of Passaic, county and state aforesaid, containing about thirty (30) acres, with all the buildings, granaries, barns, stables and outhouses thereon, together with all the household furniture, farm- ' ing utensils, tools and other things pertaining to said farm; also, the horses, • cattle, poultry and other life [sic] stock, carriages, wagons, harness and everything belonging thereto; also, about ten (10) acres of salt meadow land, situate •and lying in the county of Bergen, in this state.
“Fourth. This bequest to my son Frank, I make in consideration of and for dais services and assistance rendered to me and my estate by him up to the [51]*51time of my decease, and is subject to the following charge: My beloved wife, Katherine, shall have as good and comfortable a home on this my said farm •as she now has during the remainder of her natural life, and at her death said farm, household furniture &c., &c., &c. and salt meadow lands shall be the property of my son Frank in fee simple.”

This clause is of itself evidence of the contract. In addition to that the parol proof is abundant.

Complainant himself swears that when he was a young man (he was forty-two years of age when his father died) he wished to go away from home and strike out in the world for himself— learn a trade or do whatever he might be able to do — and that his father insisted upon his staying there, living with him and helping him on the farm, and promised him if lie would do so he would leave him, by will, the lands in question, and that he ■did so stay, relying upon his father’s promise. The same thing is sworn to, in effect, by his sister, Mrs. Anna Fells; also, by Mr. Totten and Mrs. Dankoff, neighbors. Then the division which the old gentleman had made, by will, of his property was well understood by each member of 1ns family. He was a German, who did not attempt to speak English, and understood ■it very imperfectly.

The lands mentioned in the will were as follows: A little short of ten acres in one body, bisected by Bloomfield avenue, leaving three and a half acres on one side (on which was his dwelling) and a little short of six on the other, the whole located about a mile and a quarter west of the city of Passaic, and beyond th'e line of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company. It was within the corporate limits of Passaic, but the neighborhood was not built up or improved. In addition to this ten-acre tract was a tract of thirteen and seven-tenths acres, lying disconnected with and a short distance from it, and not bounding on any highway. It was used for farm land, and as waste sprouts or swamp. Besides this were the ten acres of salt meadow of trifling value. The old gentleman seemed to entertain the notion that the ownership of this land — about thirty-three acres in all — made him a landed proprietor, and as the complainant was his only son, he desired him to reside on it [52]*52after bis death and perpetuate it in. the Kastell name. Besides this property he was the owner of a block about one hundred feet square, situate on a corner, in the city of Passaic proper, upon which were five houses, which were estimated at the value of $25,000, and rented for $200 a month. This last was subject to two mortgages of $1,000 each. He had also some building lots. Besides the complainant, he had two children — daughters— one a Mrs. Anna Fells, who lived with her husband in Lowell, Massachusetts, and the other, who died in her father’s lifetime, had married a Mr. Hillman, the father of the defendants, and had borne nine children, of whom the defendants are two. The-date of her death, I think, is not given. The block of buildings just mentioned were by the will divided between Mrs. Fells and the Hillman children. Sometime previous to the making of the will above mentioned, but just how long does not appear, the testator had made a will substantially the same as this, except he had excluded from the benefits thereof three of the Hillman children. The contents of this will were known to all his children, and they, particularly Mrs. Fells, feeling that his prejudice against the three Hillman grandchildren was unjust, induced him to change it, and the will of October 2d, 1891, was the result of a family counsel, and was satisfactory to all parties. In point of fact, the value of the two shares given to Mrs. Fells and the Hillman children was greater than that given to-the complainant by the will.

The old gentleman had always expressed a desire that his son Frank should have an heir, and in the year 1889, he married a young lady in the neighborhood, whom at first he took to live with his father and mother, but fearing a difference between the mother-in-law and the daughter-in-law, he sent her back temporarily to her father’s home, and then proposed to his father to build himself a house on a part of the homestead which had been devised to him, and his father agreed thereto, and in 1890 conveyed him a part of the homestead on the north side of Bloomfield avenue, upon which he erected a house in the summer of that year, and lived there with his wife and attended to his father’s business and affairs in the same manner as he had pre[53]*53viously done, up to the time of his death. He liad also accepted ■other employment, with his father’s consent. He was, among ■other things, street superintendent of the city of Passaic for four years while living with his father, and swears, and he is uncontradicted therein, that he gave a portion of his salary, or whatever other money he earned outside, to his father.

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53 N.J. Eq. 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kastell-v-hillman-njch-1894.