Kelso v. Kelso

123 A. 250, 95 N.J. Eq. 544, 10 Stock. 544, 1924 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 120
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 8, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 123 A. 250 (Kelso v. Kelso) 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
Kelso v. Kelso, 123 A. 250, 95 N.J. Eq. 544, 10 Stock. 544, 1924 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 120 (N.J. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Bentley, Y. C. (orally).

This ease having been tried at such great length, I am going to at least indicate what I consider to be the proofs, and I may or may not finally dispose of the questions as I talk myself into a state of mind.

The bill is filed by a husband against a wife, originally, to impress a constructive trust upon certain property transferred by the complainant to the defendant, and to have her turn the property back to him, with a prayer for restraint and a receiver.

Subsequently, it was amended so as to charge fraud and undue influence; and still later, upon the final hearing, to set up the further ground of lack of independent advice.

The complainant, now sixty-seven years of age, was a widower at the time of meeting the defendant in the summer of 1921, his first wife having died in the spring of 1920. He has been employed a great many years, practically all his life, as a shoe salesman, and by his industry and frugality and that of his family had acquired a competence of, roughly, $35,000, made up, as I recall it now, of a house in which he lived in Hackensack, and three mortgages, totaling $25,000.

At the time of meeting the defendant his family consisted of four sons, all of whom were self-supporting and living away from him, and one daughter who was about twenty or twenty-one years of age, who had remained with him and was taking care of his home.

This man was violently attracted by the defendant, and undoubtedly set out to woo her, and eventually won her hand. I say this because there has been some attempt to make it appear that this defendant was a fortune-hunter, which I do not believe. I think that the pressure of the courtship was exerted only upon his side, and that she was [546]*546very largely impressed by the ardor of his suit, his show of affluence and generosity, and the entirely practical consideration of a. help-meet in the support of herself and her three sons. In the early winter after meeting her he appears to have proposed to her, and then learned from her own lips that she was still married, whereupon, I think it is clear, he suggested that she go to Nevada and there secure a divorce which he agreed to finance, and which he did finance, including presents to a very large sum of money, totaling almost $6,000. He went to the city of Reno with her and the youngest of three minor sons. There he saw to the preliminary arrangements, remained with her a few days, and returned east to his residence in Hackensack. That was followed by three other trips to- Nevada, the second one being of no moment. On the third one I have in mind he started about the 26th of November, 1922, and while en route had delivered to him a telegram from the defendant in which she recommended that he should not come immediately, but explain a telegram that she had received purporting to come from his sons. Concerning the contents of this telegram of hers, there is great diversity between them. However, he had started, and, in his then frame of mind, he didn’t turn back, but continued on out there, to learn that one or more of his sons had sent a western union night letter to the defendant couched in hostile terms and threats, with the design of breaking up the proposed marriage of these -parties. As the result of the consternation caused by this telegram, it was then determined that he should return east and convey to her all of his property, for the purpose of discouraging any attempt upon the part of his children to commence a litigation. He says that it was upon the understanding, enforceable, I suppose, if true1, as to the personalty, that she would reconvey to him in the future when his difficulties with his sons should have blown over and upon request. She denies this, and I believe truthfully, for the reason that I consider this another move in his consuming passion to make certain of her hand, and for other reasons upon which I shall presently touch.

[547]*547After a very brief stay in Reno he re-embarked and came back to his horn®, where he consulted Mr. Howard Mackay, a solicitor of this court living in the complainant’s town of Hackensack, and as a result of that interview he executed the necessary conveyances to transfer all the property that I have mentioned over to the defendant, to whom he was not then married.

He then, about Christmas time, still in 1922, returned again to the defendant, who, in the meantime, had had her two elder boys go out and stay with her, both of whom were ill. Her decree of divorce being granted on the 2d of January of this present year, the parties were married the following evening in San Francisco, California. They then appear to have commenced their long journey home and, according to the defendant, the trouble that has. since eventuated started on the train.

Of course, I am not concerned with much of the great mass of testimony that has been introduced about the present and recent relations of the parties. Under the bill as it was originally framed is presented the issue of whether or not this was a voluntary conveyance, or was . a conveyance to her in trust, the trust being her willingness to reconvev upon his request; and, subsequently, as the amendment showed, whether or not there was any frqud or undue influence, and whether or not he lacked having had the benefit of independent advice.

So far as fraud is concerned—I mean fraud at the inception of the contract—or undue influence, I see no evidence in this case, either direct or circumstantial, out of which-1 can find in favor of the complainant. It is true that the man appears to have been madly infatuated with the defendant, and it is also true that he did a very foolish thing, but I don’t see how out of that I can spell undue influence. And there is no pretense of fraud, let alone the clear proof that is required to establish it. Reluctantly—and I say “reluctantly” because I realize the effect upon the complainant of finding against him—it seems to me that I must find as a fact that there was no such promise made by the defendant [548]*548as he says there was in the fall of 1922, and that is very largely for reasons that counsel for the defendant has elaborated upon more than I shall do, such as his unquestioned assertion to her when he proposed marriage that she would have everything that he had in the world. I think that that is not denied. And, secondly, the very luminous fact that in May, 1922, after he had deposited the defendant at Reno, and without anjr talk with her about it—without any pressure from her—he made the will, as he said on the stand, but that he thought it had been destroyed. And he wrote her to that effect. She says, and I think it fits in with- all the testimony and with all the facts in the case, that his letters to her to that effect was the first intimation that she had that he was going to make a will.

Now, here was a man who was a free agent, sui juris, who, without any request, made what he thought was a secure provision for this woman if anything happened to him. It is very significant that this man, whose memory is remarkable, and who kept notes and memoranda of all these things, testified upon the stand that the will was not made in May, but in the month of November of 1922, or six months later.

Now, I can see only one explanation of his post-dating— on the witness-stand I mean—the making of the will for a period of six months, when he had m'ade it only a year and a half before.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 A. 250, 95 N.J. Eq. 544, 10 Stock. 544, 1924 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelso-v-kelso-njch-1924.