Koegel v. Egner

54 N.J. Eq. 623
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 54 N.J. Eq. 623 (Koegel v. Egner) 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
Koegel v. Egner, 54 N.J. Eq. 623 (N.J. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

The Ordinary.

August Meis was by birth a German, and by occupation a tanner. For many years before his death he lived in the city-of Newark and carried on business there. He committed suicide by shooting himself, in the yard of his factory, on the 23d of August, 1894, leaving him surviving, as the natural objects of his bounty, his widow and three children by a former wife, a son and two daughters. The daughters were the contestants below and are the appellants here.

The documents in dispute are a will, dated on the 21st of December, 1892, and a codicil thereto, dated on the 26th of September, 1893.

They are impeached by the appellants upon the grounds — -first, that the testator was mentally incapable of making them when [625]*625they were respectively executed; and second, that he was unduly influenced to make them, or they were fraudulently imposed upon him, by Henry W. Egner, his business partner.

With the exception of the signatures of Meis and the subscribing witnesses, the documents are in the handwriting of Egner, who, by them, is appointed one of their executors, and, indirectly, is made the recipient of other benefit and advantage, to which I will presently refer.

The proofs show that although Meis could speak English and, with some difficulty, read and write it, he was familiar with and habitually used the German language. About eight years before his death he entered into partnership with Egner in the business of conducting a tannery in Newark, which furnished employment for some thirty or forty men and was a prosperous- and paying concern. His principal occupation in that business was the superintendency of the manufacturing and the sale of the products of the factory, while Egner, who was more proficient in the English language, did the office work — that is, kept the books, carried on the necessary correspondence and attended principally to the financial part of the business. The proofs, however, show that at times Meis was obliged to perform Egner’s duties and that he possessed a sufficient knowledge of English to do so.

For fifteen or twenty years prior to his death Meis was addicted to the excessive use of intoxicating liquors, so that he was frequently drunk and occasionally remained so for days at a time. In that condition, at home, he was irritable, violent and destructive, acting sometimes as though bereft of his reason. His daughters say that at times he would be so violent that his family, in fear, would fly from the house, and he would break the dishes and furniture, and that once, while in that condition, he was so far demented as to remove his clothing and put it in the stove to burn. One of his daughters thinks that his drunken sprees would average three a week. The other says, generally, that he was constantly drinking and for years had been a brute. It is testified also by the daughters, in the vague and general terms which characterize the greater part of their testimony, that [626]*626upon several occasions he attempted to take his own life. This testimony fails to give the particulars of those several attempts or any account of the causes which led to them. The approximate dates of two only of the attempts, both by hanging himself, are stated, one immediately after the death of his first wife and the other about two years before his own death. It does not appear whether or not the attempts at suicide and the accomplished suicide were referable to present intoxication or to nervous despondency attendant upon recovery from some continued debauch or to other causes. That they were attributable to his habits is probable, for Mrs. Heinz says that his condition was caused by only drinking; it was nothing but drinking.”

It is admitted by the appellants that their father, when sober, was an industrious and competent business man.

It is not shown what his relations with his son were. His daughters complain of him as having been brutal at home, and Mrs. Heinz says, vindictively perhaps, that after the death of his wife, several years before the will was made, he became so debased as to propose to her that she lead an incestuous life with him. She adds that she recounted this proposition of her father to a neighbor and to his second wife, and thus, possibly, she discloses a-reason why the father may have limited his bounty to her and her sister.

The daughters both married, and when the will was made were living with their respective husbands.

By the disputed will Meis bequeaths $2,000 to each of his daughters and $1,000, with his household effects, to his widow, and devises to his son, August Meis, Jr., all his real estate and bequeaths to him his half interest in the tannery business of Meis & Egner, requiring the son, however, to share the homestead equally with the testator’s widow and pay her $4 each week during her life, and to pay all taxes, insurance, water rents, assessments &c. imposed upon the homestead. He also prohibits the son from mortgaging and selling the homestead, and provides that at the death of the son the -homestead shall go to his children, and, if he should not leave a child or children, to the children of the testator’s daughters.

[627]*627Doubt is expressed whether the latter proviso is not applicable' also to the business real estate.

The testator was the owner not only of one-half of the business of Meis & Egner, but also of one undivided half of the real estate which constituted the tannery plant.

Another important feature of the will is that it enjoins the' son to become the partner of Egner in the father’s place and to continue the tannery business, and forbids him to sell his interest in the tannery real estate without the consent of Egner.

Egner and John F. Zimmerman are appointed the executors of the will.

The codicil states that on the 4th of April, 1893, the testator paid his widow $1,000 and that therefore the bequest of that sum to her in the will is revoked.

The proofs do not disclose the value of the properties left to the son, but from their description enough appears to satisfy me that his share in the estates was much greater in value than the legacies to his sisters, even though the charge upon it in behalf of the widow and his limited and incomplete estate be taken into consideration.

It does not appear that fixed mental disease resulted to Meis from his habitual and excessive use of intoxicants, nor does a presumption to that effect arise either from the proof of his habits or from such proof coupled with the testimony that at times he attempted to commit suicide and eventually did take his own life.

It is established, by abundant authority, that inebriety, though long continued and resulting occasionally in temporary insanity, does not require proof of lucid intervals to give validity to the acts of the drunkard, as is required where general insanity is proved, consequently where habitual intoxication is shown there will be no presumption that incapacitating drunkenness existed at the time of making the will. Such a condition at that time must affirmatively appear, or the presumption of capacity will prevail. Lee’s Case, 1 Dick. Ch. Rep. 193, 200.

“It is not the law,” said Chief-Justice Denio, in Peck v. Cary, 27 N. Y. 9, 23, “that a dissipated man cannot make a.contract [628]

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.J. Eq. 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koegel-v-egner-njsuperctappdiv-1896.