Lake v. Ranney

33 Barb. 49, 1860 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 189
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 33 Barb. 49 (Lake v. Ranney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake v. Ranney, 33 Barb. 49, 1860 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 189 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinion

By the Gourt,

Allen, J.

The will of John Goodhue, deceased, was propounded for probate by Oliver F. Ranney and Harlow Goff, the executors named therein, and was contested by the appellants for the want of testamentary capacity in the deceased, as well as upon the ground that its execution was procured by fraud and undue influence.

Over thirty witnesses were examined before the surrogate and testified at length to facts bearing with more or less force upon the questions involved, and showing the character, history and business capacity of the testator, his relations to and with the parties litigant up to and at the time of his death, and the relation of the litigants to each other and the degree of their intimacy with the testator, and their connection with the will and its execution. While it is difficult to grpiip to-. [62]*62gether the facts and circumstances found and relied upon either to support or impeach the will, it is impracticable to give anything like a perfect analysis of the testimony. Only the more prominent facts can be referred to, and the many minor circumstances which color and give character and peculiar significance to the main facts must be passed by.

John G-ooclhue, the testator, died in December, 1857, aged eighty-one years, leaving him surviving as his heirs at law two daughters, Clarissa Lake, one of the appellants and the wife of her co-appellant Eansom Lake, and Hannah Eanney, one of the defendants and the wife of Oliver F. Eanney, one of the executors named in the will. The wife of the testator died in January, 1855, and the alleged will bears date and was executed in July of the same year. Mrs. Eanney was married in 1841, and Mrs. Lake in. 1853. Mr. and Mrs. Eanney came to reside with the testator in th'e fall of 1844, and' continued to reside in the" same house with him up to the time of his death. The evidence as to his business capacity in early life, the effect of disease and of age upon his mental faculties, and his testamentary capacity at the time of the execution of the will, and his freedom from a subjection to restraint, coercion, or undue influence of any kind from those by whom he was surrounded, is in this, as in most cases of this character, somewhat conflicting. We are so constituted that our social relations and our sympathies and our prejudices influence our perceptions and bias our memories, as well as our opinions and judgments. Hence two individuals of equal intelligence, integrity and opportunity for observation and judgment, will observe and note facts as it were .through entirely different mediums, and honestly report the facts with different colorings, and arrive at directly opposite conclusions, or conclusions essentially differing from each other. There is no class of cases in which the evidence is necessarily less satisfactory and conclusive than those involving the validity of acts depending on the mental capacity of the actor. With the witnesses before the judge, with ample op[63]*63portunity to test their integrity and judge of their competency to speak understanding^ of the matters to which they are called, the judgment may he far from satisfactory even to him who pronounces it. The witnesses are ordinarily not experts, and they are selected because they can testify to and relate facts, or circumstances, or opinions favorable to the party calling them, and courts and juries must determine from the imperfect light which these isolated facts, and perhaps partizan opinions, furnish. The court of review has not the advantage of inspecting and personally examining the witnesses, and can only try them and weigh them by the record of their testimony; and if the judgment of this court was final, when sitting in judgment upon the decree of an intelligent surrogate, I should hesitate before I would agree to reverse it in a doubtful or- balanced case. But as the only effect of a reversal is to submit the question, upon such evidence as may be adduced, to another tribunal and that a jury of twelve men, we may scrutinize more freely the evidence before the surrogate and his adjudications upon it. The testator was a farmer, competent to manage his farm and transact his' ordinary business and make a good bargain up to 1837, when he had a severe fit of sickness, which affected his activity and energy—diminished them.” His former son-in-law, the husband of a deceased daughter, a physician, testified that “ from the time of his severe sickness, down to 1845, he got back in some measure to the point where he started from, but never entirely recovered after this fever. From the time of this sickness down to the death of his wife his health was declining, or his body was breaking down. I think his mind failed him ; he did not retain his mental capacity for doing business ; his judgment failed in some measure ; his mind weakened; might be called a weakness of mind. Was easily affected to tears. Little things overcame him.” In 1847 he had a stroke of paralysis, which disabled him, and the same physician testified that since he had this fit he has not, in my judgment, been capable of doing busi[64]*64ness. This was in February, 1847. From the fall previous to the death of the testator’s wife, down to 1849, he was not capable of doing business, in my judgment. Testator, I should rather think, was not capable of doing ordinary business from spring of 1844 to 1847.” There was considerable evidence of the same general import, and much that conflicted with it. But that to some extent after the illness of 1837, he was enfeebled in body and mind, I think cannot he questioned upon the evidence. Heither do I think that it can be fairly claimed that the testator was mentally incompetent to make a will; that he was not of sound and disposing mind and memory to the extent held necessary for testamentary purposes. In other words, he had, as it would seem, “testamentary capacity” at the date of the will. He was an ignorant man, had hut little knowledge of figures, and kept no accounts. For all purposes of arithmetical calculation and written memoranda, he always depended mainly on others. In 1844, and before the death of his wife, he is described by one of the witnesses as “very childish,” and “easily influenced by others and he and his wife were anxious to get some one to live with him and attend to his business, and was advised to have one of Ms cMldren come and live with him. He is also described as “ forgetful” at this time, and according to the testimony of many of the witnesses, exhibited many evidences of senility and mental debility, as well as bodily infirmity. Eanney and his wife were invited to come, and did come up from Hew York, .and- take up their residence with the testator, on account of the infirmities and inability of the latter, and to take charge of his business and affairs generally. The wife of the testator died in the J anuary following, and her death seriously affected his health and spirits. ' From the time he came to live with the testator, Eanney had the general charge and control of the business, and exercised a very decided influence on the testator, and most business matters, and all of any importance were coim mitted to him.

[65]*65At the time of making the will the testator was worth, in real and personal property, from $8000 to $9000; and by the will propounded he gave the bulk and all but $1000 of it to Mrs. Ranney, giving to his executors, of whom Ranney was one, the remaining $1000, the interest of which was, when and only when the executors should think necessary, to be applied to the support of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Barb. 49, 1860 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-v-ranney-nysupct-1860.