Pancoast v. Graham

15 N.J. Eq. 294
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 15, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 15 N.J. Eq. 294 (Pancoast v. Graham) 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
Pancoast v. Graham, 15 N.J. Eq. 294 (N.J. Ct. App. 1858).

Opinion

The Ordinary.

The appellants, who are the executors named in a paper writing which purports to bo the last will of Lewis W. Pancoast, late of the county of Burlington, deceased, offered the same for probate to the surrogate of that county. The respondents, who claim to be interested in the estate of the deceased as legatees under an alleged prior will of the decedent, filed a caveat. A large number of witnesses were sworn and examined in favor of and against the will, and the court decided against admitting it to probate. The objections urged against the will are two — the mental incapacity of the testator, and that the will was procured by undue influence. It was on the ground of incapacity that the Orphans Court rejected the will. There is no evidence in 'the case to justify a reasonable suspicion that the will was procured by undue influence. I shall not therefore further notice this objection, but will direct my inquiry.to the other ground of objection, the incapacity of the testator.

The will, upon the face of it, is a reasonable one. There is nothing in the disposition which the decedent makes of his [296]*296property that indicates an unsoundness of mind. With the exception of three. small legacies, he gives his property to those who would have taken it by law if he had died intestate — his brother and sister — who are his only heirs-at-law and next of kin.

But it is said, that although the will bears upon its face no evidence of unsoundness of mind, yet in fact the disposition there made by the decedent of his property was in violation of an arrangement which he had made with his wife, since then deceased, under circumstances which would have induced him not to disregard it, had he possessed that soundness of mind which rendered him capable of intelligently disposing of his property.

The testator’s wife, when he married her, was seized in her own right of a house in the borough of Bordentown. He agreed with his wife, that if she would unite in the proper conveyances, so as to vest the title of that property in him, he would, by his will, dispose of his property in a particular way specified. Such conveyances were made. On the twenty-first of December, 1840, the property of his wife was vested in the testator in his own right, and on the next day he made his will, in pursuance of the arrangement made with his wife. By that will, he gives to his wife, during her natural life, the income of all his estate, real and personal. He gives to the children of John L. McKnight, the children of Jacob K. Train, and Ellen Graham (who are alleged to be the cousins and heirs-at-law of testator’s wife, but of which there is no proof,) the sum of $3000, to be divided equally among them, share and share alike. The said bequest last named to be void in case the testator’s wife should leave issue by him, or by any future husband, and in such case such bequest to be for the benefit of such issue. The residue of his estate he gives to such persons as would by law have been entitled to his property had he died intestate.

By the will propounded for probate, the testator totally disregards the arrangement made with his wife, and which was recognized and carried out by the will of 1840, except [297]*297so far as relates to the children of John L. McKnight. Instead of the $3000 which he had given to the children of John L. McKnight, Jacob K. Train, and Ellen Graham, he gives one hundred dollars to each of the children of John L. McKnight, and makes no mention of Jacob K. Train’s children or of Ellen Graham.

I think the change which appears to have taken place in the relative situation of the parties, and their respective circumstances between the years 1840 and 1853, sufficiently account for the different disposition of the testator’s property, and his disregard of the arrangement which had been entered into between him and his wife, without attributing it to an unsoundness of intellect, which rendered him incapable of appreciating any moral of legal obligation he might be under to provide for the next of kin of his deceased wife.

His wife died within a year after the making of the first will. She left no issue. Thirteen years had passed since the execution of the will. John L. McKnight had, since then, inherited a fortune of upwards of $300,000, and one of his children had settled in a foreign land. The children of Jacob K. Train were living in a distant state of the Union, if living at all; but no one of the witnesses seemed able to give any account of them or of the whereabouts of Ellen Graham. It is true a caveat had been filed in their behalf, by J. L. McKnight as their attorney, but no power of attorney was produced, and the fair presumption is, after what took place on the investigation, that there is no such power of attorney in existence. After the inquiry made for Ellen Graham and for the children of Jacob K. Train, it was the duty of those opposing this will to have given some evidence of their being still alive, and of the authority to appear for them, if they wished to attach any importance to the fact of their not being mentioned or provided for by the will.

Taking into consideration all these circumstances, I do not think any conclusion unfavorable to the capacity of the decedent can be drawn from his not providing for his wife’s relatives by his last, as he had by his former will. The [298]*298legacy of a hundred dollars, each, to the children of Mr. McKniglit, shows that the arrangement he had made with his wife was not obliterated from his memory.

Was the testator, when he executed the will of 1853, of that sound disposing mind and memory which the law regards as sufficient to render him competent to dispose of his property by will ?

On the 27th of October, 1841, the decedent was declared a lunatic by the Court of Chancery upon the usual proceedings had for that purpose in the court. Nathan Satterthwait was appointed the guardian of his person and property. He was sent to a lunatic asylum at Erankford, in Pennsylvania, where he remained seven or eight years. He then resided with his guardian, until he left his dwelling, in a clandestine manner, on the 10th of November, 1851. On the 6th of June, 1851, he presented a petition to the Court of Chancery, setting forth the proceedings upon which he was declared a lunatic — that he was found a lunatic from disease produced by the excessive use of ardent spirits; that he had entirely ceased and abandoned the use of all spirituous liquors, and was restored to the full possession and enjoyment of his reason and understanding.

After a full investigation under the direction of the court, the inquisition of lunacy was vacated, and the decedent was restored to the full possession of his property.

On the first of November following, he purchased a farm of eighty-two acres, near Bordentown, for the sum of three thousand five hundred dollars; he stocked this farm, at a cost of nearly $500, and went to farming; he bought and sold for himself, and transacted all the ordinary business required in carrying on such a farm; he had very considerable money transactions with various individuals; he kept a bank account, deposited his money, and drew it out from time to time by checks; he kept memoranda books, in which he entered generally, in his own writing, moneys which he from time to time received, and took receipts for money paid out. The books are neatly kept, and the entries made correctly [299]*299and intelligently.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 N.J. Eq. 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pancoast-v-graham-njsuperctappdiv-1858.