Platt v. Platt

2 Thomp. & Cook 25
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Thomp. & Cook 25 (Platt v. Platt) 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
Platt v. Platt, 2 Thomp. & Cook 25 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

Barrett, J.

This is a motion for a new trial under § 268 of the Code, as lately amended. It brings up before final judgment the question, whether the findings of the special term were justified by the evidence, and necessarily involves the consideration of the whole case, both upon the facts and the law.

The suit was brought by the executors of Nathan 0. Platt, to set aside certain transfers of property, made by him, in the years 1860 and 1861, to his brother, the defendant.

These executors are the children of Nathan C. Platt, and they charge that the transfers were procured by fraud and misrepresentation upon the part of the defendant, and by means of undue influence, which they assert that he exercised upon their father.

These charges are denied by the defendant, and upon the issues thus raised, there was a trial at the special term that resulted in the decision and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, which is now under review.

The intimacy between these brothers was close and life-long. Prior to the transfers in question, they had been partners in business some thirty years, the defendant being the head of the house, and nine years the senior. ’ Both were active, energetic and industrious. There were two separate departments in the business; one was importing and dealing in watches, etc., which was carried on at No. 20, Maiden lane, under the superintendence of Nathan, and the.other was a gold and silver refinery, established at Nos. 4 and 6, Liberty place, and conducted principally by the defendant. Nathan’s sons assisted him in the mercantile business, while the defendant’s sons and son-in-law occupied themselves with the refinery.

There being, as was quite natural, perfect confidence between the brothers, neither troubled himself to become acquainted with the details of the department conducted by the other. Matters thus seem to have gone on smoothly and prosperously until, in what was certainly for Nathan an evil hour, he launched into enterprises outside of the regular business of the firm.

He became president of the Artisans’ Bank and city chamberlain. [33]*33With rare assiduity he fulfilled the various public and private duties thus assumed, including morning and evening visits to the mercantile establishment, until the latter part of the year 1860, when disasters set in; he then ceased to be chamberlain, the public funds were removed from the Artisans’ Bank, and the failure of that institution speedily followed.

During the preceding summer he had been unwell, and had lost much of his old vigor and robustness, while later, in the struggle to sustain his bank, he passed through much excitement and trouble, suffering the anxiety and undergoing the mental wear and tear incident to such a crisis. It was to the intensity of this strain that he himself attributed the disease with whith he was attacked at a later period, and he declared to one of the witnesses that “ one night during the troubles, he had walked the floor of the Artisans’ Bank all night,” and that his efforts to make good his city account “ had killed him, and broken him down.” He bore up, however, until these troubles culminated in the final catastrophe, and then he sank, it is not too much to say, helplessly and hopelessly, declining slowly but steadily both in mind and body, until July, 1863, when he died. «The testimony upon this head is full and abundant. It is true that after his illness began he occasionally visited the mercantile establishment, gave a few orders, wrote letters, signed checks, and even transacted some private business; he was never, in fact, non compos mentis, within the legal signification of that term, as applied to testamentary disposition. But it is equally true that his mind became so weak as to render him an easy victim to any designing man, and that his credulity, as evidenced by his own diary, was amazing; he was in just that dangerous condition of mind for which the law makes no provision, because the individual is yet within the confines of its definition of sanity; but which equity guards with her just and benignant rules. In this, very diary, for instance, he narrates events indicating a perfect child-like faith in the most improbable and transparent and improbable statements of one Plin White, and yet he pens them with an accuracy and precision, carried into the minutest details, worthy not only of the most careful and prudent business man, but of one gifted with a memory sufficiently retentive almost to photograph the scenes depicted.

It is quite evident that the failure of the bank preyed upon his mind, broke him down physically, mortified his pride, crushed his spirit, and superinduced the fatal disease under which he finally [34]*34succumbed. The witnesses draw a sad picture of his declining days. In the spring of 1861, he took to his room, and never again left the house. Speaking of his physical condition, they say that he “ steadily grew worse,” that he was “ weak,” “ exceedingly nervous,” “constantly fading away,” “suffered a great deal from sleeplessness,” and also from pains in his feet, so much so that he could not bear a stocking or sheet. to touch him,” and that his physicians termed his disease “ diabetes,” which afterward ran into consumption; the latter finally “ carrying him off.”

With reference to his mental state, they say that his disposition became “ very changeable; ” that much of the time he was under “great mental excitement,” sometimes “brooding,” sometimes “weeping,” over his troubles; that he would very frequently “go around the room crying,” and “ seemed at times as if he did not know what to do with himself,” again he would be “ almost in a stupor,” then “ vacillating,” “ fretful,” “ respondent,” “ melancholy,” some days cheerful-and hopeful of again returning to business, .then despairing and perfectly hopeless. They further prove that he had “ all sorts of whims and queer ideas ; ” that he showed one of his sons an advertisement in a newspaper, saying, “perhaps I can make “ one thousand dollars by investing ten dollars, I wish you would go and see about it,” and although his son has promised to do so, never again recurred to the subject; that he asked another of his sons to get him opium to make him forget his troubles, and when it was procured, permitted the package to remain undisturbed; “ very soon he forgot all about it;” that he had his old papers and accounts, books and letters brought to him, and that he used to have them on his desk, on his bed, and “ strewn all around the floor,” spending days looking over them,"“apparently with no object at all;” “ he seemed,” says one of the witnesses, “ to have a great hobby for figuring up things.”

The illness and death of his wife added to his affliction and nervous exhaustion; during her last illness, his son, Nathan, says that he was “ as near' to a crazy man as you could come, and not be crazy; he would walk the floor wringing his hands and not sleeping any.”

It was at this time, when his wife was dying in the adjoining room, and he himself was in the condition described by the witnesses, that the final transfers of his partnership" and individual property were completed. " ■

[35]*35The partnership interests were conveyed upon the 2d of July, 1861, the individual real estate in Nassau street, upon the fifth, and his wife died upon the seventh of the same month.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Thomp. & Cook 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platt-v-platt-nysupct-1873.