Price v. Tompkins

108 Misc. 263
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 108 Misc. 263 (Price v. Tompkins) 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
Price v. Tompkins, 108 Misc. 263 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1919).

Opinion

Sawyer, J.

Plaintiffs’ motion to amend the complaint by adding immediately after the phrase “ and that during such cohabitation, and until his death, the said Charles D. Price was ignorant of the marriage of the said Harriet E. Hilton and that his said marriage to her was illegal and void,” the paragraph, ‘‘ That in or about the year 1867, the said Harriet E. Hilton saw the said H. Seymour Hilton in the city of New York, N. Y., and ever thereafter withheld and concealed such fact from the said Charles D. Price,” is granted with the usual exception to defendants. Order to that effect may be entered.

The action is brought to recover for the plaintiffs almost the entire estate with its accumulations of their father, Charles D. Price, deceased for more than a third of a century, and involves transactions the participants of which are all dead and the memory of which has almost faded from the minds of men. It may not therefore be amiss to set forth somewhat in detail the facts which have led to this most unusual controversy.

On the 12th day of March, 1848, a marriage was solemnized at Lyons, N. Y., between H. Seymour Hilton and one Harriet Mitchell, then not quite fourteen and one-half years of age, and who had theretofore resided with her parents at Geneva, N. Y. After about one month of married life the husband, apparently succumbing to the “gold excitement” then prevailing left his bride and sought for fortune in the, at that time, distant territory of California. His wife returned to her father and mother who seem thereafter to have cared for her until her maturity. Among the friends and close acquaintances of her childhood she still was known by the familiar name of Hattie while among those of less intimacy she was referred and spoken to by both her maiden name of [266]*266Mitchell and her name through marriage of Hilton. This continued until after her removal to New York some seventeen years later when seemingly she dropped the name of Hilton entirely and was thereafter known only as Miss Mitchell.

Mr. Hilton’s stay in California was of comparatively short duration, and upon his return he wrote his wife asking her to return and live with him. This letter was presumably written from Lyons, although there is uncertainty as to this, that village not being his family home. At any rate her father refused to permit Mrs. Hilton to return to her husband for the reason, as stated, that he had left her once and might do so again. When it is remembered that the young wife was then not far from fifteen years old this decision of the father is easily understood. Later, Mrs. Hilton wrote to the postmaster at Lyons concerning her husband’s whereabouts and in reply received a letter saying that Mr. Hilton had died, and from some disease of the head. The date of this correspondence is not definitely known but from the testimony of Mrs. Bloomer as to her own age at the time, I conclude that it must have been at the outside within two or three years after the letter from Mr. Hilton asking his wife to join him.

In any event he, after such request and its refusal, appears to have dropped out of her life and unless a certain declaration referred to later on is accepted as fact, there is nothing to show that she ever saw or heard from him again, nor of him other than this notice of his death. Following the separation from Mr. Hilton she continued in her father’s home for many years during which time she took up and followed the business of a local dressmaker. In the fall of 1865 she removed to New York where she obtained employment as forewoman in a dressmaking estab[267]*267lishment and resided in the family of a married sister living in that city. Here she met one Charles D. Price, whom she married in that city on July 12, 1866. As already stated, she had after her removal to New York ceased to use the name of Hilton and was there known by her friends and acquaintances as Hattie Mitchell, under which maiden name she was married to Mr. Price.

This was Mr. Price’s second marriage, and he had by his first marriage two children, these plaintiffs, then about twelve and four years of age respectively. During this marriage she bore to Mr. Price two children, one of whom died in early infancy, and the other a son named Ernest Irving Price, born about 1872, who survived his father and lived until December 11, 1911.

From the time of their marriage until Mr. Price’s •death, which occurred January 26, 1886, she and Mr. Price, these plaintiffs until their maturity, and her children by him while in life lived as one family, the relations seemingly having been those of a normal and happy household. Mr. Price’s affection for the woman he had married, contentment with the home she made for his children and himself, and reliance upon her good sense and honesty of purpose is made manifest by his gifts to her during his lifetime of both real and personal property of much value, and by his provision for her in his will which gave her one-half of his entire ■estate, she being also named as one of the executors thereof. The remaining one-half was given to his children in equal shares. Their friendly marital relation is likewise shown by his visits to her family and relatives at and near the home of her childhood, which, beginning with their wedding trip in 1866, were repeated yearly until his death.

It is inconceivable that he would have continued [268]*268these annual trips, with their attendant expense and trouble, except his relations with her family and herself were harmonious. Her son Ernest Irving Price died unmarried and without children, and his estate, which was largely derived from his father, the said Charles D. Price, by his will, passed to her.

Mrs. Price died January 27, 1917, aged eighty-three years and upwards, leaving a last will and testament of which these defendants are the duly qualified executors.

Plaintiffs, her stepchildren, bring this action to set aside certain decrees of the surrogate of New York county and to recover from her estate the moneys and property which came to her from their father, both by gift, by his will, and through her deceased son Ernest Irving Price.

The action is founded upon the proposition that because of her former marriage the ceremony between Hattie Mitchell and Charles D. Price was a useless formality and that she was never in truth the wife of Mr. Price. That she induced him to marry her by the false and fraudulent representation that she was unmarried, and both then and ever thereafter concealed from him the facts of her previous status so that he should continue to believe their relations were those of lawful wedlock; that so successful was she in this that he lived and died believing her to be his wife and that the fruit of their union was honestly begotten. That his gifts to her and her child, inter vivos as well as by will, were procured to be made by such fraudulent acts and concealments and were made solely because of his belief that she was his legal wife and her son his legitimate heir.

Plaintiffs’ cause of action must rest upon the proposition that this marriage with their father was wholly illegal and void. If otherwise valid and effectual. [269]*269mere concealment by the woman of the fact of her former marriage would not operate to destroy its force. Fisk v. Fisk, 6 App. Div. 432.

Neither would her active effort to deceive and false representations to that end serve to invalidate it. As was said by Mr.

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108 Misc. 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-tompkins-nysupct-1919.