Prince v. Hazleton

20 Johns. 502
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedNovember 15, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 20 Johns. 502 (Prince v. Hazleton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prince v. Hazleton, 20 Johns. 502 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1822).

Opinion

The Chancellob.

The question to be discussed is, whether the nuncupative will of William Jones, as stated to have been made on the 11th of April, 1820, can be admitted to probate, as being valid in law. It becomes a complicated question, under the circumstances, and involves in the inquiry matter of fact, mixed with matter of law. I shall consider it to be my duty to speak frankly and freely on the whole subject of the case, but, at the same time, with a sincere respect for the character of the Court whose opinion is now under review, and from which I shall be obliged very greatly to dissent.

William Jones was an Irishman by birth, and a religious catholic by profession. He was bom in the county of Dublin, in Ireland, and received a school education about thirty years before his death, and which carries us back to the year 1790. He had then living, parents, brothers and sisters, and he was the youngest of the family. He was apprenticed to a house-carpenter in the city of Dublin, and served a regular apprenticeship of seven years. When this service expired, he worked as a journeyman, for nine oi* twelve months, and then emigrated to the United States. This brings us, in the history of his life, to the year 1798, and perhaps that fact may enable us to give some probable solution of the only circumstance that seems (if we except [508]*508the will) to cast any shade over the memory of this man j 1 allude to the change of his paternal name, O’ Connor, for that of Jones. It does not appear, precisely, when he changed his name, hut I refer it back to that period, as the probable time, and presume that he and his family were more or less implicated in the peril of the rebellion, which broke out in Ireland in 1798, in consequence of an ill-fated attempt to effect a revolution in that kingdom. It is probable, that he may have emigrated, for safety ; and, for greater safety, laid dovra the name of O’ Connor, which was then memorable in the Irish annals, on the side of the unfortunate. But, be this conjecture as it may, we find him first at New-York, then for two years at Savannah, then living, for 12 or 14 years, in the island of Cuba, and learning the Spanish language, and where he probably made his fortune. He is next traced, on his return to the United States, to the cities of Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New-York; and in all of them, he seems to have had business, pecuniary concerns, and friends.

These are the few and-imperfect sketches of his biography to be selected from the case, before we find him rich in the fruits of his enterprise, but sick with a disease of the liver, at the boarding-house of Mrs. Fox, in Cherry-street, in New-York, the latter end of March, 1820.

Jones, while at the. house of Mrs. Fox, claimed to be worth, altogether, 65,000 dollars, in property, existing in New-York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and the island of Cuba ; and to show that this claim had pretty fair pretensions to truth, there was actually found at 1ns lodgings, at his death, bank books, showing deposits to his credit, in one or more banks of New-York, to between thirteen and fourteen thousand dollars.

He had been sick at Mrs. Fox’s about five weeks, when he is said to have made the will now tinder consideration. During that time, he had one Ellen Taylor, a coloured woman, for his hired nurse; and there was a Mrs. Hazleton, who had rooms, and boarded in the same house, who also acted as his nurse.

Whether Jones ever saw or heard of Mrs. II. before he came to board at Mrs. Fox’s, does not appear, nor have we [509]*509m the ease, any distinct lineaments of the character which Mrs. H. sustains, or the business or purpose of her life. She rented the two front rooms in the boarding-house, and yet, her brother says, she followed no kind of business. She has had two husbands, and her present one is said to be a seafaring man, by one of her witnesses, and, another of them says, that he had been voyages at sea, and had been on the gaol limits, and was then following his trade of a whitesmith at Savannah. Why she lives in this detached situation, without a family of her own, and a husband to live with and provide for her, as is quite common with married persons, must be left to conjecture. She was able, all at once, and, as it would seem, without any adequate cause, and without any remarkable display of goodness, or even of attention, to gain a wonderful ascendency over the affections of this sick man. If her story be true, and the will genuine, she obliterated from Joneses breast the sense of friendship, the charities of religion, the deep-rooted traces of national affection, every tender recollection of the ties of blood, of his natal soil, of the school-fellows of his youth, of father and mother, brother and sister, relative and friend. He was persuaded at one nod, to pour the accumulated treasures of his varied life, into the lap of this mysterious woman—-the acquaintance of a day!

The will, as certified by the four witnesses, is in these words: “ 1 now say, as I have repeatedly said before, that I leave all the property I am possessed of to Mary Hazleton. I do this in consequence of the good treatment and kind attentions I have received from her during my sickness. She is worthy of it. No other person shall inherit my property. I wish you all in the room to take notice of this.”

This will carries marks of fraud on its very face. Let us examine it attentively. This sweeping donation is made, for what ? For good treatment and, hind attentions received from her during Ms sickness. The" sickness had lasted only five weeks, and it was not so bad but that he was able occasionally to ride out. No person apprehended any immediate danger. He had a hired nurse, a coloured woman, who was, by Mm, totally forgotten. What [510]*510could this other woman have possibly done, in the course of five weeks, to awaken, in any rational miñd, a sense of such enormous obligation, or to call forth such stupendous remuneration ? I am forcibly struck with the folly and falsehood, of the motive assigned. But the will goes on, and adds, She is worthy of it; and where does her great merit appear, and from what circumstance does she entitle herself to this extravagant eulogy ? The very declaration, that she was worthy to possess all his estate, proves, that Jones must have been insane, or that the whole is a base fabrication. The will goes on further, and says, JYo other person shall inherit my property. And why these words of special exclusion of the rest of the world ? • They seem to imply a heartlessness and misanthropy, very unnatural and very improbable for any man to express, in the contemplation of death, and who was in the enjoyment of the comforts and the smiles of fortune ; and especially for a native born Irishman, who was in the midst of his emigrant countrymen, and could not but have heard and felt the claims of religion, of charity, of the widow and the orphan. He then adds, I wish you all to talce notice of this a speech which looks so much like contrivance, that it does, of itself, throw a suspicion over the whole piece. This man must have been previously told, that the statute required, that in making a nuncupative will, the testator must

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Bluebook (online)
20 Johns. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prince-v-hazleton-nycterr-1822.