Smith v. . Keller

98 N.E. 214, 205 N.Y. 39, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1189
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 98 N.E. 214 (Smith v. . Keller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. . Keller, 98 N.E. 214, 205 N.Y. 39, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1189 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

Chase, J.

Ellen Raidy duly made her will April 15, 1896. At that time she was a widow with four children. By her will she gave to her daughter Diana one dollar, And divided in equal shares the remainder of her property, real and personal, among her three children, Daniel, Kate and Louise. Daniel died April 20, 1906, leaving a will by which he gave all of his property to his mother, *41 but provided therein that in case his mother did not survive him then he gave all of his property to his sisters, Kate and Louise. Ellen survived Daniel, and died February Id, 1907. Her will was admitted to probate March 17, 1907. This action was thereafter commenced to determine the validity or invalidity of the probate of the will of Ellen pursuant to the provisions of section 2653a of the Code of Civil Procedure. It is alleged in the complaint in substance that the execution of the will of Ellen was secured by fraud and undue influence, and that at the time of the alleged making and execution of said will and for a long time prior thereto she was weak, sick, aged and infirm and otherwise in such condition that she could be easily influenced, and that her children, Daniel, Kate and Louise, by threats, duress and coercion, compelled her to execute said will and practically disinherit Diana, the plaintiff.

Upon the trial the plaintiff stipulated that no claim of mental incapacity on the part of the testatrix was made by her, and when the case was submitted to the jury the court expressly charged that the competency of the testatrix to make a will is not challenged nor has the evidence justified a finding that she was not competent to make a will'. It was claimed upon the trial, however, that the will was not her voluntary act, but that it was procured by the undue influence of Daniel and Kate. Ellen Eaidy was left a widow in 1860, eleven days before her youngest child was horn. Her oldest child, Daniel, was then about six years old. The family was then living on a small piece of land in Steuben county which had been purchased by the husband, and was in possession of a larger adjoining piece of real property which the husband had a contract to purchase upon payment of certain moneys as provided therein.

Mrs. Eaidy, practically unaided except by the work of her children as they became old enough to aid her, not only paid the indebtedness of her husband’s estate, but *42 complied with the terms of the contract referred to, and also purchased and cleared still other lands, and at the time of making the will in question was the owner of several pieces of real property and also of personal property, including investments aggregating in value several thousand dollars. At the time the will was executed the children Daniel and Kate, both unmarried, resided with her. Louise had married ten years before and lived with her husband and family several miles away. Diana, the plaintiff, married contrary to the wishes of her mother and of her brother and sisters two years prior to that time and resided with her husband about half a mile from the home of Mrs. Raidy. Mrs. Raidy, as indicated by her history, was a strong and resolute woman and at that time about seventy years of age. She continued in good physical and mental health for several years thereafter until she had a fall and an attack of pneumonia, after which she ceased to work as she had done in previous years, and upon the death of Daniel, which was a great grief to her, she rapidly declined and died on the day stated. Louise lived three and one-half miles from the village of Bath, where Mrs. Raidy frequently went to transact business with an attorney well known in that county. She had been visiting Louise for several days when on the morning of the day that the will was made she was notified that two men, against each of whom she held a real property mortgage, wished to meet her at the office of the attorney in Bath and pay the mortgages and obtain satisfactions therefor. Louise, with Mrs. Raidy, drove to Bath and Mrs. Raidy went to the office of the attorney while Louise attended to business in other places in town. The business was transacted, the mortgages were paid and satisfied and a new loan was consummated and a mortgage taken therefor, and after such transactions were completed and the men with whom she was dealing had left the office, she told the attorney that she wanted to make her will. ;She described to him her property and asked if making a *43 will -would affect her rights daring her lifetime, and being told that it would not, she said if she could control it during her life, she wanted to give it to Daniel, Kate and Louise. The attorney being familiar with the family, asked her specifically in regard to Diana and discussed the matter of discriminating against Diana with her. She concluded by saying: “She has made me more trouble than all the other children I ever bore * * * At last she married a man she knew the family all objected to, and my heart was broken.” Some further suggestions were made to her by the attorney, and she replied: “That maybe so, but she shall never have a dollar that I worked to save.” She then said to the attorney that he knew what she wanted done, and he proceeded to prepare the will, and it was duly executed. She requested that he retain the possession of it. She was told by him that she could get the will at any time she wanted it, and that at any tune she wanted to change it she could do so in any way, or she could revoke it. It was put in the safe of the attorney, and remained there until after her death. After the will was made, from time to time she was at the office of the attorney transacting business, and on many of such occasions she was there alone with him. The attorney also, at one time several years after the will was made, went to her house, where a deed was prepared and executed by her of certain property to her daughter Kate, and he was alone with her there in consultation for some time. At none of these interviews did she ever refer to Diana, or to her will, or suggest that the same was not as desired by her, or that she wanted to make any change in it or revoke it. Although it is claimed, as we will hereinafter mention, that the son and the daughter Kate prevented her from seeing Diana, she lived from the time the will was made until her death within half a mile of the home of Diana, yet she never went to see her, and Diana never came to see her mother, *44 except on two occasions, a few days before her death, neither did either ever speak to the other so far as appears, except on the occasions when Diana came to see her as stated. Mrs. Raidy visited among her neighbors in the vicinity of her home and the home of Diana from time to time during these years, and it is reasonably certain that she could have seen Diana and talked with her, either with or without the knowledge of the children living with her, had she desired so to do.

Assuming as is conceded that the testatrix was competent to make a will, and also assuming that the same was her free and voluntary act, there was nothing to prevent her devising and bequeathing her property as she wished. The circumstances immediately surrounding her at the time the will was made, and the testimony of the draftsman of the will, indicate very strongly that the will was her free, deliberate and intentional act.

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Bluebook (online)
98 N.E. 214, 205 N.Y. 39, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-keller-ny-1912.