Stackhouse v. Horton

15 N.J. Eq. 202
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 N.J. Eq. 202 (Stackhouse v. Horton) 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
Stackhouse v. Horton, 15 N.J. Eq. 202 (N.J. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinion

The Ordinary.

The decedent, Esther Horton, died in February, Í852. She was upwards of seventy years of age-She had been feeble in bodily health for seven or eight years prior to her decease. During the last four months of her life her decline was rapid. Her disease was an affection of the lungs. It finally assumed the shape of consumption, of which she died. For the last three years of her life she was deprived of her sight — most of that period totally blind. Silas Horton, her husband, died in December, 1842. There was no issue of their marriage. It nowhere appears, in the [203]*203voluminous testimony taken, what relatives Silas Horton left at his decease. The numerous individuals by the name of Horton mentioned in the paper offered for probate, and others by that name connected by the evidence with this case, are the blood relations of Esther Horton. Whether they were of any relationship to Silas Horton, deceased, does not appear. Silas Horton died seized of a large real and personal estate. His personal property was inventoried at nearly twenty-nine thousand dollars. Of this his widow received, by his will, about sixteen thousand dollars, and the real estate devised to her is valued at upwards of ten thousand dollars. She died seized of the same real estate devised to her by her husband; and the personal property which she received under the will of her husband accumulated in her hands, so that the amount, at the time of her death, exceeded twenty-one thousand dollars. The disposition made by her of this real and personal property by the paper writing propounded for probate is the origin of the present controversy.

Esther Horton left a paper writing, bearing date the 13th day of January, 1852, purporting to be her last will and testament; and it was offered for probate in the surrogate’s office of the county of Morris by Jacob H. Crammer and William Logan, named therein as executors. Eour caveats were filed. One by Silas Horton, who is a nephew of the decedent, but not one of her next of kin, his father, Aaron Horton, being alive; Aaron Horton, a brother of decedent; Susan McCollum, a sister, and Curtis Coe, a nephew and one of the next of kin, each filed a caveat.

After a protracted investigation before five judges of the Orphans Court of the county of Morris, that court (two of the judges dissenting) adjudged and decreed that the instrument offered for probate is not the last will and testament of the said Esther Horton, deceased, and probate thereof was denied by the court. The court did further order that the costs of both parties to the litigation before them should be paid out by the estate. The court taxed the costs for the services of the judges at two dollars a day, each, making [204]*204$690; for the counsel of the will $1250; and for the counsel of the caveators $1250. The surrogate’s fees are taxed at $296, including $20 for reading the depositions; sheriff’s fees for serving citations $21.64; stationery is charged $16.52. These expenses are independent of the witnesses’ fees, which were ordered to be paid, but the amount of which I do not find carried out in the bill of expenses. The whole amount of costs is nearly four thousand dollars.

From these orders an appeal was taken to this court. I must determine whether the Orphans Court was right in refusing this writing probate; and it is my further duty to decide whether the costs taxed by that court shall be paid out of the estate.

The caveators object to the writing offered as the last will and testament of Esther Horton, as follows, on the ground—

1st. Of the general incapacity of the decedent to make a will at the time of the execution of this paper.

2d. That if of sufficient general legal capacity, yet the decedent was the subject of monomania in reference to one of her relations, who had claims upon her bounty, so warping her affections and understanding as to prevent her making a disposition of her property in conformity with her real affections and her moral obligations.

3d! That the execution of the paper was the result of improper influence and fraud.

The witnesses who express opinions unfavorable to the capacity of the decedent to. make a will, as well as the facts upon which their opinions are based, are few, notwithstanding the unusual amount of evidence that has been pressed into the case, the larger part of it wholly irrelevant, and which should not have been admitted by the court. It is not contended, nor was any effort made to prove that the decedent was naturally a woman of feeble intellect. On the contrary, the whole evidence taken on both sides shows that she possessed at maturity rather a strong mind. She was self-willed, impetuous, and unusually susceptible to prejudices. She had an opinion of her own, in state as well as [205]*205domestic affairs, and her opinions in these matters were neither singular or erratic. Hor business capacities are abundantly proved by the fact, that she maintained always, even up to the day of her death, the control and management of the estate left her by her husband, selecting her own agents to aid her without any dictation from others, and herself directing those agents, and they submitting to her judgment, without ever questioning its propriety. But it is contended that her mind began to fail her soon after the death of her husband; that from that time her body began to yield and give way to a slow but a steady and wasting disease, and that with her body there was a natural decay of her intellect, which became so feeble, during the last few months of her existence, as to deprive her of those qualities of mind which capacitated her for the important duty of disposing of her property by a last will and testament.

That the mind of the decedent was broken, impaired, and shattered by disease, is beyond question. But with such a standard of capacity, very lew who had reached the age of three score and ten years would be deemed competent to make a final disposition of their property. Did the decedent comprehend the act she was performing ? And was her mind strong enough to form a fixed intention, and to summon her scattered and enfeebled thoughts, so as to enable her to execute that intention ? If she did not comprehend the act, or, if comprehending it, she could not control the feeble faculties of her mind, so as to enable her to execute her intention, then she was not capacitated to make her will; it matters not whether such incapacity was the effect of a disordered or an enfeebled intellect. But although the numerous authorities, in our own and other courts, touching the subject of testamentary capacity, were ably reviewed and criticised by counsel in this case, I deem it unnecessary to do more than adopt for my guide, in this investigation, the rule laid down by Judge Washington, in Den v. Vancleve, in the Circuit Court of the United States for this district. That rule has been approved and acted upon by my predecessors; it com[206]*206mends itself to my own judgment, and I do not feel wdlling, nor is it necessary in the present instance to question its propriety or complain that it is not sufficiently rigid in the standard it fixes for the mental capacity of a testator. “ He must,” in the language of the law, be possessed of sound and disposing mind and memory. He must have memory; a man in whom this faculty is totally extinguished cannot be said to possess understanding to any degree whatever or for any purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.J. Eq. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stackhouse-v-horton-njsuperctappdiv-1854.