Strong v. Gambier

155 A.D. 294, 140 N.Y.S. 410, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5107

This text of 155 A.D. 294 (Strong v. Gambier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strong v. Gambier, 155 A.D. 294, 140 N.Y.S. 410, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5107 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Thomas, J.:

The plaintiff claiming title as devisee under a will of Lilla A. Green, destroyed after her death, seeks-to have a deed of land in New Rochelle made by his testatrix adjudged a mortgage, and so it has been. The decedent’s collateral heirs joined for such relief, but unsuccessfully contended that no will was made. The Merchants’ Exchange National Bank, Gambier, individually and as executor of Charles H. Green, the husband of the testatrix, Louise B. Green, Green’s second wife, and the Hektograph Company, claim interest under the deed, and all have been unsuccessful save that the bank is adjudged a lienor on the land in the sum of $8,300 for loans to Green before his first wife’s death, but appeals because it was not allowed for loans made thereafter, while the plaintiff appeals because any lien was allowed. Sanbern and the Hamilton Trust Company, as judgment creditors of Charles H. Green, assert that Charles H. Green owned the land, while Alexander, not appealing, as the only judgment creditor at the time, contended that the land was by Green’s procurement placed in her hands to defeat creditors. Before complicating the inquiry by considering the claims of defendants, who, whatever their own disagreements, unite against the plaintiff and the heirs, it is convenient to decide whether Lilla A. Green left a will destroyed after her death. For, if she did not, the relief given the plaintiff belongs to the heirs. She died on November 9, 1905. He died in 1908. The plaintiff was his nephew, and at the age of eight became a member of his family and was educated and supported by his uncle and aunt, who had towards him an affection measured by the relation, and indicated at least by their helpfulness, although there is some contention that Mrs. Green deprecated, if she did not resent, .his marriage in 1902 to Miss Quimby, who also in July and August, 1902, visited in the family at the instance of Mrs. Green, under her own name as she proves, but under the assumed name, Riley, and as a friend of the cook, Mrs. Molineaux, as plaintiff’s opponents would prove but did [297]*297not. The plaintiff remained an actual member of the family till 1902, when he went to New Mexico, where he resided until 1906, when he returned to the city of New York. The will was executed in 1901. Kate Molineaux, the cook for seven years with the family in New York, and Michael O’Brien, the coachman, with his family living at the time in a house on the land, each testify that they signed the will at the request of Mrs. Green, and the former testifies that Mrs. Green asked them to sign as witnesses, and O’Brien also states that she asked them to sign her will but he does not say that she asked them to sign as witnesses. But each testifies that the testatrix read the will at the time and said that it was her will, and Molineaux states, with some variation as to the personal property, that it purported to give plaintiff the New Rochelle land and her personal property, while O’Brien says that it gave the land to plaintiff. Molineaux says that she read it when it was signed and three times thereafter, and follows its history — its deposit in a pigeon hole of Mrs. Green’s desk, and a year later in a tin box in the desk, where Molineaux afterwards saw it once each week while she was dusting, her own reading of it, her exhibition of it in 1902 to the plaintiff and Miss Quimby when she was staying at the house (the date of which she erroneously fixed in 1905 instead of 1902), who read it, the showing of it to her young children. She further testifies that at the time of the examination and burning of Mrs. Green’s papers after her death, Green handed her the will and another paper and told her to burn them, which she did after some days by putting the will in the furnace, as she at one time said, or in the range, as she later stated. The testimony of Molineaux is unfavorably affected by the fact that she said she burned the will at her master’s dictation, although her hesitation in doing so showed her consciousness of the wrong of it, and there were discrepancies in her statements and contradictions of her evidence that must be weighed in considering her truthfulness. They are placed methodically before the eye, as in the case of the other witnesses as to the existence of the will, in the helpful brief of the learned counsel for the heirs. But when it is considered that Mrs. Molineaux was an humble and unlearned woman speak[298]*298ing of events dimmed by the lapse of several years, and that there were exacted strict statements by several examiners, some confusion in memory or understanding tending to discrepancies and errors in particulars is not unnatural. As to the existence of the will, her testimony contributes: as to the destruction of it it is the sole evidence; as to the events at its execution and particularly that she and O’Brien were asked to sign as witnesses, her testimony is vital. Her testimony isolated would beget grave doubt, but it fits with the evidence of the other witnesses and lends probability. O’Brien states less and knows less, which may well be due to lack of opportunity, while the attack upon his veracity is by way of impeaching statements. Some of them were serious. But it is noticeabie that even in the alleged impeaching statements he is credited with saying that Mrs. Green called him in and that he signed a paper. The plaintiff’s wife read the will on several occasions, as did the plaintiff, and it was in form and substance as Molineaux and O’Brien testified, except as to the personal property and a reference in one instance to all real property. The plaintiff testified that he first learned from O’Brien, and not from Molineaux, as she states, when he returned from the West some two months after his aunt’s death, that the will had been destroyed, and he waited until after his uncle’s death in 1908 before he asserted his rights under the will, although he was erroneously allowed to testify to a conversation with Green respecting it. He was willing to abide by the justice and await the testamentary generosity of his uncle, and his omission to take any heed of what he conceived a right imparts infirmity to his testimony. The effect of such laches as to the bank I wifi.later consider, but the present question is, does his silence condemn his- evidence ? It hurts, but in conjunction with all other testimony his evidence has probative value. Mrs. Crosby and Josephine Frost after Mrs. Green’s death looked over her accumulated papers while Mr. Green was in and out. The former testified that Mr. Green made inquiry or reference to Mrs. Green’s will and that she found a paper and gave it to him and that he used an expression indicating that it was the paper he wanted. It was in the course of this clearing away of papers that [299]*299Molineaux states Green gave her the paper to destroy. The testimony of those witnesses, so far as the examination and destruction of papers is concerned, unites to aid Molineaux’s statements of the direction by Green to burn the will. But before the trial Mrs. Crosby wrote to Josephine Frost and sought to call to her attention the finding of an important paper, and the latter replied that the letter revived recollection of the examination and destruction of papers but not the reference to the will, and as a witness she disclaimed all recollection of it. Mrs. Crosby and Miss Frost were engaged in a joint work, and the incident, if it happened, would naturally interest each of them and cling in the memory. Mr. Burns, one of the defendants’ lawyers, by telephone conversed with Mrs. Crosby and she disclaimed any knowledge of the will except that she had heard that there was one.

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Bluebook (online)
155 A.D. 294, 140 N.Y.S. 410, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-v-gambier-nyappdiv-1913.