Thompson v. Quimby

2 Bradf. 449
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2 Bradf. 449 (Thompson v. Quimby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Quimby, 2 Bradf. 449 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1853).

Opinion

The Subeogate.

The probate of the will of the decedent is contested on the grounds of invalid execution, insufficient testamentary capacity, and undue influence.

I. By a clause in the will, the following provision is made: “ All such household furniture, jewelry, chemical and other apparatus, which is specified or enumerated in a certain schedule accompanying-this my will and which is signed by me, I give and dispose of to the respective parties named in said schedule, and in the proportion as therein designated.”

The statute requires the will to be signed by the testator, and attested by the subscribing witnesses at the end. It appears that the schedule referred to in the will, was not attached to the instrument at the time of execution, or subsequently. Something was said concerning it when the decedent was about signing the will, and the idea was advanced that it might be annexed afterwards; but the proceeding was not interrupted, and he called on the witnesses to attest, and declared the instrument to be his will, notwithstanding the schedule was not ready. I cannot perceive that it would have made any difference, whether the schedule was attached to the will or not. In either case, unless executed and attested as a will, it could have no testamentary character. Reference may-dte made in a will to another document, for purposes of description, but there can be no valid testamentary dispositions unless contained in [459]*459the will; and the testator cannot in his will reserve the power of giving, or declare that he does give, by an instrument not formally executed according to the provisions of the statute. The schedule it was proposed to attach to the will, as well as the clause in the will referring to it, would consequently have been void, even had the schedule been annexed. The failure of that provision would not, however, have avoided the entire will. The schedule was not designed to be an integral part of the will, but only to be an appendant. All that was intended to be in the will was in it. The instrument itself was complete and perfect, was declared by the decedent to be his last will and testament, and was signed and attested as such at the end. Notwithstanding one of its provisions looked to another instrument and other gifts, that circumstance did not affect the integrity of the will as a complete act then accomplished. Hie document itself received all the solemnities designed to be performed, and requisite to the due execution of a will; and the appending of a schedule intended to effectuate the objects of one of the clauses, or the failure to append it, could, I think, have no effect upon the question of the due execution of what was at the time signed, declared, and attested as the last will. Independently of this view, there is enough in the evidence to show that the intention in respect to the schedule, so far as it had been proposed to execute it at that time as a supplement to the transaction then consummated, was for the time at least, waived or abandoned. The will was executed without it.

II. I shall, in the next place, proceed to consider the evidence adduced to establish the decedent’s insanity.

Born in the county of Suffolk, Mr. Thompson was for some years engaged in business in the town of Islip, and then came to the city of New-York, where he continued to reside for nearly half a century, and died at the age of 75, having amassed a large fortune, amounting nearly to three hundred thousand dollars.

His only son, Edward, died in the year 1835, leaving a [460]*460widow and three children, Edward, Augustus, and Cornelia. By his will he constituted his father, the decedent, a trustee of his estate for the benefit of his family. Augustus died under age: Cornelia was married in 1848 to Thomas R. Quimby. She and her brother Edward, who is still a minor, contest their grandfather’s will.

The decedent made three wills. By one executed August 31, 1850, Abijah Mann, jun., acting as his counsel, after legacies amounting in the aggregate to $26,500, to several friends and relatives, he gave $10,000 in trust for his grand-daughter, Mrs. Quimby, and the residue of his estate in trust for his grandson, Edward—, during life, with remainder to their issue.

On the 13th of May, 1851, by another will, William W. Campbell acting as his counsel, after several legacies to friends and relatives, amounting in the aggregate to ten thousand dollars, he gave five thousand dollars in trust for Mrs. Quimby, twenty thousand dollars in trust for Edward,—during life,-—-and the residue of his estate in trust for various benevolent and religious institutions.

On the 27th day of October, 1851, two days before his death, he executed the will propounded for probate, by which he left sundry legacies, amounting to $15,250; gave his grand-daughter, Cornelia, and her mother, $100 each; his grandson, Edward, $15,000, in trust during life; and the remainder to religious and charitable institutions.

It is contended that at the time of the execution of this last instrument Mr. Thompson was not of sound mind. The evidence offered to impeach his sanity runs back through a long series of years.

Solomon Davis, employed by him as a coachman and in other capacities, lived with him twenty-two years before his death for about two years, and subsequently at various intervals, from one to four months at a time. He says, “ I have lived with him sixteen times, off and on. . '. . He was a curious man, and had curious habits. . . . He gave me a book to read, called Francis Barrett; [461]*461a book to work spells, cure fever and ague, and raise spirits. He then said he knew a place at Montauk where Kidd’s money was buried; that he had been on there with an old man he took up, and had a rod that would attract to the money. That he got a man at Sag-Harbor named David Mulford. He acted as rodsman. It did not work well in the old man’s hands, because Mulford had more of the Water of Life in him. I asked him why Mulford had more than other men, whether it.was because he was a bigger man, because of his size ? He said, Ho, it was because he drank more rum. He said Mulford took the rod in his hands, and it worked well, and he found where the deposit was, struck a crowbar down on it, and it sounded; formed his ring and commenced digging. Just as he broke the turf, there was a great black and white spotted bull came running over the hill, throwing his tail as if he had the wattles in his back in the spring of the year. The wattles is a kind of fly. The bull pawed and hoofed the dirt, he said, as if he was mad. There were nearly a thousand cattle, he said, that came and passed diagonally over another hill opposite, which acted just like that bull. He said the bull looked to him as big as a mountain. I said, A small mountain, I suppose. He said, Well, it was as big a bull as ever I saw. He said, when the cattle were passing so, Mulford said with an oath, ‘ By God, we have got it.’ Whereupon the cattle all stopped, and went feeding quietly. After that, the crowbar dropped or sunk down into the earth as it stood, nearly a foot. That he, Thompson, told them to let the crowbar stand, till he dug to see what stopped it. Previous to this he said Mulford’s speaking broke the spell. He did not say what made Mulford speak. He said he dug till he got to the point of the crowbar, shoving off the earth, and examining and handling it all over to see what stopped the crowbar, before Mulford spoke; and he found a little piece of mother-of-pearl fan (which he showed to me), at the point of the [462]

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Bluebook (online)
2 Bradf. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-quimby-nysurct-1853.