Tompkins v. Leary

134 A.D. 114, 118 N.Y.S. 810, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2789
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 8, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 134 A.D. 114 (Tompkins v. Leary) 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
Tompkins v. Leary, 134 A.D. 114, 118 N.Y.S. 810, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2789 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Jenks, J.:

The defendant appeals from a judgment on a verdict at Trial Term for the plaintiffs, and from an order denying a new trial on the minutes. The action is to recover securities valued at $13,110, as a gift inter vivas made by Cartwright to the plaintiffs.. The defendant is the sole surviving executor of Cartwright, but is sued personally. He makes general denial.

The plaintiffs’ case rests mainly upon the testimony of Johnson, a servant in Cartwright’s house for 12 years. On July 20, 1906, Cartwright, aged 84 years, ill in his home, was about to be taken on that day to the hospital for a desperate operation. Johnson testifies that about 8 a, m. he and the plaintiff, D. Tompkins, were alone [116]*116with Cartwright, who picked up' a key from a number which he had in his hand, and said to Tompkins, “Dan, this is the key of my desk down in my office, and * * you unlock the top of my desk and you will find some money there and securities of considerable value,” and that thereupon Cartwright handed the keys to Tompkins, saying, “ Take my keys.” Tompkins said, “ What will I do with those securities, Uncle George?” and Cartwright answered, “Keep them for you and your wife, you and Mary.” The witness then said to Tompkins, “ ‘ Ask him how about running the house while he is gone to the hospital,’ because [says the witness] he wanted me to stay there, and Mr. Cartwright said, Let Richard and Lucy \i. e., Johnson and another servant] buy the necessary food to suit themselves, and you see that the bills are paid.’ ” The witness testifies that in a very few minutes the ambulance came and took Cartwright away. Cartwright died in the hospital the next day.

Circumstances which may make for the plaintiffs are that Cartwright was the godfather of Tompkins’ wife; that the Tompkinses lived in the same town ; that they appear to have been frequent and intimate visitors in Cartwright’s home, and that Cartwright had no near relatives and mentioned none nearer than first and second cousins in his will. And plaintiffs’ witness Ellegood testifies that Cartwright had said to him that Cartwright’s sister had given once a deed of a house to Mrs.. Tompkins, but had withdrawn it, and then remarked, “ ‘ Mow, I cannot understand why Libby didn’t make some provision for Mary; ’ Mary is a namesake of the family, and had always been regarded almost like one of their own children. * * * I will have to see what I can do to make it up to her.’ ”

On the other hand, Cartwright had made a will 8 months before, whereby he devised certain pieces of realty to a church and a hospital respectively, 100 shares of stock to 2 cousins respectively, $11,000 each to 4 second cousins, and $2,000 to a Miss Swain. He also gave to Mary Tompkins and her husband (these plaintiffs) his house and land wherein he resided, with the furniture thereof, for their lives, and then to their son. He gave legacies to two churches and made some small specific bequests. The said house and land given to these plaintiffs were worth about $8,000 exclusive of the contents thereof. The total estate was about $104,000. After deduction for the church of $20,000, for the hospital of $15,000, [117]*117for St. Matthew’s Church of |1,000, for Star of Bethlehem. Church of $1,000, and of $8,000 for the house left to the plaintiffs, the balance of the estate was $35,000 including the securities in suit. The total pecuniary legacies were $46,000, leaving a deficiency of $10,000, subject to the determination whether a legacy had lapsed which "would leave the deficiency about $700. If the securities in suit were taken out, there would be a shortage of $13,000 or $14,000. This proof is pertinent to show that the testator did make a provision for Mary — a house — which could be said to make up for the house, taken from her; that the provision was probably as large as that made for any other individual, and that if the securities sued for are excluded from the scope of the will, such exclusion would seriously disturb the specific provisions thereof. No reason is suggested why such exclusion should have been made. Johnson is confronted by a witness, Mrs. Rosa Coutant, a professional nurse, who was in charge of Cartwright," and who had been an inmate of his house for a long time. Her testimony may be summarized as follows: She was in attendance upon Cartwright on that day until she went with him to the hospital. The plaintiff, D. Tompkins, came into Cartwright’s room at 8:30 A. m., when she was alone with Cartwright. Johnson had gone to order a carriage to take her to the hospital. She gave a fan to Tompkins to take her place in fanning Cartwright. As she was about to fetch her bag from her room, she noticed Cartwright’s watch on a bureau and said to him, “ ‘ Here is your watch; what do you want to do with it?’ and he says, ‘Well, I will take it with me.’ I said to him, ‘If you take the watch, they will take it from you at the hospital.’ And he says,1 Well, then, I won’t take the -watch.’ ” Then he held it up with his hand and said, “ ‘ Danny Tompkins, I will give you this watch and chain.’ ” Then, as the witness turned to him, she saw his keys on the bureau. She picked them up and said to Cartwright, “What do you want done with your keys?” He took them up in his hand “and he fumbled them a little while; he stopped and paused and he says, he handed them to Danny Tompkins and he said, ‘ I will give you these keys to keep while I am gone, and I will give you full charge of the house while I am gone.’ And then he said, ‘ Danny, there is quite a good deal of money in my desk, and there is bonds and mortgages or stocks and mortgages in my [118]*118desk; ’ also, lie says, £ Take good cave of them.’ He commenced to tell then what he had done for Hr. Tompkins’ son; he says, Danny, I have given your son Danny this house and-lot, but * * * I have given yon and your wife, Mary, the use. of this as long as yon live.’ ” The witness then stepped out of the room to get her bag, and Cartwright continued in this strain, telling what he had done, and the witness testifies, ££ but I could hear everything.” The bag was on the edge of the witness’ room outside the door, and the witness did not go out of hearing. She testifies that as she started back she saw the doctor and Johnson and Ellegood coming up the stairs, and thereupon Cartwright was brought down. She testifies that Johnson was not present at the conversation; that “all he heard of it was while he ivas coming up the stairs, just as he came in the room there with the other people; he ivas not present.” She positively denies that Cartwright said in her- hearing, in words or substance, that the securities were for the plaintiffs. She testifies that D. Tompkins said, “Thank you, Uncle George,” after Cartwright had told him of the provision made in his will.

It does not follow that either Johnson or Mrs. Coutant is a deliberate perjurer. Moore on Facts (§ 883) quotes the observation. of Manning, J., in Piffet's Succession (37 La. Ann. 871, 873): “The narration of conversations correctly is the most difficult feat of memory and of expression, and of all evidence the narration of a witness of his conversation with a dead person is esteemed in justice the weakest.” (See, too, McKinney's Administratrix v. Slack, 19 N. J. Eq. 16Í.) The effect of the variance between them is whether Cartwright by his conversation intended to give the key to Tompkins to take charge of the property in the desk while Cartwright was absent in the hospital, or whether Cartwright sought to give the securities to D. Tompkins and his wife. Johnson on cross-examination testified that Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 A.D. 114, 118 N.Y.S. 810, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tompkins-v-leary-nyappdiv-1909.