Watson v. Holmes

80 Misc. 48, 140 N.Y.S. 727
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 80 Misc. 48 (Watson v. Holmes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Holmes, 80 Misc. 48, 140 N.Y.S. 727 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Clark, J.

This action is brought by the plaintiff, as executor of the will of Morton W. Rundel, deceased, to [50]*50set aside certain transfers of personal property made by said Rundel in Ms lifetime to defendant Elizabeth A. Holmes, on the ground, that such transfers, which defendant alleges were gifts, were procured by fraud and undue influence.

Morton W. Rundel was a bachelor and had for many years conducted an art store in the city of Rochester, where he died on the 5th day of November, 1911, aged seventy-three years. He was not in active business at the time of his death, having retired in 1904. Mr. Rundel left a will dated August 11, 1910, in which this plaintiff was named as executor, and there was a codicil to that will dated April 17,1911, and after Rundel’s death the will and codicil were admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court of Monroe county.

By the terms of the will, after making liberal provision for Ms sister, who was Ms nearest relative, and also remembering certain collateral relatives, he devised the residuum of Ms estate to the city of Rochester for the purpose of establishing a memorial art gallery, but no particular amount was named for that purpose. By the codicil to his will he increased to a certain extent his gifts to collateral relatives and changed the legacy to Ms sister from the income on $100,000, wMch was provided for in the will, to a legacy providing that she be paid $3,600 a year, in equal monthly payments of $300 each, secured by 150 shares of Eastman Kodak Company stock, left in trust during the life of his sister.

The defendant and Mr. Rundel had been acquaintances for many years, and they were both spiritualists, and it is claimed he believed that acting through defendant as a medium he could get reliable information from spirits, both in reference to his health, medical treatment and business affairs.

In the latter part of July, 1910, Mr. Rundel went to [51]*51Atlantic City, N. J., intending to spend some little time at that resort. It had been his custom to go to Atlantic City occasionally for rest and recreation. At the time he went in July, 1910, his health was not robust, but he was not by any means in a serious condition, he being up and around and able to attend to his ordinary affairs.

Before he went to Atlantic City he had invited defendant and her widowed daughter to go there as his guests, but they did not accompany him. A few days after Mr. Rundel arrived at Atlantic City defendant and her daughter, Mrs. Sawyer, went there in pursuance of his invitation to visit him, and when they arrived, although he met them at the station in a carriage, they found that he was seriously ill, he having been stricken with a heart difficulty on his journey from Rochester to Atlantic City a few days previously. Defendant was a practical nurse, a widow over sixty years of age, and had followed the business of nursing to a certain extent at Rochester for many years. On her arrival at Atlantic City and finding Mr. Rundel out of health, at his request she at once undertook to care for him, and continued to do so until about the 7th of August,. 1910, when she and her daughter returned with him to Rochester. They traveled in the night, he being critically ill at all times during the journey, and defendant stayed up all night and nursed and cared for him. They arrived in Rochester the next morning and went immediately to Mr. Rundel’s boarding place at 57 South Clinton street, where he had lived and had rooms for many years. Before arriving in Rochester from Atlantic City, and when they reached Canandaigua, defendant telegraphed or telephoned ahead for a physician to be present and attend Mr. Rundel on their arrival at his hoarding place.

The first night after he arrived there defendant did [52]*52not stay with Mr. Rundel, but left Mm in the care of Ms landlady, defendant g'oing to her own residence in Rochester. The next time she saw him, which was the next day, Mr. Rundel had not improved, and he requested defendant to remain and care for him, wMch she did, giving him excellent care and attention from that time continuously and without interruption until the time of Ms death. Her attention and care of Mr. Rundel were constant, she being with Mm practically all the time, night and day, she alone ministering to Ms every want.

Mr. Rundel remained in his rooms on South Clinton street from about August 8,1910, until early in March, 1911, when he moved to a house at No. 732 Bast Main street, in the city of Rochester, which property was purchased and the title taken in the name of defendant, although it was largely paid for by moneys originally furnished by Mr. Rundel.

Mr. Rundel and defendant had not only been acquaintances, but had been close personal friends for many years previously to 1910, and he had shown his regard for and interest in her by giving her various articles of personal property, notably fifty shares of the common stock of the Eastman Kodak Company May 11, 1908, tMrty shares of the common stock of the same company October 7, 1909, and ninety-five shares of the common stock of the same company February 3,1910. These gifts, being one hundred and seventy-five shares of the common stock of the Eastman Kodak Company, were all made previous to Mr. Rundel’s last illness, which came upon Mm the last days of July, 1910, and at times when he was in his usual mental and physical vigor, and these gifts are in no way questioned or attacked in this litigation.

When Mr. Rundel came back from Atlantic City on or about the 8th of August, 1910, he was still the owner [53]*53of a very large amount of personal property, aggregating in value about $572,000. He owned 1,415 shares of the common stock of the Eastman Kodak Company, and stocks of many other corporations, as fully detailed in the complaint.

Of the 1,415 shares of the Eastman Kodak Company stock above referred to the defendant received by way of gifts from Mr. Rundel, as she claims, between the day he returned from Atlantic City and the time of his death, 784 shares, and her daughter, Mrs. Sawyer, received 21 shares, also claimed to be a gift.

When Mr. Rundel returned from Atlantic City he had on deposit in various banks in the city of Rochester' cash aggregating in amount $6,745.49. After his death it was discovered that between the time of his return from Atlantic City and-the time of his death he had transferred to defendant a large amount of personal property on the dates as follows:

1910.
Aug. 10.
300 shares Eastman Kodak common stock.
Aug. 27.
100 shares Eastman Kodak common stock.
Aug. 27.
100 shares American Fruit Products Company common stock.
Dec. 25.
Cash, $6,500.
1911.
Feb.
Cash, $3,900.
June 13.
84 'shares Eastman Kodak common stock.
June 13.
18 shares Hungerford Smith stock.
June 17.
Bill of sale, jewelry, pictures, personal effects.
Aug. 1
Insurance policy for $3,000.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Misc. 48, 140 N.Y.S. 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-holmes-nysupct-1913.