Judges: Smith
Filed Date: 3/8/1905
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The determining rule for the disposition of these cases is thus expressed in the headnote of Matter of Tompkins, 69 App. Div. 474, 74 N. Y. Supp. 1002:
“Where, on an appeal to the Appellate Division from a decree of the Surrogate’s Court made in a proceeding for the probate of a will, it appears that the disposition which should be made of the questions of fact presented by the evidence given is not free from doubt, and the result reached in the Surrogate’s Court is not entirely satisfactory, the Appellate Division will send the case to a trial term for a jury trial.”
The deceased was 97 years old at the time of his death, in January, 1903. His wife had died the September previous. He left surviving one child, a son, Alexander Warnock, who was a married man, living upon a farm about 12 miles distant from the farm of the deceased. About a year before his death he and his wife had deeded the son the home farm, which was of the value of about $3,000. Prior to that, and when the sqn was married, he had given the son about $1,700, which is claimed ,by the son, however, to have been compensation for services upon the home farm up to that time. In November, after his wife’s death, he sent for his nephews Thomas and Robert Anderson, living in New York City. The nephews came to him, and upon the next day he assigned to them securities of the value of about $4,800. The succeeding day he went with his nephews to New York, and there remained with them until his death. Prior to his death, however, the will in question was drawn by a New York attorney, giving all of his property to the appellants. Besides these securities, which had been given to the appellants here, the deceased had about $400 in the bank, which would pass under the will. Upon a proceeding for the probate of the will, the son contested the probate. The Surrogate denied probate; holding the deceased was not competent to make a will, and that it was obtained by the appellants through undue influence.
Under the rule of law, the contestant must make clear the fact that the will, properly executed in. form, was not the free and intelligent act of its maker. While an unnatural disposition of the property in the will may be evidence, and sometimes is strong evidence, that the will was unduly procured, the burden still rests with the contestant. The record discloses no room for doubt that the. testator’s wife was a clear-headed, capable woman. There is evidence to the effect that before her deáth it was talked between the deceased and his wife that after her death he should go and live with his nephews (the appellants here), and that the son should receive no more of the father’s property than he had already received. This would seem to be corroborated by the remarks of the deceased aft