Judges: Fowler
Filed Date: 12/15/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The grandson of the testatrix, omitted from the paper writing offered for probate as the last will of his grandmother, contests such probate on the usual grounds. The will in question is in favor of an adult son and daughter of testatrix, but charged with their support of an incompetent son of the testatrix. The estate is not large.
The allegation of undue influence has not been sustained. It is not sufficient to rely on the relations of testatrix to the
The omission of a grandchild from a will is not in itself sufficient to cast, in the first instance, an additional burden on proponents of the will. The testatrix had the right and power to disinherit her children or grandchildren, and she might dispose of her propety as she saw fit, if capacity to make a will existed. Norton, 2 Redf. 6; Mairs v. Freeman, 3 id. 181; La Bau v. Vanderbilt, id. 399; Matter of Cornell, 43 App. Div. 241; Horn v. Pullman, 72 N. Y. 269, 276, 277. These established rules dispose of the objection interposed and charging undue influence, as there was no direct evidence in any way sufficient to sustain such charge.
The fact that testatrix was aged and deaf (which is disputed), and was also blind, did not render her incapable of making her will. Horn v. Pullman, 72 N. Y. 276. A blind person may make a will. Such a condition as that of testatrix merely casts upon the proponents the burden of proving, with greater particularity, that the paper propounded was the conscious act of a free and capable testatrix, and that no imposition was practiced on her. It seems to me that the proponents have discharged this burden resting upon them sufficiently in this cause. That the provisions of the will were dictated by testatrix herself, and that the will was read over to her before execution, is established, and it is not contradicted. There is an absence of proof of weakness of mind. The will is sufficiently rational on its face to furnish no inherent evidence of a disordered intellect.
The only remaining question then is as to the sufficiency of the execution. The Statute of Wills provides for a greater
Decreed accordingly.