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Surrogate's Court, New York County, May, 1899.

[Vol. 27.

Matter of the Accounting of WILLIAM G. McCORMICK, as Executor, Etc., of WILLIAM H. MARTIN, Deceased.

Trusts

(Surrogate's Court, New York County, May, 1899.)

Accounting Statute of Limitations does not run unless trustee renounces.

Unless a testamentary trustee distinctly repudiates that relationship and clearly conveys such repudiation to the beneficiary, mere lapse of time will not preclude the beneficiary from compelling the trustee to account.

PROCEEDINGS upon an accounting.

John N. Johnson, for petitioner.

Abner C. Thomas, for executor.

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VARNUM, S. The application herein was heard by Surrogate Arnold, and it has since been stipulated that the questions involved be decided by me. The prayer of the petition is that the respondent be directed to account as executor and trustee." It appears that a decree judicially settling the accounts of respondent, as executor, was made by this court, in 1870. While a general allegation of fraud is now made, no evidence to substantiate such allegation is submitted. There is no valid reason given why this decree should not be permitted to stand. Matter of Tilden, 98 N. Y. 434. The sole question that remains is as to the liability of the respondent to account as testamentary trustee. It is contended that even if such an obligation exists, the present petition is fatally defective in that it does not comply with the requirements of sections 2804 and 2806 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Those sections contain the provisions applicable to proceedings by a beneficiary to compel a trustee to pay over money or deliver personal property. The petition herein asks for an accounting only, and, therefore, comes directly under sections 2807 and 2808, the requirements of which appear to have been followed. It is urged that the Statute of Limitations has run against the petitioner. A certain portion of the trust estate became payable to the petitioner upon the death of a life beneficiary in 1897, and, hence, as to this portion no question

Misc.]

Surrogate's Court, New York County, May, 1899.

of limitation can be raised. The remainder of the trust funds became payable at the majority of the petitioner, in 1873. The statute does not run between the beneficiary and trustee of an express trust, such as was created by the will of the decedent, unless there has been a distinct disavowal or repudiation of the relationship by the trustee, clearly and unmistakably conveyed to the cestui que trust. 27 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 100; Kane v. Bloodgood, 7 Johns. Ch. 90. Respondent avers that he did expressly repudiate the trust, and explains various payments made to the beneficiary during the last twenty years by characterizing them as gifts. From the evidence before me, however, I cannot find that these and other allegations of the respondent establish that the trustee assumed such an antagonistic attitude towards the beneficiary as to cause the statue now invoked to be set in operation. Respondent will be ordered to account as testamentary trustee.

Decreed accordingly.

Matter of the Contested Will of MARY E. BARBINEAU, Deceased.

(Surrogate's Court, New York County, May, 1899.)

Will Not avoided by a second will executed just before death den of proof as to testamentary capacity.

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Where a prior will executed with deliberation and while the tes tatrix was in good health is sought to be overthrown by a later will, containing different provisions, executed twelve days before her death and when she had become enfeebled by illness, the court will inquire most minutely into the circumstances attending the execution of the later will, will require its proponent to show that the testatrix had testamentary capacity at the time of its execution, and, failing such proof, will reject the later will.

PROCEEDINGS upon probate of a will.

Thomas W. Burke (James A. Gray, of counsel), for proponent.

Jeroloman & Arrowsmith, for contestants.

VARNUM, S. The trial herein was conducted before Surrogate 'Arnold, and it has now been stipulated that the case be decided

Surrogate's Court, New York County, May, 1899. [Vol. 27.

by me without a new hearing. The importance of the issues involved, together with the great number of conflicting statements scattered through the voluminous testimony that was taken, have caused me to feel keenly the disadvantage of being compelled to weigh evidence without seeing and hearing the witnesses who produce it, and I have, therefore, been at pains to give the minutes and the exhaustive briefs submitted the most careful study before arriving at my decision. Decedent died on May 15, 1894. She married the contestant in 1887. During the three years prior to her death she invested the greater portion of her funds in western securities, and her husband, at the same time, made similar investments on his own account. Not only did they thus engage in their business ventures together, but they likewise were in perfect accord with each other on all other subjects, so that their married life was marked by the most complete cordiality and harmony. The record discloses several attempts to show that latterly decedent felt displeasure at her husband, but all of these failed completely. There can be no doubt that the pleasantest companionship existed between this husband and wife. In 1890 decedent, then being in possession of her entire faculties, made a will. She went about the matter deliberately, with the aid of her own attorneys, and without advice from or consultation with contestant. She had no children or remoter descendants. Her only relatives were a brother and four sisters, with none of whom, excepting perhaps the former, she was particularly intimate. The one who was nearer and dearer to her than all others was her life companion, and it was, therefore, natural and proper that, after giving a small legacy to her brother, she devised her entire property to her husband. This will was kept by decedent in a trunk in her room and was never destroyed. The instrument that is now offered for probate is dated and alleged to have been executed on May 3, 1894, twelve days before the death of decedent, and while she was in a state of enfeebled health. Under its terms, the testatrix gives her property to her brother, sisters and husband in equal shares, appoints her brother the sole executor, and directs that in the event of any beneficiary contesting the will, his or her share shall be divided among the others. The husband became the sole contestant. It will be observed at the outset that we have here a case where a prior will, made while the testatrix was in good health and under circumstances of deliberation and care, is sought to be overthrown by a later will in hostility to the

Misc.]

Surrogate's Court, New York County, May, 1899.

provisions of the first instrument and made while the testatrix was on her deathbed, weakened by disease. Under such circumstances, the court will inquire most minutely into all the concomitant circumstances touching the execution of the second testament; and will require the proponent to clearly show that the testator was fully cognizant of his acts and reflected his intentions in the will offered for probate. Matter of Way, 6 Misc. Rep. 484, 499; Forman v. Smith, 7 Lans. 443, 445; Matter of Clark, 5 Misc. Rep. 68, 73; Booth v. Kitchen, 3 Redf. 52; Tyler v. Gardiner, 35 N. Y. 559. It appears that decedent's last illness began in the fall of 1893. She suffered from a pelvic abscess. Eventually, meningitis set in and became the immediate cause of her death. During the long course of this sickness she suffered intense pain, which was finally relieved only by the almost continual use of opiates. Her husband was a constant and faithful attendant. As a nurse to his dying wife, he performed services, rendered necessary by the dread nature of her illness, which would have strained the loyalty of any man to the utmost, and yet he did these things uncomplainingly and with beautiful devotion. There was no estrangement, no quarrel, no disagreement. How, then, can the remarkable change of intention that decedent underwent be explained? The direct evidence on the subject is furnished mainly by proponent's wife. She testified that, in the fall of 1893, decedent informed her that she desired to alter her will so as to have it read like one made by an uncle, who divided his property equally among brothers and sisters; that nothing more was said until about May 1, 1894, at which time decedent said that her end was near and asked that a lawyer be employed to draw up a new will. This is substantially all the light that was shed on this subject. Thereupon, an attorney, who had performed services for proponent, was employed, and the instrument now offered for probate was drafted from oral instructions given by proponent and his wife to this attorney. We now come to the eventful evening of May 3d. Proponent's wife testified that decedent said that she did not want her husband to know of the proposed change in the will, as she could not, in such an event, live with him, and that she wanted him away from the house at the time the will was to be signed. Whether or not decedent made. these statements, the fact remains that on this evening, the proponent persuaded the contestant to go walking, and that, while the two were away, the alleged execution of the will took place. Con

Surrogate's Court, New York County, May, 1899.

[Vol. 27.

testant knew nothing of this second testament until his wife was dead. We are now confronted with the important inquiry as to the decedent's mental condition on the evening in question. Here I find the testimony most conflicting. Proponent's witnesses say emphatically that the will was read over to decedent, and that she said "yes" to the usual questions as to whether that was her will and whether she desired the subscribing witnesses to act. She was so weak that she could not write, although an excellent penman, and the attorney wrote her name and guided her hand as she made a cross. On the other hand, it was shown that two of the subscribing witnesses had signed statements in which they aver that decedent was speechless; that, upon questions being asked, she uttered sounds like "ah, ah"; that she made no declaration of any kind, and seemed entirely unconscious of what was going on about her. The attempt to explain away the force of these statements must be characterized as most unsuccessful. Furthermore, the physician who regularly attended decedent testified that his patient was in a condition of coma during three days before Thursday, May 3d; that she had not been rational since the Monday before that Thursday; that he visited her twice on May 3d, and that she did not take any notice of him whatever on either occasion. He could not positively state what her condition was a few hours after his second visit, at which time the alleged will was signed. He testified, however, that while it might have been possible that she understood what was going on, yet, from his knowledge of her condition, he believed that this was extremely improbable. From a careful perusal of the testimony offered on this point, which I do not deem it necessary to further review, I find that a grave doubt remains in my mind as to whether decedent was rational on the evening of May 3d, and whether she had any knowledge whatever of the contents of the paper to which she affixed her cross. And this doubt is intensified when I take into account the peculiar circumstances surrounding the entire transaction. In view of this fact, I do not deem it essential to pass on the issue of undue influence, and I shall rest my decision of the matter entirely on the issue of testamentary capacity. Aside from the salutary rule laid down in the case of Matter of Way, supra, it rests upon the proponent of a will to satisfy the court of the mental soundness of the testator's mind. Delafield v. Parish, 25 N. Y. 9. It is true that this case has been cited in support of the proposition that the burden of proof is upon him who alleges tes

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