Von Meyer v. Varcoe

Delehanty, J.

This is an action to set aside two deeds to real estate located, respectively, at No. 303 West Seventy-eighth street and Nos. 340 and 342 West Eighty-seventh street, in the borough of Manhattan, city of New York. It appears that in the year 1914 the owner, Katherine F. Lindemann, executed a last will and testament by which the property was to be held in trust for the benefit of one Helene M. Meyer, an infant, until she should reach the age of thirty years, whereupon the premises were to be conveyed to her in fee. On March 4, 1915, said Katherine F. Lindemann executed a codicil to her will transferring a life estate in No. 303 West Seventy-eighth street to one Annabella K. Yarcoe, and devised only the remainder therein to Helene M. Meyer. On January 31,1917, Katherine F. Lindemann deeded the Seventy-eighth street property outright to said Annabella K. Yarcoe, and the Eighty-seventh street parcel was likewise conveyed to her on the following March third. *428On the seventh of March, four days after the last conveyance, Katherine F. Lindemann died, and probate of her will has since been denied on the ground that the deceased at the time of the execution thereof was of unsound mind, and that the same was procured by fraud and undue influence.

It is sought to set aside the deeds in question upon the ground that there was no consideration therefor; that the same were obtained by fraud, and that the grantor, being of unsound mind, was legally incompetent to convey the premises. Upon the trial herein the heirs at law offered in evidence the decree of the Surrogate’s Court, which indicates that Katherine F. Lindemann was of unsound mind at the time of the execution of the will and codicil above mentioned. Such a decree based upon the findings of a jury with the litigants herein as parties to the proceedings before the surrogate is conclusive as to the matters embraced therein. Code Civ. Pro. §2550; Gugel v. Hiscox, 216 N. Y. 145. Furthermore, it is well settled that a deranged mind, proved or admitted to exist at any particular period, is presumed to continue until disproved, unless the derangement was accidental or caused by the violence of a disease, which is not the case here. The evidence offered herein to rebut the presumption of the mental incompetence of Katherine F. Lindemann was not at all satisfactory. The witnesses as they appeared in court, their testimony as given and the surrounding circumstances, force me to the conclusion that the transactions in question were not based upon fair dealing. The grantor at the execution of the last conveyance was an old woman in extremis, and I am convinced was unconscious or unaware of the nature and effect of her act. I am othe opinion that the same is true of the other conveyance executed a few months prior to her death. No *429money passed at the time of either conveyance, and while a valid consideration may he based upon other grounds there is nothing from which the court can infer that the grantees herein parted with anything of value in order to obtain these deeds. They intimate that the property was conveyed to them in order to provide a home for Helene Meyer, but they have shown no legal obligation on their part to do so. Moreover, in obtaining these deeds they deprived her of the property which she would have taken if the will of Katherine F. Lindemann had been declared valid. The sanity of the grantor herein and her freedom from undue influence was not established by the witnesses produced for that purpose. The doctor who testified in behalf of the grantees was not an alienist, and was only called to attend the decedent on her deathbed. While he testified that, in his opinion, she was of sound mind when she executed the deeds, he also said on cross-examination that he thought he might change his testimony upon being reminded that the second deed was made but four days before her death. Other witnesses produced seemed to have some bias in connection with the matter, which called for a careful scrutiny of their evidence. I am satisfied that the interest of justice in this case requires a judgment setting aside the deeds in question and granting the relief prayed for in the complaint.

Judgment accordingly.