Court Opinion

ID: 7291485
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-25 20:34:32.722694+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:19:21.654807
License: Public Domain

Reed, Vice-Ordinary.
The probate of the will of Joseph Whitford was contested on the ground that its execution was induced by undue influence. The orphans court of Passaic county admitted the will to probate. The court also refused to allow costs and counsel fee to be paid out of the estate.
On this appeal it is practically admitted that the decision of the court in admitting the instrument to probate cannot be successfully attacked. The insistence is, however, that the court erred in refusing to direct that the expense of the-litigation, including a counsel fee to the proctors of the caveators, should be paid out of the estate.
*614The testator was twenty-four years of age at the time of his death, on December 36th, 1899, was unmarried, childless and without living brothers or sisters. The caveators are aunts. He had made his home for nine years preceding his death with Mrs. McQuirk, the mother of Maggie, the legatee. His mind was entirely clear at the time of the execution of his will, as his directions to the lawyer who drew that instrument and the testimony of his attending physician demonstrate.
In respect to this intelligent adult, no presumption of undue influence springs from his relations with the MeQuirks; and there is no testimony whatever that any influence was employed, aside from those offices of kindness which they rendered him, particularly during the days of his last sickness. The futility of the caveators’ contest must have been apparent to the proctors of the caveators after the examination of the subscribing witnesses. It was certainly apparent to them, they knowing the character of the testimony which would be and was subsequently produced. How, the statute (P. L. of 1898 p. 789 § 197) permits the testator’s estate to be burdened with the costs of a contest like this only in two ■ instances—first, when the contestant shall not have offered any evidence at the trial except that of the subscribing witness, and secondly, when it appears that the persons contesting the validity of the will had reasonable cause for so doing. Heither of these conditions appear in this cause, and the order of the orphans court is affirmed.