Court Opinion

ID: 5667616
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-12 13:50:03.257763+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:39:29.329814
License: Public Domain

The Subrogate. — The question in this case is, whether the husband of the deceased is incompetent, by reason of •drunkenness, to administer on her estate. Several witnesses swear that they have seen Kechele intoxicated from time to time.
But they do not show, in my judgment, habitual, con-*473tinned, inveterate, and irremediable habits of drunkenness,. incapacitating him for the transaction of business. Only-such habits can be held to have been intended by the statute as a disqualification of any person for the trust of administration on the ground of drunkenness, as would warrant overseers of the poor in designating' such person as an habitual drunkard, under the Eevised Statutes, or a jury in adjudging him so to be. The law expressly confides the privilege of administering upon a deceased wife’s effects to her surviving husband, on condition of his giving adequate security, and this privilege is not to be forfeited without clear evidence of his incapacity.
Kechele must be granted letters of administration, on filing his bond in double the value of the personal estate, with two sufficient sureties, justifying to the satisfaction of the surrogate.