Abbey v. Christy

49 Barb. 276, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 115
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 Barb. 276 (Abbey v. Christy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abbey v. Christy, 49 Barb. 276, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 115 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1867).

Opinion

G. G. Barnard, J.

The case of Seymour v. Van Wyck, (6 N. Y. Rep. 120,) is directly in point. That case decides that the testator .must, in the presence of two witnesses, declare the instrument to he his' last will and testament. In the case at bar such a declaration was not made.

The case in 6 N. Y. Rep. and the present case are quite similar in their details ; the health and capacity of the testator in Seymour v. Van Wyck was about the same as those of the testator in this case ; if any thing a little better.

[277]*277In that case one of the witnesses (Caleb Eoscoe) testified: “ The testator was bolstered up in bed; he said ‘ I have sent for you and want you to take notice whether I have sufficient mind and memory to make a will, for I have long wanted to make an alteration in my will, and now I have had Mrs. Seymour to write a codicil to my will/ He asked for the will.' The paper was lying on the bed. I said it would require two witnesses. Mrs. Seymour said Caroline See was in the house. He said ‘call her/ She was called. A bible was placed on the bed. I handed the pen and ink and he signed the paper, Miss See and myself looking on. He requested me to date it and write what was necessary for the witnesses to sign, and to witness it. I did so, and subscribed it as a witness, as did also Miss See, and I folded it up.”

The other witness, Miss See, testified: “ Testator signed it in my presence, and requested me to witness it. Testator said ‘you see I am in my right mind/ I bowed my head. He said ‘speak/ I said yes. He said ‘I want you to sign your name to that paper/ He was raised up in bed; called for the paper, pen and ink and put his name to it. Mr. Eoscoe signed his name to it, then I put mine ; that was the end of it; I left the room. He did not, while I was in the room, say it was his last will and codicil, or any thing of that kind. He did not, in my presence, speak the word will or codicil.”

The surrogate admitted this will to probate, but the general term reversed his decision, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the general term, with costs to be paid by the appellant.

In the case at bar, one of thee witnesses (Dr. Eogers) testifies : “ When I entered Mr. Christy’s room he called his attendant to pass his portfolio; he opened it, took out a paper and desired me to read it, which I did. I read it silently. After concluding the reading I asked him what more he wished. He wished me to witness his signature. [278]*278I asked him if he had read it; he said hé had heard it read. I then asked if it was all right; he replied I think so.’ His attendant was then called into the room, and he was bolstered up in the bed; the paper was placed upon the back of a portfolio held in his lap, and pen and ink was passed to him.”

The other witness (Joseph H. Morrison) testifies : “ When we entered the room, Mr. Christy was propped up in bed with pillows ; he remarked that he wanted us, the doctor and myself, to witness his signature. The doctor had the document in his hand, whatever it was ; I don’t know what it was; I never read it. I saw Mr, Christy sign the paper; the doctor put his name there, and I put mine under his ; nothing was said whatever regarding what the paper was, or any thing about it.” At folio 70 he says : “ I did not read a single word of the paper.” • At folio 73, being asked, “ Have you any recollection of the precise language that Mr.' Christy used in relation to the instrument; what he called it ?” The witness answered : “ The man was too feeble.” On the question being repeated he said, “'No I could not. I think he asked, in as loud a tone as he could, gentlemen I wish you to witness my signature to this paper ; he might have said document. I don’t remember. I know he spoke but very few words, because he was not able to speak.”

This is all the evidence bearing on the publication of the paper as a will.

The evidence falls just as far short of proving publication to the witness Morrison, as' in the case of Seymour v. Van Wyck, it fell short of proving publication to the witness See.

Conceding that the handing the paper to Dr. Rogers, with a request to him to read it, and his reading it, was a publication as to him, yet it was not a publication as to Morrison, for two reasons ; first, the doctor read it silently so that the witness Morrison, even if at the time in the room, could not by such reading be apprised of its contents or nature, and second, this reading by the doctor was before the testator [279]*279was propped up' in the hed, and the witness Morrison did not enter the room until after he was propped up, and Dr. Eogers was there before Morrison.

The statement of Dr. Eogers that a messenger came to him stating that Mr. Christy wished him to visit him on the matter relating to the will, is incompetent to prove a publication by the testator. It is mere hearsay testimony. If it is competent at all, it only tends to prove a publication to the doctor alone.

Thus, as under the case of Seymour v. Van Wyck, the testator must declare the instrument to be his last will and testament to each of the subscribing witnesses, and as under the same case, the proof in this case fails to establish such declaration to one of the subscribing witnesses, the decision of the surrogate in rejecting the instrument, on the ground that it had not been proved to have been properly executed as a will, was correct.

In the cases of Jauncy v. Thorne, (2 Barb. Ch. 40;) Nelson v. McGiffert, (3 id. 158;) Orser v. Orser, (24 N. Y. Rep. 51;) Trustees of the Theological Seminary of Auburn v. Calhoun, (25 id. 422;) Tarrant v. Ware, (Id. 425;) and Peck v. Cary, (27 id. 1,) cited by the appellant, there was, except in Orser v. Orser, affirmative proof that the testator declared the instrument to be his will, to each of the subscribing witnesses, and the court held that when such was the case, the will might be established if such proof were sufficient to overcome either the want of recollection on the part of the subscribing witnesses that such declaration was made, or their positive denial that it was made.

In the case of Orser v. Orser, one of the witnesses was deceased, the other denied that he heard the decedent speak of the paper as his will, but admitted that he heard some conversation between the decedent and the other witness, which he could not remember. The court held that the attestation clause signed by a deceased witness was evidence, to some extent, of the facts stated in it, and that it was error to [280]*280limit its force to the deceased witness, as it was also some evidence to contradict the living witness ; and for this error reversed the judgment below.

These cases are not in conflict with the case of Seymour v. Van Wyck, (6 N. Y. Rep. 120;) for that case simply decides that the proof there adduced was insufficient to establish a declaration to both witnesses; and it is shown above that if the evidence was insufficient in that case, it is equally so in the case at bar.

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Related

Seymour v. . Van Wyck
6 N.Y. 120 (New York Court of Appeals, 1851)

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Bluebook (online)
49 Barb. 276, 1867 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbey-v-christy-nysupct-1867.