Burritt v. Silliman

16 Barb. 198, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 194
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 16 Barb. 198 (Burritt v. Silliman) 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
Burritt v. Silliman, 16 Barb. 198, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 194 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1853).

Opinion

By the Court, Harris J.

The first question which presents itself for examination in this case is the decision of the surrogate in rejecting the, witnesses Monroe and Kendrick as incom[201]*201potent. They were offered to sustain the will. By that instrument they were appointed trustees of all the estate, except three lots in Troy devised to Mrs. Burritt, and were also appointed executors. Monroe, when the objection was made, renounced his appointment as executor, and also his right and claim to act as trustee, under the will. Kendrick, when offered as a witness, proposed to file his renunciation as a trustee and also as an executor, but the surrogate having decided that the renunciation would not render the witness competent, none was filed.

The provisions of the code on this subject have no application to proceedings in surrogates’ courts. By the 8th section the application of the act is expressly confined to civil actions commenced in the courts of this state, except when otherwise provided. The sections relating to the examination of witnesses have not been made applicable to surrogates’ courts, and the question before us must, therefore, be determined upon the common law rules of evidence.

Whether a person named as an executor in a will, and deriving- no other benefit therefrom, is a competent witness to establish the validity of such will, is a question which does not seem to have come before the courts of this state. But in other states, where, as in this state, commissions are allowed to an executor by statute,' it has been held, that the executor, by his right to commissions, takes an interest which renders him an incompetent witness. Under a statute of South Carolina, which requires that all wills shall be attested and subscribed by three or more credible witnesses, it was held that the witnesses must be competent at the time of attestation, to prove the execution of the instrument, and that where one of the witnesses to the execution of the will was nominated as an executor, he took such a valuable right under the will as to render him incompetent ; and being incompetent he was not at the time of attestation a credible witness within the meaning of the statute. (See Taylor v. Taylor, 1 Richardson, 531.) It cannot be disputed,” say the court, “ that the office of executor is an appointment yielding emolument, and, as such, is a. subject, of [202]*202pecuniary interest and of generally acknowledged value. All offices of profit are encumbered with the performance of duties, to which the compensation is incident. In a contested election for such an office, neither of the candidates could be received as a witness ; for it could not be doubted that he had an interest in the question.” Tucker v. Tucker, (5 Iredell’s L. Rep. 161,) is to the same effect. In Allison’s Ex’rs v. Allison, (4 Hawks, [N. C.] 141,) the testator had by his will appointed trustees for the purpose of selling his real estate. By the terms of the will, the trustees were authorized and directed to retain to their own use out of the moneys that might come to their hands a sufficient compensation for their trouble in performing and executing the trust.” It was held, that as the appointment furnished the trustees with employment, and gave them compensation for it, they were not competent witnesses to sustain the will.

In these decisions I concur, although with some hesitation. I was, at first, inclined to regard the commissions of an executor as the compensation fixed by law for services to be rendered; and which, if the services are not rendered, he is not entitled to receive. But I am unable to distinguish between the case of an executor and that of a public office of profit. In both cases, the law measures the salary or perquisites by the nature and extent of the duties to be performed. Each is an employment by which wages for labor may be gained. As the person claiming the office would not be, received as a witness, in a controversy involving his right to the office, so, I think, a person named as executor in a will, is not, at common law, a competent witness to sustain the will when offered for probate. But I do not see why a renunciation does not restore the competency of the witness. The question relates to the time when he is offered. If he has then no interest, it is no objection that he has before been interested, or may afterwards acquire an interest. By renouncing, he divests himself of all present interest, and though he may retract, and his interest may thus be restored, this is a contingency which can only affect his credibility. Such contingencies are never regarded in determining the question of com[203]*203petency. If, therefore, the witnesses Monroe and Kendrick had taken no other interest under the will than their right to commissions as executors, I should be inclined to hold that the surrogate had erred in excluding them after their renunciation had been tendered.

But they were not merely nominated as executors in the will. They were also, by their individual names, appointed trustees, and in that capacity were to take the bulk of the estate. The estate vested in them as trustees was not divested by their renunciation as executors. “There is no contradiction or variance in the authorities,” says Duer, justice, in Dominick v. Michael, (4 Sand. Sup. Ct. R. 401,) “ that a power which an executor takes by force of the will, and not of its probate, is not divested or affected by his renunciation of the office.” The character of executor and trustee under this will are entirely distinct. Had all the executors renounced, and administration with the will annexed been granted to some other person, they "would still remain vested with the estate for the purpose of executing the trusts of the will. It was held in Judson v. Gibbons, (5 Wend. 224,) that a trust estate, when given to an executor, can only be divested by a release or deed of disclaimer. Without such release or disclaimer he would be considered as a devisee under the will. The objection that the renunciation tendered upon the hearing did not release the interest of the witnesses, in the property devised and bequeathed, was specifically taken, and although the surrogate excluded the witnesses for other reasons, the decision may be sustained upon this ground.

There being no error in the rejection of evidence, we are brought to the consideration of the decision of the surrogate upon the evidence before him. In the opinion delivered by the surrogate he sustains his decision upon two grounds; first, that there was no satisfactory evidence that the testatrix knew the contents of the instrument she executed; and again, that at the time of the execution, she had not sufficient testamentary capacity. Upon both points, I am inclined to agree with him.

The will was drawn by Mr. Kendrick, but upon whose pro•ourement does not appear. There is no evidence that the testa[204]*204trix ever gave instructions for drawing it, or that it was read to her, before or even after its execution, or that she ever had it in her possession for a single moment. Monroe, one of the trustees and executors under the will, and whose wife was to receive a legacy of $500, was the active party in procuring the execution. He went after the persons who became subscribing witnesses and requested them to attend. After the witnesses were introduced, they found the testatrix sitting up in bed, and in a very feeble state of health. But one of the witnesses was acquainted with her.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Barb. 198, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burritt-v-silliman-nysupct-1853.