Caw v. . Robertson

5 N.Y. 125
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 5, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 5 N.Y. 125 (Caw v. . Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caw v. . Robertson, 5 N.Y. 125 (N.Y. 1851).

Opinion

H. Gray, J.

The question here presented is, whether Caw, the appellant, whose name appears as a subscribing witness to the will of the late Margaret McPherson, is entitled to the legacy bequeathed over to him. For the purpose of determining this question, it is important, first, to consider, whether one who is, in reality, an attesting witness to a will, is, under any circumstances, entitled to a legacy under it. The revised statutes relating to wills of real and personal property, and the proofs of them, provide, first, for wills of real estate and the proofs of them; secondly, for wills of personal property and the probate of them; and then make provisions applicable to wills *of both real and personal property. These latter provisions require that every last will and testament, of real or personal property, shall be attested by at least two witnesses. (2 R.S. 63, § 40.) That portion which relates exclusively to wills of real estate and the proof of them, as originally enacted, required that all the witnesses to such will, *120 living in this state and of sound mind, should be produced and examined. (2 R. S. 58, § 12.) That which relates to wills of personal estate, required the will to be proved by one or more of the subscribing witnesses. (Id. § 26.) By the same statutes, among the general provisions applicable to wills both of real and personal property, it is provided in § 50, that, “ if any person shall be a subscribing witness to the execution of any will, wherein any beneficial devise, legacy, interest, or appointment of any real or personal estate, shall be made to such witness, and such will cannot be proved without the testimony of such witness, the said devise, legacy, interest, or appointment shall be void, so far only as concerns such witness, or any claiming under him; and such person shall be a competent witness, and compel-lable to testify respecting the execution of said will,” &c.

While § 12, above referred to, remained in force, a devise or bequest in a will disposing of real estate, to which the devisee or legatee was a subscribing witness, could be saved by the provisions of § 50, only where the devisee or legatee should be of unsound mind, or should reside out of the state, when the will was proved. This confined to very narrow limits the operation of that section, as applied to wills disposing of real estate; while the different method of proving wills of personal estate, under the provisions of § 26, gave effect to the 50th section in all cases where a single disinterested witness should satisfactorily prove the due execution of the will.

Those two sections of the revised statutes (12th and 26th) were repealed by § 71 of the “ act concerning the Pr00^ *0^ wiUs>” (Laws 1837, c. 460), and the 10th and subsequent sections of that act substituted in their place. By § 10, two, at least, of the witnesses to the will (whether of real or personal estate), if so many are living in this state, and of sound mind, and not disabled from age, sickness or infirmity, from attending, are required to be examined; and provision *121 is made, in other sections, for the examination, at their residence, of such as are disabled from attending at the surrogate’s office. By § 11, it is provided, that “ in case the proof of any will is contested, and any person having a right to contest the same shall, before probate made, file with the surrogate a request in writing, that all the witnesses to such will shall be examined, then, all the witnesses to such will, who are living in this state, of sound mind, and who are not disabled, from age, sickness or infirmity, from attending, shall be produced and examined.”

By this change of the statutes, I think, the legislature designed to place the proof of wills of real and of personal property (as the formalities required at their execution had before been placed) on the same footing; and also to extend, in regard to wills of real estate, and limit, in regard to wills of personal estate, the benefits of § 50, before mentioned, to the cases where the execution of the will should not be contested, and where proof of its due execution could be made by the number of witnesses indispensable to its validity, without calling upon the witness claiming a beneficial interest under it. These things the act of 1837 accomplishes, and thus secures uniformity, not only in the proof of wills, but in the effect of provisions therein in favor of subscribing witnesses, whether they relate to real or to personal estate, or to both; and removes the incongruity which before existed between §§ 12 and 50. It may have been one object of the change, as was suggested by the learned justice who delivered the opinion in this cause in the court below, to relieve the executors or devisees having an interest in proving the *will, from the labor and expense of producing all the witnesses beyond two; but I' cannot think, that this was the chief inducemeht to the repeal of § 12. The simplicity and convenience of a uniform system in the proof of wills, both of real and personal property, and the more just *122 and equitable application of the provisions of § 50, are reasons, which, in my judgment, must have operated with much greater force, in producing the change.

If these views are correct, it is obvious, that the intention of the legislature was, to supersede the necessity of examining more than two witnesses, who should satisfactorily prove the will, unless the proof is contested by some one having the right to do so. The 17th section of the same act declares, that no will of real or personal estate shall be deemed proved, unless the witnesses to the same, residing within this state, competent to testify, shall have been examined as hereinbefore provided. When two witnesses are produced and examined, as required by § 10, by whom the will is satisfactorily proved, or when the proof of the will is contested, all the witnesses living in this state, competent to testify, and not disabled, are produced and examined, as provided in § 11, then the requisites of § 17, are complied with, so far as the necessity exists for the production and examination of witnesses.

The court whose judgment is now the subject of review, referred to the 11th section of the act of 1837, rendering it necessary that all the witnesses to a will, living in the state, should be produced and examined, when any one having the right, should contest the proof of the will. This provision cannot prejudice .the appellant ; the contingency provided for in it, has not happened, and cannot, as the will has been proved, without contest, and the appeal day has passed. It is clear, therefore, that a will, either of real or personal estate, can be proved by two of the attesting witnesses, if no one having the right shall contest its proof; and that the rights of an attesting witness, who is a legatee, are saved, in all cases, except where the will cannot be proved without his testimony; *and hence, the question arises, whether the will of the testatrix could not have been proved, without the testimony of *123 the appellant. The fact that all whose names appear as attesting witnesses to the will are legatees, cannot affect the rights of the appellant, if the contingency happened that rendered his testimony unnecessary.

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.Y. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caw-v-robertson-ny-1851.