Everitt v. Everitt

41 Barb. 385, 1864 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 41 Barb. 385 (Everitt v. Everitt) 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
Everitt v. Everitt, 41 Barb. 385, 1864 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1864).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The object of this action is to establish the execution and validity of the will of Walter 0. Everitt, which is alleged to have been lost or destroyed. The deceased was a resident of Middletown, in the county of Orange, at the time of his death, which occurred on the 19th of January, 1842. The will is said to have been dated on the 11th of January of the same year, and witnessed by Henry S. Beaker and David Hoyt, both of the same place, and that Lewis H. Everitt and Harvey Everitt were the persons named as executors therein.

In proceeding to consider and apply the evidence to the allegations of the complaint, it is to be observed that the formalities or acts—several in number—which the law requires to constitute a valid will are to be proved in the usual way, as other facts are required to be proved to make them evidence in a court of justice. While the statute prescribes rules to be observed in the execution and publication of wills which it does not prescribe in regard to the execution and delivery of other written instruments, the proof of the several acts so prescribed is the same as the proof required to establish any other fact. Thus if the ipstrument to be proved is in existence and within reach of the process of the court, it must be produced in court. If lost or destroyed, or its production from any cause becomes impossible, and that appears to the satisfaction of the court, secondary evidence may be resorted to. If there are witnesses to the execution of the instrument, who have subscribed their names as such (and without subscribing witnesses se[387]*387lected by the testator himself a will has no force,) they must also be produced and examined, if living and within the power of the court. If they be dead or beyond the jurisdiction of the court, secondary evidence may also be resorted to in this contingency, and proof taken of their handwriting. So if the witnesses when produced and examined have lost all recollection of the transaction, and especially of the extrinsic facts, other evidence may be again summoned to supply the imperfection of the witnesses’ memory. For example, when the witnesses cannot recall to memory the circumstance that they subscribed at the request of the testator, that fact stated in the attestation clause will be some evidence to show that such a request was made. /‘And if the witnesses are men of good character, and there is no doubt as to their signatures, or any other suspicious circumstances, the attestation clause would be deemed sufficient evidence of a request. In short the law lays down no stubborn inflexible rules in such cases, but accepts the best evidence that can be procured adapted to the nature of human affairs, human infirmities and casualties, which tends with reasonable certainty to establish the fact in controversy. The proof of a lost or destroyed will proceeds upon the theory that it is not in existence and cannot be produced before the surrogate, and therefore the case is one of secondary evidence exclusively.

It is not disputed that the deceased was a resident of Middletown at the time he died, and that he expired at the house of Ms brother in law, Harvey Everitt, at that place, on the 19th of January, 1842, then being of the age of 21 years and upwards, without wife or children, leaving his father, Walter Everitt, and various other relatives surviving him. Henry S. Beakes states in his evidence that he knew the deceased, and was present with him in his illness from six to 15 days before his death, in a bed room adjoining the sitting room at Harvey Everitt’s house. He was invited to come there by Walter Everitt, the father of the deceased. He saw Mrs. Sally A. Everitt at the house, and no one else [388]*388that he recollects. He remained at the house about two hours. While there he received instructions, which he wrote down, from. the deceased, for a will, which he then drew in his= own handwriting. This will may or may not have been executed; he has no recollection that it was, and none that it was not executed. Nor has he any memory what became of.it. He .remembers the will contained directions for building a vault upon land at Middletown, and a bequest of the one half of a horse called Jack, to his father, Walter Everitt, who owned the other half. He examined amongst his papers for the will, but was unable to find it. In respect to Mr. Beakes’s presence in the.sick room of the deceased at the time he mentioned, he is corroborated by the evidence of Harvey Everitt, Sally A. Everitt and Mary Jane Kinsey, who saw him .there engaged writing in the presence of the deceased. David Hoyt, who is said to be the other subscribing witness, was sworn and examined, and said he had no recollection whatever of witnessing the will. There is always some reason to think that the will of a deceased person will find its way into the possession of some of those named in it as executors. Lewis H. Everitt and Harvey Everitt are the executors alleged to have been appointed in the will in controversy. The former is dead, and his son, Samuel L. Everitt, was examined as a witness and said he was one of his father’s executors. After his father’s death, which was in October, 1846, he found amongst his papers an instrument purporting to be the will of Walter 0. Everitt. It covered two pages of paper. He knows the handwriting of the deceased, and of Henry S. Beakes and of David Hoyt. The will was signed with the name of Walter 0. Everitt in the handwriting .of the deceased, was witnessed by Henry S. Beakes and David Hoyt as subscribing witnesses, in their own handwriting, and the body of the will was also in Mr. Beakes’s handwriting. He also stated the contents of the instrument, which corresponded substantially with the copy to which I will refer hereafter. A few months after his [389]*389father’s death he gave the will to his grandfather, Walter Everitt. Sally A. Everitt, the sister of the deceased, and wife of Harvey Everitt, remembers the visit of Mr. Beakes at her house, upon the occasion of her brother’s last illness. She heard him reading a paper to the deceased in the bed room. When Mr. Beakes announced that "he was ready, she, together with David Hoyt who had been in the sitting room some time before that, entered the bed room. She assisted to raise her brother up in the bed, procured a book for him to write upon. Saw him sign his name; heard him declare the paper to be his last will and testament, and ask Mr. Beakes and Mr. Hoyt to sign their names as subscribing witnesses, and saw them sign their names accordingly in the deceased’s presence. The deceased requested Mr. Beakes to take the will with him, who thereupon folded it up, put it in his pocket and took it away with him. The next week after her brother’s death, Mr. Beakes, Mr. Hoyt, Harvey Everitt, Walter Everitt, Freelove Kirk and herself were present at her house. Mr. Beakes came there at the request of her father Walter Everitt. While there he procured and read what purported to be the will of her deceased brother, and took it away with him again. Some two or three weeks afterwards her husband, Harvey Everitt, brought home with him what purported to be the same will. She and her husband took two copies of it, which she assisted him to compare and found them correct. One of these copies she gave to her father, and the other is that now produced in court. That given to her father she has not seen since. Harvey Everitt, the husband of Sally A. Everitt, recollects the time referred to by Henry S. Beakes when he prepared the will. He saw the latter in the room with the deceased, writing. Walter Everitt, the father of the deceased, David Hoyt and his wife, Sally A. Everitt, were in the adjoining room. He did not see the will executed.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Barb. 385, 1864 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everitt-v-everitt-nysupct-1864.