Hoyt v. . Hoyt

20 N.E. 402, 112 N.Y. 493, 21 N.Y. St. Rep. 593, 67 Sickels 493, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 844
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 20 N.E. 402 (Hoyt v. . Hoyt) 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
Hoyt v. . Hoyt, 20 N.E. 402, 112 N.Y. 493, 21 N.Y. St. Rep. 593, 67 Sickels 493, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 844 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The main question, which has been presented for our consideration by this 'appeal, is, whether the surrogate was in error in holding that the proceeding, which followed *500 upon tlis presentation of the appellant’s petition to him, was one for a revocation of probate under the provisions of article 2 of title 3 of chapter 18 of the Code. After the parties had closed their proofs the petitioner’s counsel requested that the surrogate should decide and find that the original probate of Jesse Hoyt’s will was a nullity by reason of fraud. This he refused to do and decided the matter as one brought under the article referred to. The appellant’s counsel have devoted much of their labor and skill to the establishment' of propositions in support of their view of the nature of the proceeding. These counsel were not the same who originally advised and appeared for the petitioner, when she presented her petition and instituted the proceedings below, but came into the case at a late stage of its trial.

Before discussing the legal question I shall briefly allude to the facts and to the contents of the petition. Jesse Hoyt, the testator, during his life, had been an active and successful merchant in the city of Hew York, and when he died, at the age of sixty-eight years, he left a will, disposing of an estate estimated at from six to eight millions of dollars in value. His death occurred at his residence in Hew York city, on August 14, 1882, and was brought about by a complication of diseases; which, from the month of March, in that year, had compelled him to abandon his business pursuits. In the month of June, after consultations with his lawyers, a will was prepared for and executed by him. The testator left him surviving his widow, Helen Maria Hoyt, and an. only child, his daughter, Mary Irene Hoyt, this appellant. Under the provisions of his will, his widow was given the income and revenue proceeding from the sum of $1,250,000, which the executors were to hold as a trust fund during her life. Of this principal sum, she was permitted to dispose of the sum of $750,000 by her last will and testament. For his daughter, testator created a trust fund of the same amount in his executors’ hands, the income and revenue from which were to be applied to her use during her life “in the most bounteous and liberal manner as to expenditure, and so as to promote her convenience and comfort and *501 gratify her reasonable desires.” The residue of his estate, after the payment of certain legacies, was disposed of to and among his brothers and sister and the daughter of a deceased brother. After his death and on the 29th day of August, 1882, this will was admitted to probate by the surrogate of the county of New York, and letters testamentary issued thereupon to the executors named therein, viz., his brothers, Alfred M. and Samuel N. Hoyt, and to James W. Jackson, formerly in the employ of the testator as confidential clerk. Jurisdiction was acquired by the surrogate to issue such letters, by the filing of the will in his office, on August 18, 1882, with the petition of the executors, praying that a citation issue to the widow and daughter to attend the probate thereof, etc. The citation was personally served upon them and, upon the return day, there being no opposition made, and upon the proofs, the surrogate adjudged and decreed the will to be valid as a will of both real and personal property, and admitted the same to probate as such. Subsequently, on November 10, 1882, the daughter, Mary Irene Hoyt, presented her petition to the surrogate ; in which she alleged the facts as to the probate of her father’s will; and further alleged, in substance, that from June 6, 1882, to the day subsequent to her father’s death in August, she was confined in an insane asylum in Pennsylvania; that her return to New York was at the instance of her uncles, Alfred M. and Samuel N. Hoyt, and was, ostensibly, to attend her father’s funeral; that she was brought to the Windsor Hotel, in New York city, instead of her father’s house, and was in the custody of the superintendent of the asylum; that upon her arrival her said uncles informed her that she would not be allowed to attend the funeral; that, nevertheless, she did attend it; that on returning therefrom her uncles informed her she must go back to the asylum, but that she need remain there only three weeks longer; that on the day following the funeral Samuel N. Hoyt came to the hotel and, in his presence, she was served with a citation to attend the probate of her father’s will, a printed copy of which was also served upon her; that said Samuel N. Hoyt, at this interview, stated that *502 she was not insane and, apart from her, as she is informed, requested one of her relatives to induce her to return at once to the asylum and not to see any lawyer; that she read and understood the citation and will; that she was and is not insane; that she was always on terms of affection with her father, and the proceedings referred to were unlawful and ruthless; that on the said day said Samuel 1ST. Hoyt caused her to he again removed to the asylum, in the custody of the superintendent; that she was incarcerated until September 6, 1882, being eight days after the probate of the will; that she was not allowed to communicate with her friends, or anyone outside of said asylum and that her letters were destroyed or intercepted; that she was deprived of all possibility of asserting her rights, or of responding to said citation, or of being present, in person, or by counsel, at the hearing, and her appeals to the superintendent to be allowed to go to Hew York, for the purpose of answering said citation, were refused; that Alfred M. and Samuel H. Hoyt were large legatees under the will. Her petition further alleged, that Jesse Hoyt, at the time of the making of the said will, was enfeebled by disease, was not of sound mind or memory and was not competent to make a will; that it was not voluntarily made as his last will and testament and that it was obtained and procured by fraud, circumvention and undue influence, practiced upon decedent by said Alfred M. and Samuel H. Hoyt, or one of them, or by other persons colluding with them. The petition further alleged that no opportunity was offered her to require that all the witnesses to the said will, or cognizant thereof, should be produced and examined; or to request that any other witnesses should be examined; or to be present at, or in any manner to contest the proof of the alleged will, that the said Alfred M. and Samuel H. Hoyt caused her removal to and incarceration within the said asylum for the purpose of excluding her from her father and of avoiding any objections being made to the citation, or any contest to the will. The petition prayed for “ a decree opening the default taken against petitioner on August 29 *503 18S2, and revoking, vacating and setting aside the letters testamentary; - * "x" and that all the devisees and legatees named in said alleged will and all other persons, who were parties to the proceeding in which said prohate was granted, be cited to show cause why the default taken against petitioner * * * should not be opened without costs and petitioner ■ granted an opportunity to contest the will and interpose her objections to said will, and why said probate and letters should not be revoked, vacated and set aside, and why petitioner should not have such other and further relief as may be just,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.E. 402, 112 N.Y. 493, 21 N.Y. St. Rep. 593, 67 Sickels 493, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-hoyt-ny-1889.