In re Hock's Will

129 N.Y.S. 196
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 24, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 N.Y.S. 196 (In re Hock's Will) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Hock's Will, 129 N.Y.S. 196 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

BOWLBR, S.

The papers propounded in this cause as the will, and a codicil’thereto, of John Hock, were executed on the 27th day of April, 1910, in the city of New York, in the house where John Hock then lived. The will and codicil were attested by the lawyer who drafted them and by two other attesting witnesses, both strangers to'John Hock before the attestation in question. The formal [199]*199execution of the papers propounded corresponds in detail with the requirements of the statute of wills.

[1] The evidence of the subscribing witnesses, although they were strangers to the testator, is sufficient, standing alone, to establish the execution of the will and codicil. Marx v. McGlynn, 88 N. Y. 357. The surrogate saw these witnesses, and they seemed to be intelligent and truthful. They had no sinister object to subserve in acting as attesting witnesses to the papers in question.

The objections to the probate in this proceeding are taken by Bessie Hock and Frank Hock, the grandchildren of the testator. They are the children of a deceased son. Apparently their mother, testator's daughter-in-law, has also filed objections to the will and codicil; she having been cited to attend the probate.

The will in controversy leaves the testator’s estate to his only surviving son, Jacob, and it nominates Jacob sole executor. The codicil, bearing date on the same day as the will, bequeaths $100 to each of his daughters-in-law, and to his grandchildren, Bessie and Frank Hock, $50 and $100, respectively; otherwise, it confirms and ratifies the will. The attesting witnesses to both instruments propounded are the same persons.

Just prior to the execution of the papers propounded, John Hock appears to have placed all of his personal property in this jurisdiction, consisting of money in savings banks, in the names of his son Jacob and himself, to be held for their joint account. If such transfers were complete to carry title to Jacob, which I doubt (Matter of Bohn, 136 N. Y. 177, 32 N. E. 626; Estate of Laetitia M. Myers, 129 N. Y. Supp. 194, opinion of Surrogate Cohalan)—and their validity is not involved in this proceeding—it would seem as if there were no personal property of testator which will pass under the will and codicil in controversy. Substantially all the residue of John Hock’s estate consists of a house and lot in the state of New Jersey. It is of no great value. Neither the will nor the codicil contains a power of sale to the executors. Notwithstanding this situation of the estate, testimony taken on the hearing in this matter consumed some sessions of the court; all the parties to the cause insisting that the probate proceeding was a matter of right and the surrogate’s jurisdiction complete. The surrogate has proceeded on this assumption (Matter of Davis, 182 N. Y. 468, 75 N. E. 530), despite the proofs of the situation of the estate given in evidence.

[2] The objections to probate are founded on the common allegations of intestability and undue influence, and the proofs given in on these points by both proponents and contestants are most voluminous. Contested wills have become so common as to greatly resemble the former courts of probate in solemn form, where the proponents were compelled by a caveat to give evidence in detail and under oath of all matters relating to the factum of will. The evidence of the contestants is, under the present practice, oftentimes so insufficient as to relieve the proponents of the necessity of giving what Surrogate Bradford accurately terms “adminicular proofs” to support the probate. This case is hardly such an instance as that suggested as too common practice; but in this cause it seems to the surrogate that contestants’ [200]*200proofs fall far short of those which justly authorize the surrogate to disturb the will of the dead. Such proofs ought to be irresistible. Whenever their effect is doubtful in law, or when the proofs are unrelated to the precise allegations stated in the objections to probate, the presumption should be for the will, if the factum of will is otherwise established.

[3] In this cause John Hock, the alleged testator, appears from the testimony to have been an illiterate man, following very respectably throughout his life the vocation of a peddler, in which he accumulated some little estate. For some time before the execution of the papers propounded, Jacob Hock, the only surviving son of the testator, lived with John Hock in the same house, or in the same household. Jacob’s young children throughout this period seem to have been the chief objects of the testator’s constant solicitude. As they were deprived of the care of their mother by reason of á mental malady which confined her to a distant place, the grandfather, John Hock, seems to have stood to Jacob’s children in loco parentis. Such care as he could give them John Hock intelligently gave. His anxiety for their superior education was exemplified by testimony showing his interest to the last of his life in securing for these children a good school, and it is very significant of testator’s real interest in life. In fact, his son Jacob and Jacob’s children were the closest companions of the testator’s life. They constituted his family as none else did. Thé children of his deceased son and their mother, however friendly their relations with John Hock, were not of his immediate household at the time the will was made. They were not the companions of his daily existence, or equally the objects of the testator’s solicitude or interest in his lifetime. This is reasonably clear from the proofs bearing on the testator’s circumstances and family relations. It is by such proofs as these that the surrogate is enabled to ascertain whether or not papers propounded as wills are in accord with testator’s pronounced intentions in causes where undue influence or want of capacity are charged by contestants.

In this particular cause intestability and undue influence, although inconsistent allegations, are both charged by contestants. While the testator had an undoubted right to do what he pleased with his own, if want of testamentary capacity or moral coercion, amounting in law to undue influence, is here established by contestants, the papers propounded as John Hock’s will are not entitled to probate.

[4] Concerning the allegation of want of testamentary capacity, it appears that John Hock was about 68 years of age when the papers propounded were executed. He seems to have been of average intelligence throügh life, but in waning health which he affixed his signature to the will and codicil. His ability to sigh his name was the extent of his literary accomplishments, as he could neither read nor otherwise write. Much testimony was given by contestants bearing on the mental peculiarities of testator, but no evidence appears as to testator’s normal conduct in life, so that the surrogate is unable to determine' that such peculiarities are in his case abnormal or even evidential of mental disorder. A brusque, rough manner, which is natural to one person, indicates nothing but mental health to him; whereas, [201]*201such roughness in a person habitually gentle and refined may have a totally different significance. It is not the abstract act or feeling which constitutes a symptom. It is the departure from the normal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 N.Y.S. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hocks-will-nysurct-1911.