In re Maguire

105 Misc. 433
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 105 Misc. 433 (In re Maguire) 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 Maguire, 105 Misc. 433 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Ketcham, S.

Upon a motion for a new trial in this proceeding, the following are the facts:

The jury found that the will was duly executed. Upon direction of the court, with the acquiescence of the contestant, they found that the testator was possessed of testamentary capacity. At the opening of the trial it was conceded by the contestant that it was the intention of the decedent to give.and to leave to the persons and corporations named in the first five paragraphs of the will the gifts there designated.” The only provision of the will which was not embraced in this concession was the residuary gift to the proponent. The question whether there was fraud or undue influence with respect to the residuary provision was answered in the affirmative, and the finding in this regard was the only subject of the motion for a new trial.

The verdict was deemed by the court to be contrary to the weight of evidence, and the decision was that a new trial would be granted, unless the court, upon consideration, with adequate briefs before it, should determine that the issue solely as to the residuary clause could not be tried. The proponent, though repeatedly invited, has failed to submit a brief upon this question.

Reason and authority compel the conclusion that parts of a will may be admitted to probate, while another part is denied probate on the ground of either fraud or undue influence.

A will, the general contents of which are well known to the testator and which was duly executed by him, may be infected by fraud with respect to a single provision Avhich, without Ms knowledge, has been dishonestly introduced into the instrument.

[435]*435The exclusion from probate of such fraudulent provision may rest upon grounds more obvious than those leading to the exclusion of a provision which, though well known to the testator, was accepted by him in response to duress or other form of undue influence.

■ In case of undue influence addressed primarily to only a part of a will, there is room for the suggestion that the entire act of testation is affected while such suggestion is impossible in respect to the fraudulent introduction of a single paragraph into a will containing many paragraphs which the testator intelligently approves and adopts.

But the power and jurisdiction of a probate court to exclude the provision introduced by undue influence is necessarily asserted and supported by the cases which, by their facts, are limited to the denial of probate to such part of the will as was written therein without the knowledge of the testator.

That the court may refuse probate to any separable part of a will for any given cause is inevitable warrant for the like procedure in every case where, in the exercise of adequate caution, there appears ground for a finding that the testator’s mind or act Avas affected by any abuse which, if exerted Avith respect to a Avhole will, would invalidate it entirely. That which may be done upon a finding of fraud or mistake by Avhich a provision was written into a Avill without the knowledge of the testator may be done upon a finding of undue influence. Hence, all the cases which for any reason justify a disregard of a single feature of a Avill are plain authority for the proposition essential to this case that the residuary clause may alone be denied probate.

Every suggestion of righteousness and good sense makes for the avoidance of a portion of a Avill which for any reason is found not to have been Avithin the actual purposed of the testator. There would be a fail[436]*436ure of justice if the same considerations which would clearly require the entire denial of probate. should bo helpless in the face of an equal wrong entirely limited to a single feature of the will.

The present case is an apt illustration. It is here claimed, though the evidence did not uphold, the' claim, that the testator without fraud or undue influence and with sufficient deliberation adopted five paragraphs of his will, but that with respect to the residuary clause thereof was subject to domination and abuse of his volition, sufficiently strong and well defined to have avoided the whole will if thereunto directed. If we concede the claim, how abhorrent would it be to withhold the redress sought Of course, in order to deny probate to a part only of a will, it must clearly appear to be severable from the remaining provisions; but when a conceded and plainly marked wrong is disclosed, the law will not confess its inability to award adequate and appropriate redress. Cases which decide that a part only of a will may be denied probate for reasons other than undue influence are the following: Burger v. Hill, 1 Bradf. 360; Hill v. Burger, 10 How. Pr. 254; Matter of Janes, 87 Hun, 57; affd., without opinion, 152 N. Y. 647; Riggs v. Palmer, 115 id. 506; Matter of Finn, 1 Misc. Rep. 280.

In Burger v. Hill, supra, the fact was that without fraud or undue influence the testator by mistake had devised all his real estate to his mother and sisters under the conviction that certain leasehold premises were actually held by him as real estate. He had no real estate, and he gave to persons other than those to whom he made his attempted devise, all his personal property. Mr. Surrogate Bradford admitted the will to probate as a valid will of real and personal estate, except as to the leasehold premises, consoling his sense of justice by saying: “ Under such a limited [437]*437probate, the testator’s mother and sisters will take as next of kin, what they would have taken had the will conformed to his real intentions in that particular.”

It is notable that the surrogate cited in support of his decision that part of a will could be excised from the instrument in a probate decree upon the sole ground of mistake, cases where like relief was granted for incapacity, fraud or imposition. In this he clearly intimates that the principle under which a portion only of a will may be avoided in probate for any ground, is applicable to any case where other but equally influential ground appears.

In an action brought to annul the decree made in the case last cited 6 ‘ so far as it purported to admit a certain portion of specific legacies to probate and rejected other portions of the same legacies from the probate of the will,” the Supreme Court at Special Term approved the decree, with reasons expressed, although the decision was merely that the decree could not be reviewed collaterally. Hill v. Burger, supra.

In Riggs v. Palmer, supra, it is said, though in scant relation to the determination then reached, “A will procured by fraud and deception, like any other instrument, may be decreed void and set aside, and so a particular portion of a will may be excluded from probate or held inoperative if induced by the fraud or undue influence of the person in whose favor it is. (Allen v. M’Pherson, 1 H. L. Cas. 191; Harrison’s Appeal, 48 Conn. 202.)”

In Matter of Finn, supra, Mr. Surrogate Coffin laid down the rule, though not essential to his decision, that where mistake was made as to the naming of an executor, the will might still be admitted to probate without the provision introduced by mistake.

Cases in which it was expressly held that a portion only of a will could be disregarded in probate for fraud [438]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re the Estate of Wharton
114 Misc. 2d 1017 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1982)
In re the Estate Lawson
75 A.D.2d 20 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1980)
In re the Estate of Eckert
93 Misc. 2d 677 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1978)
Petrie v. Chase Manhattan Bank
38 A.D.2d 206 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1972)
In re the Probate of the Will of Foulds
21 Misc. 2d 402 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1960)
In re the Probate of the Will of Croker
201 Misc. 264 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1951)
In re the Estate of Thorn
153 Misc. 28 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 Misc. 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-maguire-nysurct-1918.