In re Proving the Alleged Last Will & Testament of Dake

75 A.D. 403, 78 N.Y.S. 29
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 A.D. 403 (In re Proving the Alleged Last Will & Testament of Dake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Proving the Alleged Last Will & Testament of Dake, 75 A.D. 403, 78 N.Y.S. 29 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.:

We think that the decree appealed from should be affirmed in so far as it admits to probate the original will made by the deceased, and should be reversed in so far as it admits to probate the two alleged codicils thereto.

Jonathan M. Dake died in February, 1900, being a resident of •Livingston county. He was over eighty years old at death and seems to have developed a quite well-defined predilection for writing wills and codicils and other communications to be published post mortem. He had been married four times. He was survived by his last wife and one child of that union, and also by descendants by each of his previous marriages. At and for some time prior to his death he resided with his last wife and child and apart from his children by former marriages. Up to a short time before his death he had been possessed of considerable property. After his death it appeared that he had executed various purported transfers of a large portion of the same to his widow. Shortly after his death said widow proposed for probate by the surrogate of Livingston county a purported last will and testament dated February 5, 1894, and also two purported codicils thereto dated respectively February 20, 1898, and November J, 1898. The son by her marriage with the deceased joined in the efforts to secure probate of these instruments. The children and grandchildren of the deceased by his former marriages opposed the same. Originally various reasons, including lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence, were urged by contestants why said purported last will and testament and codicils, which favored the widow and her son, should not be admitted to probate. Upon the hearing, however, and upon this appeal the objections were and are in substance reduced to the following:

[406]*4061. That said original will contained material interlineations and alterations which avoided it.

2. That after its execution, and in 1896, another will was executed by the testator which operated as a revocation and annulment of the will proposed.

3. That the first proposed codicil was void and ineffectual because of failure upon the part of the testator to properly and sufficiently observe the statute governing the execution of wills (2 R. S. 63, § 40.)

4. That said second purported codicil was not in any proper and sufficient way so connected with or made applicable to the original will as to be admitted as a codicil thereto.

We shall consider the objections in the order stated.-

The original will did contain two or more material alterations by way of interlineation. These interlineations, however, like the body of the will are in the handwriting of the testator. An attempt ■ was made by the contestants to demonstrate by the evidence of an expert witness that the ink of the clauses inserted was so different from the ink used in the body of the will as to indicate that the alterations were made at a different and subsequent time from that at which the will itself was written. The proponents, upon the other hand, gave evidence tending to show that the body of the will and the inserted clauses were all written at the same time. The surrogate, both by his findings and by his refusals to find, by implication at least, adopted the theory of the proponents and refused to accept that of the contestants that the said interlineations were made after the will had been executed. In view of his findings and refusals to find, and under all of the circumstances of this particular case, we are unwilling to hold or presume that said changes were made in said will after the same had been executed. We think, upon the other hand, that it is more reasonable to assume that the same were made, by the testator in the course of the preparation of the instrument and before its execution. (Matter of Potter, 33 N. Y. St. Repr. 936; Crossman v. Crossman, 95 N. Y. 145.)

In support of their claim that the proposed will had been revoked by the acts of the testator, contestants gave evidence tending to prove that he.had made another and later will some time in the [407]*407latter part of the year 1896. The evidence as to the date and details of the execution of this alleged later will was given by the subscribing witnesses thereto. It was not entirely clear and definite in all respects, especially as to the time of execution. It may probably he assumed with safety, however, that such will was made. The acting surrogate, while refusing to find as fully as requested by the contestants upon this subject, has still found somewhat in favor of their claim. This later will was not produced upon the hearing and no evidence whatever was given as to its contents, except that the witnesses stated that when the testator asked them to witness the will he stated in substance that it revoked his other will or wills.

Assuming that execution of this last will was proved, we do not think that all of the evidence bearing upon that subject is sufficient to sustain a finding that thereby the proposed will was revoked.

The statute bearing upon that subject (2 R. S. 64, § 42) provides: “Ho will in writing except in the cases herein after mentioned nor any part thereof shall be revoked or altered otherwise than by some other will in writing or some other writing of the testator declaring such revocation or alteration, and executed with the same formalities with which the will itself was required bylaw to-be executed,” etc.

It may also be accepted that a former will may be revoked or annulled by a subsequent one which is thoroughly and radically contradictory of or inconsistent with the provisions of the first one.

Both of these rules, impose upon the party seeking to establish such a revocation of a former will the burden of showing that the latter instrument, either by its express terms or by necessary implication, operated as a revocation. That evidénce is wanting in this case. The testimony of the witnesses Gurnee and O’Oonnell that the testator declared that the will of 1896 revoked his former wills, even if it had been accepted and believed by the acting surrogate, did not furnish sufficient evidence of the contents of .the later will to comply with the requirements of the rules adverted to, Even if it should be held that the statement of the testator as to the contents of his will was proper proof, we should hold that the declaration in this case claimed to have been made was nothing more than the expression by the testator of his opinion as to the legal effect of his [408]*408later act. (1 Jarm. Wills [Rand & Tal. 5th Arn. ed.], 338; Matter of Williams, 34 Misc. Rep. 748.)

We pass finally to the consideration of the two purported codicils to the foregoing will, and in the admission of which to probate the learned acting surrogate in our judgment committed error.

These two alleged instruments, as before stated, are dated respectively February 20, 1898, and November 7, 1898. They are both, in the handwriting of the testator. As presented to the court, they were-part, of a parcel of papers pasted together, and consisting, in the order named, of a communication covering two sheets of foolscap addressed by the testator apparently to his son Moses; the later of the purported codicils covering one page of foolscap; the earlier purported codicil written upon two pages of distinct sheets of fools- . cap; the will in question, upon which are found certain detached declarations in the handwriting of the testator in substance that he had been free from any undue influence, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
75 A.D. 403, 78 N.Y.S. 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proving-the-alleged-last-will-testament-of-dake-nyappdiv-1902.