In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Dorsey

16 Mills Surr. 350, 94 Misc. 566, 157 N.Y.S. 662
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 Mills Surr. 350 (In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Dorsey) 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 Proving the Last Will & Testament of Dorsey, 16 Mills Surr. 350, 94 Misc. 566, 157 N.Y.S. 662 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Fowler, S.—

The trial of the controverted questions of fact (put to the jury by an interlocutory order dated Eovember 1, 1915, based on the contestant’s objections demanding a trial by jury of such controverted issues) came on for hearing before me and a jury, duly impaneled and selected for the purpose, at this Trial Term of this court. At the close of the evidence I directed a verdict on all the questions so put to the jury, substantially in favor of the will. I then directed meo motu the ■ proponent to move, pursuant to section 1233 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for judgment at a late day in the term on the answers of the jury (duly subscribed by the foreman and the jurors), and at the same time I directed the contestant to move for a new trial at a day deferred on the minutes, pursuant to. section 998 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

I believe.this is the proper practice, and that section 1233 of the Code of Civil Procedure should be held to apply to verdicts rendered by a jury on the controverted issues of fact put to them in this court, although, as I pointed out in Matter of Plate (93 Misc. Rep. 423), the answers of a jury to questions are not a special verdict, and not a general verdict. But they more nearly resemble a special verdict, as defined by the Code, than a general verdict. The Code, to' which we are referred in gross for guidance by the new Surrogates’ Law, seems to contem[352]*352plate only two generic kinds of verdict, and in this respect it is. faulty.

It is necessary that the practice, on trials with the aid of juries in the courts of the surrogates for this county, should be speedily settled upon a rational basis. In my judgment, both of the sections of the Code indicated apply to trials with juries in this court for reasons I shall hereafter state at length. One-other section also applies to such proceedings: Section 1185 of the Code of Civil Procedure, when the trial of an issue by a jury presents only questions of law, the judgment may. direct the jury to render k verdict subject to the opinion of the court. In that event the motion for judgment may be made by either party .and must be made at a term of the Appellate 'Division of the Supreme Court. (Code Civ. Pro., § 1234.) In most of the courts of the surrogates, especially those in the rural counties of this State, jury trials never have taken place, and in all probability such trials never will take place, the surrogates of such counties electing to send such matters to the Supreme Court, as they may lawfully do-. We shall get no aid on the proper practice from those counties. But in this great county it is becoming common, in the smaller estates more particularly, to demand trials by jury in contested probate proceedings. Too many result in settlements, the fear of a trial by jury on wills is so great. Thus it is essential that the practice in such proceedings with juries should be speedily settled in this county and the sections made applicable to trials by jury by section 2770 of the Code of Civil Procedure of the new Surrogates’ Law determined. When I concluded that I ought to take my part in the jury business of this court I found it necessary to determine what sections of the Code were made applicable to trials by jury. There had been up to February, 1916, but twenty trials by jury since September 1, 1914, and the practice was not altogether uniform nor with exception of the last trial such as I could follow. Out of the twenty jury trials in all [353]*353under the new law nine verdicts had been directed by the surrogate. The percentage of verdicts against wills was very much greater than the percentage of rejected wills under the old law. Out of the eleven issues left to the jury, there were four disagreements, making seven cases actually decided by juries in. this court in practically one and a half years of court work.

That a motion for judgment should not now be made or decided immediately on the rendition of the verdict I believed when I deferred the motion in this proceeding to a later day. The practice of the employment of juries in this court is so novel that unless we proceed graviter et lente we may seriously obstruct the rights and powers now regulated by the Statute, of Wills. I know of no such formidable attack on the testamentary power, venia testando as the new 'Surrogates7 Law affords, if the trials by jury in the courts of the surrogates are conducted by judges -and juries not impressed by the wisdom of the Statute of Wills, the gravity of the situation, the importance of the testamentary power to society at large, and the clear right of a competent testator to .do what he pleases with his own. The slightest weakening on any of these points by judge or jury will result, nine times out of ten, in injustice too grave to be lightly contemplated. It is for this reason that on challenges to the favor on the selection of juries in this court, in contested probates, every one of those drawn should, before he is accepted as a trial juror, be interrogated as to his -attitude to the Statute of Wills and the abstract right of testators to do with their own as they please. This has not been the practice, and yet it is common knowledge that many persons in this commonwealth do not approve of the Statute of Wills or of testamentary dispositions differing from the Statute of Distributions. Such are not teompetent to serve -as jurors in contested probates, under the new law.

It may -be said that any error in the trial of contested probates can be corrected by an appeal. What an idle and ineon[354]*354siderate suggestion! Let me illustrate by an example: The father and breadwinner comes to die; he leaves the accumulation of a laborious life, $50,000 (this is far above the average of estate) and surviving him a widow and five or ten children, some of them infants. His will leaving all to the widow is contested, perhaps by a guardian (appointed by this court). After long delay the contested probate comes to trial with a jury in 'this court. The verdict of the jury is against the will. There has been a mistrial, patent, open and nortorious. Where is the money to come from to correct the iniquity on appeal ? The family are starving; all need their money now. So the will of the dead man, wise and prudent as it is, is ignored by the parties. The. will fails, the Statute of Wills is defeated, and the last wishes of the dead, which ought t-O' be so solemn to all right-minded men, are ignored. Only the guardian has profited in the case. It is the people of the poorer sort who are going to.be the victims of such malpractice1, ignorant practice or want of skill on the part of myself or the jury. It is for this reason and in order that no1 blame should lie at my own door in this matter that I directed the motion for judgment on the findings in this case to be deferred until I could consider the matter afresh with proper deliberation.

The practice of moving for judgment in this court at a deferred day is consistent with the old practice in this county and in all courts of this character, as it gives ample time for that fuller, deliberate and requisite consideration on the part of the surrogate, who remains the exclusive judge of probate under the new law, and who must be satisfied in hi© conscience, pursuant to section 2614, Code of Civil Procedure, before the law allows him to enter a decree of probate based on any verdict. Unless he is careless or unmindful of his main official obligation, he must, in my opinion, take time before acting on the verdict. By some delay in re-examining the case before proceeding to decree of probate the chances of error will be lessened. My

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Related

In re the Probate of the Last Will & Testament of Walsh
107 Misc. 475 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1919)
In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Vetter
16 Mills Surr. 439 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
16 Mills Surr. 350, 94 Misc. 566, 157 N.Y.S. 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proving-the-last-will-testament-of-dorsey-nysurct-1916.