In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Mason

121 Misc. 142
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJune 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 121 Misc. 142 (In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Mason) 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 Mason, 121 Misc. 142 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1923).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

This is a proceeding to probate the oral will of a soldier, last seen or heard of in a German prison camp.

The first question to be determined is whether or not the soldier is dead. The contestant admits that the inherent probabilities are that the soldier is dead, but questions whether there is proof enough before the court to establish the fact.

The soldier involved was a member of the One Hundred and Sixth Infantry of the army of the United States, and was captured on September 27, 1918, by troops of the German army, during the attack of the Twenty-seventh American Division upon the enemy position known as the Hindenburg line. He was taken by his captors, with other prisoners, to the German rear. On October first he was stricken with influenza.

Quartered at that time in a schoolhouse or barn, he was there attended by Loomis, one of his regimental comrades, who was his fellow prisoner, and his only medication was some aspirin given him by a British hospital orderly, also a fellow prisoner. He was so sick as to be unable to rise, and on October fourteenth and fifteenth was delirious. On the latter date he was, during the absence of his comrade, removed from the schoolhouse or barn in a German ambulance.

Since then, he has never been heard from. All the Americans captured by the German army have been repatriated, but he is not among them. The United States army authorities have classified him as dead. His comrades have never heard from him. The members of his family have never heard from him. The young lady to whom he told his comrades he was engaged, and who was the object of his affectionate solicitude, designated by him as the beneficiary of his alleged will, has never heard from him. His uncle, who holds his funds, has never heard from him. No reason is known to exist why he should not, if alive, communicate with some or all of them.

The well-known character of the malady from which he was suffering, so fatal even under the best of care and medical attention, taken in conjunction with the other facts disclosed in the record, lead to the inevitable conclusion that, under the conditions confronting him during his illness, aggravated by the lack of proper medicines, he died.

It is true that his grave has not been located, but the graves of prisoners dying in prison camps of a defeated and retreating army are not always accurately recorded, and many graves have been found of dead whom it is impossible to identify.

The law only requires that the proof should remove the reasonable probability of Ernest Charlton Mason’s being alive. Butler v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 225 N. Y. 197, 203, 204. There is no [144]*144probability at all that he is alive. Indeed, the proof does not admit of conflicting inferences, but points clearly to his death; and it is found, as matter of law and of fact, that the evidence is sufficient to show that he is dead and does establish the fact of his death.

The second question to be determined is as to whether decedent made a valid will.

The decedent, Mason, on the night before the attack of September 27, 1918, was on duty as a signalman at the telephone in a dugout, with other members of his company, awaiting the hour of attack. He was on duty forty-eight hours, and in the intervals between messages talked to his comrade, Westgate, who at times relieved him, at the telephone. Westgate testified that during the night Mason said: “In the event that I get killed, I want everything that I have to go to Miss Knapp, including my insurance.” When he made the statement, no one was present within hearing but Mason and Westgate. They talked about the matter considerably and Mason referred to it more than once.

After Mason was captured, as recited above, and about two days before he was taken away in the German ambulance, about October thirteenth, according to the testimony of Loomis, the latter expressed to Mason some wishes in regard to messages to his folks and asked Mason what he wanted him to do. Mason replied, “ Ted, I haven’t much in this world, but what I do have I want to go to Miss Knapp.” When he made this statement no one was present within hearing but Mason and Loomis. *

The statutory provisions as to nuncupative or unwritten wills is found in section 16 of the Decedent Estate Law, which provides that they shall not be valid “ unless made by a soldier while in actual military service, or by a mariner, while at sea; ” and in section 141 of the Surrogate Court Act, which requires that “ before a nuncupative will is admitted to probate, its execution and the tenor thereof must be proved by at least two witnesses.”

Except for these limitations, the common-law rules as to nun cupative wills are still in force. Matter of O’Connor, 65 Misc. Rep. 403. Under the statutes, as stated in that case, “ in addition to the general rules regarding testamentary capacity and freedom from restraint, the only essentials are that the act shall be performed with testamentary intent and shall be sufficiently explicit and intelligible to permit a finding of its purport and scope, and that its execution must be proved by at least two witnesses.”

It has been urged in this case that apprehension of death must also be shown. It is not the law that, to be valid, the oral will of a soldier must be made in immediate apprehension of death, arising from circumstances equivalent to his being in extremis. See Matter [145]*145of O’Connor, supra; Botsford v. Krake, 1 Abb. (N. S.) 112; Leathers v. Greenacre, 53 Maine, 561, 574; Van Deuzer v. Estate of Gordon, 39 Vt. 111; Schouler Wills (5th ed.), § 367; Gardner Wills (2d ed.), 54; 1 Alex. Wills, § 174 et seq. It cannot, however, seriously be contended that this young soldier, either upon the occasion of his first declaration, when in the dugout awaiting the order to assault the enemy’s strongly intrenched position, which up to that time had successfully resisted many attacks, or upon the occasion when he lay prostrate upon the floor of his prison suffering from a dread sickness, was not in apprehension of death. He undoubtedly was subject to that apprehension upon both occasions. See cases cited, supra.

The deceased was a soldier and was in actual military service. His testamentary intent was very clearly expressed upon the first occasion mentioned, and was quite apparent upon the second. The words used were sufficiently explicit and intelligible to permit a finding of the scope and purpose of his testamentary desires. Everything to Miss Knapp ” is unequivocal and precise as to quantum and beneficiary.

We come to the question as to whether a statement of testamentary purpose made in substantially identical terms upon two occasions, each time to a single witness, is a sufficient compliance with the statute.

The execution of a written will is required by statute (Decedent Estate Law, § 21) to be observed with certain prescribed formalities, but even these formal requirements permit the testator to acknowledge his signature and declare the instrument to the witnesses upon separate occasions. 1 Heaton. Surr. (4th ed.) 212. There seems to be no stronger restriction in regard to the execution of a soldier’s nuncupative will.

The latitude permitted in regard to nuncupative wills of soldiers and the origin and history of so called soldiers’ wills ” is interestingly discussed in the opinion of Surrogate Bradford m

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Bluebook (online)
121 Misc. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proving-the-last-will-testament-of-mason-nysurct-1923.