In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Moore

109 A.D. 762, 96 N.Y.S. 729
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 109 A.D. 762 (In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Moore) 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 Last Will & Testament of Moore, 109 A.D. 762, 96 N.Y.S. 729 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Spring, J.:

Chester Moore executed the instrument which has been admitted to probate about January 28, 1903. It was in his own handwriting and the subscribing witnesses were husband and wife, neighbors of the decedent, and were old people bordering on eighty years of age.

Mr. Moore was a man of intelligence and of business' ability, and had some information as to the statutory requirements pertaining to the execution of a will. Mr. Dennis, also apparently intelligent and of a fairly retentive memory, was somewhat familiar with these requirements.

Mo evidence was given impeaching the will by reason of lack of testamentary capacity of the decedent, or that he was under any restraint at the time of its execution. The evidence was directed solely to what occurred at the time the witnesses subscribed the paper.

They were asked one evening to go over to the Moore home to sign some papers. After reaching the house, Mr. Moore produced a paper entirely in his own handwriting with his genuine signature at the end, and asked these neighbors to sign, which they did under the word Witnesses.” Mr. Dennis added their place of residence. Mr. Dennis asked Mr. Moore if he was making his will, and the latter replied : Mo, this is only a memoranda I will use down town [764]*764some-day.” Again that it was. “a memorandum of his property;a list” that he “would use some future time to make out a will down town or something of that kind.” The. witness;'.was strenuous in maintaining that Mr. Moore stated he was not making á will, and that he. did not say it was a memorandum of the manner he wished his property to be disposed of after his death. He did acknowledge to , them that the signature at the end was his own. The testimony of Mrs.; Dennis, in its essential features, does not vary from that of her husband.

Mr. Mooré left no children, but a widow and brother, and purported to dispose of all his personal property, amounting to about-$50,000, by the instrument admitted to probate. He gave to his wife in general and specific legacies property aggregating about $10,000 ; to his brother $5,000; to his “ friend, Miss Lulu L. Berg-told,” $10,000. The. residue of his property was bequeathed to his , executors in trust to invest and pay the income to his wife' during, life and upon her death the corpus was to pass to Ms brother and his- children. ■ The widow alone contested probate.

The beneficiary, Miss Bergtold, was not a relative of the decedent; .The proof does- not disclose what induced the bequest to her. There is ‘an indirect intimation that the relations this legatee bqre to the decedent had been the cause of discord in the Moore- household.- In any event, the legacy to Miss Bergtold is apparently the basis of the contest of the will, and the hostility of Mrs. Moore has been imparted to the subscribing witnesses. They were emphatic in testifying that they regarded this provision to Miss Bergtold unjust and unfair to the widow and that they were against the probate of the will.

We think -the testimony of the subscribing witnesses is insufficient to show, a substantial compliance with the statute governing the execution of wills! (See 2 R. S. 63, § 40.) There was no declaration by the alleged testator that the paper was.his. last will- and testament. On the contrary, he expressly negatived the suggestion .that it was his will. He said it was a list of his property which he expected to use eventually in its disposition!

The publication of the will by the proposed testator is one of the . four indispensable requirements to its validity.- It is- important, ■first, in denoting that the testator knows the nature of the instru[765]*765ment he is executing and to check any deception upon him. In the second place, and also in order that there may be no imposition perpetrated, it is important that the subscribing witnesses understand that they are attesting the signature to the will "of the person at whose request they severally subscribe their, names. They, realize, if the document is a will, that they are expected to remember what occurred at its execution and be ready to vouch for its validity in court. The declaration of the testator that the instrument is his will is not solely, therefore, for the purpose of showing that he knew he was executing his . will. His subsequent declaration that he executed the instrument propounded would not relieve the proponents of the necessity of proving what occurred at the time of the execution. The statute is explicit in this requirement, and, while the reason for it may be to insure certainty that the person executing the alleged will knows what the paper is, yet to effectuate this purpose the witnesses selected must be apprised by the testator that they are to witness his will. The instrument was holographic. In proving the execution of a will of that kind the evidence of its publication may be relaxed, somewhat (Matter of Akers, 74 App. Div. 461; affd., 173 N. Y. 620; Matter of Beckett, 103 id. 167), but the statute makes no distinction in favor of a will of that description. (Matter of Turell, 166 N. Y. 330; Matter of Andrews, 162 id. 1.)

As was said in Matter of Twrell, where a will of that kind was under consideration (at p. 337): “ It must' appear that, as between the testator and the witnesses, there was some meeting of the minds upon the understanding that the instrument was the testator’s will; that it had been subscribed by him and that the attestation of the latter was desired to the will so subscribed. The facts which we must accept in this case are that there was absolutely no communication between the testator and the witnesses at the time they signed their names to this paper, and they barely permit of the surmise on the part of the witnesses as to the nature of the transaction in which they were participating.” If the testimony of these subscribing witnesses is to be believed they did not comprehend that the paper they were executing was the will of Mr. Moore. This information is essential to its valid publication. The knowledge may be acquired by signs or in. any other manner which dis[766]*766'closes that the testator and the witnesses possessed it. But where the proof shows that the testator or the witnesses did not have this, indispensable information, there is no publication within the meaning1 of the statute %nd, consequently, no will.

The proof is explicit that this knowledge was not imparted to the witnesses. Oh the contrary, Mr. Moore, as already indicated, pointedly said the instrument was not. his will. This gap in the proof cannot be supplied, by resorting to the inference that the testator knew he was executing his will. A testamentary, disposition cannot, be supported, however certain we may be of -the intention of the alleged testator,, upon the hypothesis that he possessed the essential knowledge of the character of the instrument but desired to withhold that knowledge from his. witnesses. They must know what, the instrument is. That knowledge is both a reason and a necessity for the publication..

Possibly Mr. Moore did not wish his wife, who was present when the paper was signed, 'to understand that he was executing, his will. That information,'on.her part might have resulted in the disclosure of the Bergtold bequest. It may be that this desire induced him to refrain from publishing the will. We are not concerned with Ips motives. ' The intention of the testator has no bearing upon the question we are considering. (Matter of O’Neil, 91 N. Y. 516,. 520; Matter of Whitney, 153 id.

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Bluebook (online)
109 A.D. 762, 96 N.Y.S. 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proving-the-last-will-testament-of-moore-nyappdiv-1905.