In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Peiser

10 Mills Surr. 188, 79 Misc. 668, 140 N.Y.S. 844
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 10 Mills Surr. 188 (In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Peiser) 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 Peiser, 10 Mills Surr. 188, 79 Misc. 668, 140 N.Y.S. 844 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

There is but a single question in this cause: The paper propounded, by inspection is readily seen to consist of two sheets of legal cap, woven together in the web and never cut since they came from the paper maker. In other words, the two sheets are only such by manner of folding. Originally they were fabricated in one long sheet. As folded they now make two sheets, or four pages, susceptible of being written on. These two sheets, or four pages, are now backed by a separate cover fastened on by removable metal staples. The cover is indorsed, “ Last Will and Testament of Michael Peiser, November 18th, 1908.” The cursive script propounded covers the front page of the first or uppermost sheet, continues consecutively on the reverse side of the second or lowermost sheet, and then returns to the reverse side of the first sheet, ending thereon with the subscription of the testator, followed by a full attestation clause, subsigned by the attesting witnesses. In other words, the signature of the testator is on the reverse side of the first sheet and is followed by a blank page, over-written only on its reverse side. The reverse side, of third page, is not signed or identified by the testator. It follows in position page 3, where the testator’s signature alone appears.

In the better and more concise language of counsel for the beneficiaries: “ If we treat the paper propounded as having four pages, the obverse and reverse sides of the first sheet being treated as pages 1 and 2, and of the second sheet as pages 3 and 4, we can then say that the will starts on page 1, is continued on page 4, and concluded on page 2.” It is page 2 which contains the signature of testator. This signature is followed [190]*190by the ordinary attestation clause, subsigned by the attesting witnesses in the usual manner. There being no allegation of fraud or forgery in this cause, and no suspicious circumstance disclosed, the authenticity of the testamentary script propounded being admitted, the presumption is that the will propounded is in the same condition it was in when the testator and the attesting witnesses placed their respective signatures on it and the testator duly declared it to be his last will and testament and requested the attesting witnesses to act as such. Matter of Cattrall, 1863, 3 S. & T. 419, 421. But without the aid of legal presumption, the paper propounded bears both internal and external evidences of genuineness and that it was composed and written at the same time, and in its present order. When the draftsman of the will had ended writing on the first page he had finished only a part of the third dispositive clause of the will. He then reverted to the fourth blank page where, at the top of the page, he was at pains to note in writing, “ Third (continued),” evidently meaning that the third clause of the will which began on the first page was to be continued on the fourth page as, in fact, it was.

The written language of the three utilized pages is closely consecutive and in order. The entire paper contains internal evidence that the will was all composed and transcribed at the same time. Without the aid of the writing on the fourth page, or in other words on the reverse side of the second sheet, the balance of the testamentary paper is unintelligible. It is manifest that the draftsman of this will began writing on the first page, turned over to the fourth page, which he filled with words, and then went back to the second page, where he ended the will and caused it to be subscribed by the testator and subsigned by the attesting witnesses. As already stated, there is no issue of fraud or forgery involved in this probate proceeding, and there is manifest an intention on the part of the [191]*191testator to comply with the Statute of Wills. The only question before me then is, “ Is the testamentary script, propounded, subscribed in this particular instance by the testator at the end thereof, within the true meaning and requirements of the Statute of Wills (2 R. S. 63, sec. 40, now sec. 21, Decedent Estate Law) ? ”

Had it not been for the decision of the Court of Appeals in Matter of Field, 204 N. Y. 448, I should have no hesitation in holding that prior decisions of this state compelled me to conclude that the paper propounded was not subscribed by the testator at the end thereof within the meaning of the present Statute of Wills. Matter of Whitney, 153 N. Y. 259; Matter of Andrews, 162 id. 1, Matter of Blair, 152 id. 645; affg., 84 Hun, 581; Matter of Conway, 124 N. Y. 455; Matter of O’Neil, 91 id. 516; Sisters of Charity v. Kelly, 67 id. 409. Although in principle these cases are often attempted to be distinguished by reason of certain special features peculiar to each case, I confess I am utterly unable to distinguish this case before me from the principle of those decisions. Those decisions place form above substance. But matter of Field modified this rule, and I am now to determine whether or not this will is within the principle announced in Matter of Field. If it is so, I must pronounce for the will; otherwise, against it.

When I just said “ within the principle announced in Matter of Field ” I should explain what I mean. The principle of stare decisis is not the equivalent of res judicata. The latter term relates more to controversies on pleas in bar and to the particular judgments rendered on the peculiar facts of a given case. It is a very trifling conception of the doctrine of stare decisis to affirm that it applies only when the identical facts are again shown and the court must render a precisely - similar judgment. If that were the true limitation of the doctrine of stare decisis, the difficulty would be that in all human prob[192]*192ability the facts of one cause could never again be precisely repeated in any future cause. All logicians concede that identity, or coexistence, or coinherence, is a relative term or figure of speech. Identity exists only in mathematical science or in the abstract, if at all. The doctrine of stare decisis relates to legal principles, not to facts. At common law the only thing in a decision binding as authority under the rule stare decisis is the right principle upon which the case was decided—ratio decidendi —and not the application of such principle. Lord Walpole v. Earl of Cholmondeley, 7 T. R. 138,148; Lord Eldon in Browning v. Wright, 2 B. & P. 13, 24; Merry v. Hickalls, L. R., 7 Ch. Div. 733, 750, 751, Osborne v. Rowlett, 13 Ch. Div. 774, 785; Lord Herschell in Trego v. Hunt, 1896, A. C. 7, 14. While these are English decisions, and by reason of their late date of no authority here, they well express the common law doctrine often recognized here, and our common law is the same on this point. Carroll v. Lessee of Carroll, 16 How. (U. S.) 275, 286.

The principle of the adjudications of this state prior to the year 1912 was that our" Statute of Wills required a will to be subscribed by the testator at the physical or actual end or foot of the testamentary document. It would not do prior to 1912 to subscribe a testament in the middle of the paginal order, or even at the logical, or intellectual, or speaking end of a will not written in a consecutive order of pagination. If the adjudications prior to 1912 do not disclose this principle, they disclose nothing else to my mind. It is idle to attempt to reconcile the decisions of our courts prior to 1912 with any other conclusion, and I will not resort to such an effort. There was by those decisions, in short, no such thing as a “ constructive end ” of a will.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Mills Surr. 188, 79 Misc. 668, 140 N.Y.S. 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proving-the-last-will-testament-of-peiser-nysurct-1913.