In re Proving the Will of Stockwell

2 Gibb. Surr. 62, 17 Misc. 108, 40 N.Y.S. 734, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 130
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMay 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 Gibb. Surr. 62 (In re Proving the Will of Stockwell) 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 Will of Stockwell, 2 Gibb. Surr. 62, 17 Misc. 108, 40 N.Y.S. 734, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 130 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Glass, S.

The only question in this proceeding is whether or not there was a sufficient acknowledgment by the testatrix of her subscription to the instrument offered for probate as her will.

The statute requires either that the subscription shall be made by the dictator in the presence of each of the subscribing wit[63]*63nesses or that it shall be acknowledged by him to have been so made to each of the attesting witnesses.

Neither of the subscribing witnesses saw the testatrix subscribe her name to the paper nor did the testatrix by any spoken word acknowledge to either of the witnesses that she had subscribed it. It is claimed, however, in behalf of the proponent that although there was no verbal acknowledgment by the testatrix of her subscription, her acts in' connection with the execution of the will amounted to an acknowledgment of subscription and that, therefore, the statute was complied with.

The will was drawn by the testatrix herself and was executed on the 23d day of March, 1895, at the house of Mr. Aber-nethy, her cousin, in Syracuse, N. Y. She had been a member of his family for about three years, and Mr. and Mrs. Aber-nethy and Isabella G. Patou, a servant in the family, were the attesting witnesses. Miss Patón was not called as a witness in this proceeding, and it does not appear when or where or under what circumstances she signed the will as a witness. The circumstances attending the execution of the instrument before Mr. and Mrs. Abernethy as attesting witnesses were as follows:

The testatrix and Mrs. Abernethy were both sitting in the library of the Abernethy home on the day in question. The tes-atrix was writing upon a pad in her lap, at one side of the room, and Mrs. Abernethy was writing at her desk at the other side of the room. Mr. Abernethy came into, the room, and the testatrix said, “ Arthur, I want you and Hatty to- witness my will.” He said, “ All right,” went over to where the testatrix was sitting and attempted to write his name as an attesting witness upon the paper while it was yet in her lap, but found that it was so low down he could not conveniently do so. He then took the paper over to a table and wrote his name about three-fourths of an inch below the signature of the testatrix, but on the left side of the paper, the signature of the testatrix being on the right side.

He also wrote the word witness ” before his own name and before the. space where his -wife was to sign her name. Mrs. [64]*64Abernetby then took her place at the table and wrote her name immediately under her husband’s signature, opposite the second word “ witness ” written by her husband.

At the time Mr. Abernethy subscribed his name as an attesting witness he saw the signature of the testatrix already signed at the end of the will.

The rules of la,w applicable to the foregoing’ facts are laid down in the following leading cases:

In the Matter of Phillips, 98 N. Y. 267, Rapallo, L, says: “The exhibition of the will and of the testator’s signature attached thereto, and his declaration to the witness that it was his last will and testament,- and his request to the witness to- attest the same, were-, we think, a sufficient acknowledgment of the signature and publication of the will, . . . .”

In Baskin v. Baskin, 36 N. Y. 416, Porter, I., said: “When, however, the testator produces a paper, to which he has personally affixed his signature, requests the witnesses to attest it, and declares it to be his last will and testament, he does all that the law requires. It is enough that he verifies the -subscription as authentic, without reference to the form in which the acknowledgment is made; and there could be no more unequivocal acknowledgment of a signature thus affixed than presenting it to the witnesses- for attestation and publishing the paper so subscribed as his will.”

In Matter of Lang, 9 Misc. Rep. 521, Fitzgerald, S., it was held that the presentation of the will to the witnesses with the signature in plain sight is a substantial acknowledgment of the signature.

It was necessary, however, that the subscribing witnesses should have seen the signature of the testatrix at the time of the publication of the will and of its subscription, by them as witnesses. Lewis v. Lewis, 11 N. Y. 221; Mitchell v. Mitchell, 16 Hun, 97; affirmed, 77 N. Y. 596; Matter of Mackay, 110 id. 611.

In Matter of Mackay, supra; Earl, J., says. “Subscribing [65]*65witnesses to a will are required by law for the purpose of attesting and identifying the signature of the testator, and that they cannot do, unless at the time of the attestation they see it. . . . The formalities prescribed by the statute are safeguards thrown around the testator to prevent fraud and imposition. To this end the witnesses should either see the testator subscribe his name, or he should, the signature being visible to him and to them, acknowledge it to be his signature. Otherwise, imposition might be possible and .sometimes the purpose of the statute might be frustrated.”

So far as the attesting witness, Mr. Abernethy, is concerned, therefore, there was, clearly, a sufficient acknowledgment by the; testatrix of her subscription to the will.

Mrs. Abernethy, the other attesting witness, however, on being asked by counsel whether she saw the signature of the' testatrix when she herself signed the will as a witness, answered, “No; X don’t think I did; I don’t remember.” She further testified that she could not tell positively whether the name of the testatrix was subscribed to the will when she signed as a witness, or not; that she did not remember.

If it is true, as Mrs. Abernethy seems to think was the case, that she did not see the signature of the testatrix at the time it was presented to the witnesses for attestation, there was no acknowledgment of subscription by the testatrix as to Mrs. Aber-nethy within the meaning of the cases above cited, although there are some cases tending to support the proposition that the acknowledgment of subscription by the testator is made if he presents his will already signed by himself to the attesting witnesses, publishing the same as his will and requesting the witnesses to sign as such, provided the signature of the testator could be seen by the witnesses, no matter whether they did see it in fact or not. Matter of Higgins, 94 N. Y. 554; Matter of Look, 26 N. Y. State Repr. 745.

. But I am satisfied that Mrs. Abernethy is mistaken in her present impression, and that she did, in fact, see the signature of the testatrix when she herself signed as a witness, but has [66]*66forgotten 'the fact, although there was only the short interval of" six months between the making of the will and the occasion of her being called as a witness.

• The paper itself; upon inspection, shows that she must have seen Miss Stockwell’s signature whpn she wrote her own name as a witness, because it would have been a physical impossibility for' her to have signed her name where she didi without seeing Miss Stockwell’s signature.

The whole will is written on the upper half of a sheet of ordinary letter paper, eight by ten inches in size.

Mrs. Abernethy sighed her name immediately below that of her husband and not more‘than an inch below the signature of the testatrix, but on the left side of the page, while the signature-of the testatrix was on' the right side. The latter portion of Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Gibb. Surr. 62, 17 Misc. 108, 40 N.Y.S. 734, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proving-the-will-of-stockwell-nysurct-1896.