In re the Application for Probate of the Will of Seagrist

73 N.Y. St. Rep. 88

This text of 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 88 (In re the Application for Probate of the Will of Seagrist) 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 the Application for Probate of the Will of Seagrist, 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 88 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

RUMSEY, J.

Nicholas Seagrist, a resident of the city of New York, died on the 14th day of April, 1894, after a sickness of a few days. He was a man between seventy and eighty years of age, who had, partly by inheritance, but much more by his own exertions, become possessed of an estate of over a quarter of a million of dollars. He was a bachelor, and for some years had lived with F. S. K. Sigrist and his wife, Theresa, who was a niece of the testator, but who had lived in his family for many years before her marriage. He had other collateral relatives, with some of whom, so far as appears, he was on friendly, but not intimate terms, and with some he was slightly acquainted. He was taken sick with diabetes on the 10th day of April. Before that time he had made no will. His disease progressed rapidly, and in a short time he became a very sick man. On the 14th of April his situation was serious, but even then his immediate death was not expected by anybody in his household, although the doctor in attendance upon him despaired of his life. The will was executed at between three and four o’clock on the afternoon of the 14th, and the testator died at midnight of that day. The will was propounded for probate in the usual way, and several of his next of kin appeared and entered upon a contest. The contestants made the usual allegations of want of testamentary capacity, and that the will was procured by fraud and undue influence of the principal devisee and that it was not properly executed. After a long trial, the surrogate admitted the will to probate, and from his decree to that effect this appeal is taken.

Upon the hearing before the surrogate there was practically no dispute as to what occurred at the time the will was made, nor is there the slightest reason to doubt that the story of what took place at the execution of the will by the proponents’ witnesses is substantially correct. It is quite true that they do not agree in all the details of the transaction, but it is a familiar experience that, where several witnesses are called upon to testify to the same transaction, there is apt to be some discrepancy as to the minor details of it. Indeed, if witnesses should agree as to every detail of a transaction which occupied a considerable space of time,- and should undertake to tell all that occurred in precisely the same order, each giving the same incidents as the others in precisely the same words, that fact would be, of itself, a suspicious circumstance. In re Lyddy’s Will, 24 St. Rep. 607.

The will was witnessed by five persons. That fact0is suggested as affording the presumption that all was not right, because it is not usual to produce so many witnesses to a will. Even if there were any force in this suggestion, it is removed by the proof of the fact that Nicholas Seagrist himself not infrequently drew wills for other people, and that, in superintending the execution of the will of his niece Theresa, he had procured five people to sign it as witnesses. The' fact itself is comparatively uniinportant, and the proof as to the manner in which his niece’s will was [90]*90executed is only material as tending to show a peculiarity of the testator which would give a reason why the husband of the niece, in preparing for the execution of his uncle’s will, should procure , the same num,ber of people to sign it as witnesses.

It seems, from the testimony, that the will was drawn by Mr. Orrell, a lawyer of many years’ experience, who had for a long time been an intimate friend of the testator. Just how he came to draw the will does not appear. The proponents propose to-show from whom he received his instructions. This was objected to by the contestants, and npon that objection the surrogate excluded it. The correctness of that ruling is not here in question, but the fact that the ruling was made, and the witness was thereby' rendered incompetent, for the purposes of this trial, to give evidence as to the person from whom he received instructions to draw the will, very la-rgely deprives of its force the objection that he, the only person who knew where the instructions came from, did-not testify to the fact. However, he was permitted to, and did, testify that he received no directions with regard to the the will from F. S. K. Seagrist, or from Theresa, his wife, who are the persons accused of practicing undue influence, and of procuring the will -to be drawn. Mr. Orrell did testify, however, that he had a long interview, lasting the greater part of a day, with Nicholas Seagrist; that, afterwards, he drew this will, and caused it to be engrossed; that on the 14th of April he took it to the house of the testator, who was then in bed, very ill; that it was read to him, and he understood it And then he describes, as did the witnesses to the will, what took place by way of execution of it. With regard to that, it is sufficienc to say that the formalities of the statute were in all respects complied with, and that the will was formally executed.

The will gives to Theresa Seagrist, the wife of Frank Seagrist, half of the testator’s estate. It appears, from the testimony, that Frank Seagrist and h'is wife were the only inmates of the house of the testator, except the servants, that they had lived with him for many years, and that their relations with him were affectionate and intimate; and the contestants insisted that they took advantage of this relation which they bore to the testator to induce him to make a will, when, if he had been left to himself, he would Have died intestate, and permitted his property to be distributed among all of his next of kin. To this contention there are two answers : In the first place, it is not even fairly to be inferred from the evidence that the'testator would not have made the will, if he had been left to his own devices. It is quite true that evidence was given on the part of the contestants, to the effect that he had, at various times, declared that he would never make a will; -but evidence was also offered, by the proponents, of declarations of.the testator with regard to his relations towards "Theresa, of the affection he bore to her, and evincing his intention that she'should have the larger part of his estate. So that all that can be inferred from the evidence,on that point, is that there were times during which he had no intention of making a will. In re White’s Will, 15 St. Rep. 753. But that evidence, itself, is of very slight im[91]*91portnnce. The will, as made, was a very natural one. His relationship to these persons who lived with him i.n the house was, as has been said, intimate and affectionate. Theresa Seagrist had been an inmate of his house before her marriage, and occupied almost the position of a daughter towards him. He had frequently expressed to many people the obligations he felt towards her for the kindness she had shown him, and it is evident she was the favorite among all his nephews and nieces. Some of these nephews and nieces, who lived elsewhere, were evidently not familiarly acquainted with him; and while his relations towards them all were friendly, and he sometimes visited them, it is quite clear, from the testimony, that he felt no particular affection for them, and neither had nor expressed any idea that he was under obligations to provide for them in any way. So that, in .view of the testator’s situation, as shown by the evidence, which is substantially uncontradicted, the intrinsic evidence that the -will was the product of his own intention and desire is very strong.

But, even "if he was procured to make a will in favor of Theresa, by her and her husband, that of itself is no proof of fraud or undue influence.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.Y. St. Rep. 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-application-for-probate-of-the-will-of-seagrist-nyappdiv-1896.