In re the Contested Probate of the Will of Cruger

2 Mills Surr. 383, 36 Misc. 477, 73 N.Y.S. 812
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2 Mills Surr. 383 (In re the Contested Probate of the Will of Cruger) 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 the Contested Probate of the Will of Cruger, 2 Mills Surr. 383, 36 Misc. 477, 73 N.Y.S. 812 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

ThoMAs, S.

— Tbe paper propounded for probate as a will of personal property is in holographic form and without witnesses. It is dated at Eontainebleau, Erance, on May 29, 1896, and is in the Erench language, and purports to constitute the [384]*384proponent the “ universal legatee ” of the decedent and to leave to her his entire estate. The decedent died at Fontainebleau on April 4, 1898, being then about forty-two years of age. The proponent had lived with him as a wife for about six years before his death, but was never married to him, and during the whole of that time he had a wife. The contestant is the general guardian of three children by his first marriage. It is quite clear that the propounded paper does not in any way conform to the requirements of the law of this State as to its method of execution, and it can be sustained, if at all, only as a French will, executed in France by a 'resident of that country. By the law of France: “ A holographic will shall not be valid unless it is wholly written, dated and signed, in the hand of the testator. It is not subject to any other formality.” Civil Code of France, § 970. On the part of the proponent it is alleged that the paper in question was wholly written, signed and dated by the decedent, and the contestant endeavored to establish that it was in all respects a forgery. On this issue I must determine in favor of the genuineness of the document. The proof is that it was handed for safekeeping by the decedent to a French notary in the fall of 1896, and that he spoke of having made such a will to other persons. The notary was a public officer, one of whose principal duties was to act as a custodian of papers affecting rights of property. He is not impeached, and it is not shown that he would have served his personal interests by becoming a party to a conspiracy to concoct or enforce a forged will. The evidence against the paper w'as mainly that of persons familiar with his handwriting, and of experts in handwriting, and testimony of a similar kind was also offered by the proponent. The expert testimony was interesting and served to direct my attention to the peculiarities of the penmanship of the decedent and led me to a close examination of the disputed paper. After such examination and after making a comparison of the writing in question with the other writings [385]*385shown to be genuine, I am of the opinion that the paper propounded was written by the decedent. The testamentary capacity of the decedent was also called in question. On this issue the testimony offered is entirely incapable of being harmonized. The decedent, at some time prior to 1896, became affected with a disorder of some hind, which was progressive in its effects, and which finally ended in his death in April, 1898. Among the symptoms were a paralysis of speech, and of the limbs, and a gradual weakening in physical and mental power. Tremulousness of the hands, inducing a shaking handwriting, was also a symptom. As to this general condition the witnesses are in substantial accord, but as to whether, on April 29, 1896, the disease had so far advanced as to make the decedent incapable at that time to make an intelligent disposition of his estate, the differences are radical. The great bulk of the evidence is in favor of testamentary capacity. I am also aided by the instrument itself, which shows intelligence in construction, and the writing of which does not exhibit much of tremor or physical decay. I decide that the decedent had sufficient testamentary capacity. No proof was offered on which a finding that the paper was procured fraudulently or by undue inflence could be based. The fact that the chief beneficiary was the mistress of the testator might have weight under some circumstances, though not all controlling; but, under all of the facts appearing, the paper is not at all unreasonable, and may fairly be inferred to express the wishes of the decedent. By section 2611 of the Code of Civil Procedure, “ a will of personal property, executed by a person not a resident of the State, according to the laws of the testator’s residence, may be proved as prescribed ” by our statute. If, therefore, Mr. Cruger was, at the time of making the paper in question, not a resident of this State, but a resident of Fontainebleau, in France, and continued so to be a resident of France to the time of his death, and the paper propounded was executed according to the laws [386]*386of France, it must be admitted to probate here as a will of personal property. In determining these questions the terms “ resident ” and “ residence ” as used in our statute must be used in the sense in which those words were used by our legislators and as defined by our courts. As so used a resident of a place is an inhabitant of that place who has a fixed intention to remain there. The “ residence ” must be equivalent to “ domicile,” and must include both actual residence and. intention. Dupuy v. Wurtz, 53 N. Y. 556; Mitchell v. United States, 21 Wall. 450; Moorehouse v. Lord, 10 H. L. Cas. 272. It is, however, something less than or different from citizenship or nationality, and a citizen of the United States and of the State of New York may well be a resident of any other country in the world. Dupuy v. Wurtz, supra. Mr. Cruger, the decedent, was born in Florence, Italy, in 1856, his parents being American citizens who were married in Europe and who continued to reside there until they died, the father in 1866 and the mother in 1873. He was educated in France until the outbreak of the Eraneo-Prussian war in 1870, when he was brought to America. lie received some schooling at Peekskill, in this State, and in 1872, he was appointed a cadet at the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, as an American citizen, residing in Dutchess county, New York. He was discharged from the Naval Academy in 1873, and went to Europe to join his mother. Ilis mother died in that year, and he was again brought to America. He was first in Dutchess county with relatives, and subsequently came to New York city, where he was residing when he reached his majority, in 1877. He was for a time a clerk in his uncle’s real estate office pn this city, and for some years prior to 1880, he was an officer in the National Guard of the State of York. In 1880 he was married and went to live in the residence of his father-in-law in the city of New York. In 1881 he registered as a voter in the city oi; Neiw York and voted at the election held during that year. [387]*387He continued to reside in tbis city for several years, during which, time his three children, the contestants in this proceeding, were born. In January, 1887, the marriage between him and the mother of the contestants was dissolved by a judgment of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, in an action brought by her on statutory grounds, and the custody of the infant children was awarded to her. These facts require the inference that, up to January, 1887, Mr. Cruger was legally domiciled in this State. The question is then presented whether that domicile was lost and a new domicile was acquired by his subsequent acts. After his divorce, and in March, 1887, Mr. Cruger was married for a second time in London, to a lady Avhose home had been in New York. Shortly after his second marriage he returned with his wife for a brief stay in New York, but shortly went with her to Europe, where they lived a more or less roving life, traveling about Europe, in a villa at Paris and in a hotel at Fontainebleau, until 1891, when a separation was had between them. Mr. Cruger then seems to have formed his relation with the proponent, and he thereafter lived with her until his death.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Mills Surr. 383, 36 Misc. 477, 73 N.Y.S. 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-contested-probate-of-the-will-of-cruger-nysurct-1901.