In re the Estate of Angle

147 Misc. 445, 264 N.Y.S. 29, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1109
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 28, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 Misc. 445 (In re the Estate of Angle) 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 Estate of Angle, 147 Misc. 445, 264 N.Y.S. 29, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1109 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Taylor, S.

The decedent by the second paragraph of his will provided: 2nd. I have prepared and placed in my Safe Deposit Box in The National Bank and Trust Company of Port Jervis various sealed envelopes, addressed to various persons. Such envelopes with their contents I direct my Executor to deliver in person or by registered mail to those persons to whom such envelopes are addressed without breaking the seals of such envelopes, such envelopes and the contents thereof to be the property, absolutely and forever, of those whose names are on said envelopes. I have also left with Mr. E. F. Mapes of The National Bank and Trust Company written directions for these deliveries of envelopes to be made.”

The will is dated February 2, 1931, and the decedent died December 21, 1932. The will was admitted to probate in this court January 18, 1933, at which time it was agreed by all interested counsel that the validity and effect of the second paragraph should be passed upon in a construction proceeding under section 145 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, at which time all the persons whose names appeared upon the envelopes in question would be brought in as parties. All of that has been done, testimony taken and the question now finally presented for decision.

The will does not specifically dispose of bank accounts which the decedent had opened in trust for others, nor stock or other certificates in similar form, and this decision, therefore, can have no effect upon the attempted gifts by means of the second paragraph of the will of these envelopes so far as the attempted gifts were of such bank books and certificates. (Matter of Totten, 179 N. Y. 112.)

In two of the envelopes, however, were unregistered Liberty bonds so that the controversy is now confined to their disposition.

There was testimony by interested witnesses that the envelopes in question were exhibited to them prior to the date of the will; one witness qualifying his testimony to the extent of saying that the envelopes he had seen were at least similar to those in question. Neither witness could say whether the envelopes at the time so exhibited were sealed. When the box was opened after the decedent’s death by the executor and in the presence of a representative of the State Tax Commission the envelopes were sealed.

There was testimony by a bank representative as .to the number of times the decedent had access to his safe deposit box, and, further, that no one but the decedent had ever opened the box.

It is significant that the bank books indicated deposits, withdrawals and additions of interest subsequent to the date of the will and that all coupons up to April 15, 1933, had been detached from the Liberty bonds.

[447]*447The envelopes were all indorsed in substantially the same language, except as to names, for instance, “ the contents of this envelope belong to Edith Burrows, 41 Fowler Street, Port Jervis, New York.”

Decedent’s sister, his only next of kin, claims that decedent died intestate as to the $4,000 of Liberty bonds to be affected by this decision, while the residuary legatee claims, because of the invalidity of the second paragraph of the will, that the void bequest falls into the residuary.

Even though the will refers to extraneous memoranda it was nevertheless proper to admit the will to probate, it having been executed with all the formalities required by statute. (Matter of Reins, 59 Misc. 126.)

In the case cited the proponent seems to have conceded that the separate list of articles mentioned in the will could not be admitted to probate, the court saying, the proponent does not ask for the probate of this list or memorandum, nor being uncontested and of a testamentary nature could it be admitted to probate.”

A will is an important document, for it disposes of one’s lifetime savings. The law, therefore, very properly surrounds its execution with certain more or less rigid, but at the same time simple, requirements (Dec. Est. Law, § 21). These requirements are not so onerous but that every will can be self contained.

The English doctrine and that of many of our States permits the incorporation into wills by reference of extraneous documents or memoranda, but the law of this State does not accept that doctrine even though it may be said with some logic that certain exceptions have been approved. (Shouler Wills, Executors and Administrators [6th ed.], § 401; Curley v. Lynch, 206 Mass. 289; Matter of Emmons, 110 App. Div. 701; Matter of Acres, 128 Misc. 254, 257; Matter of Perry, 126 id. 616, 618.)

Said Cardozo, J., in Matter of Fowles (222 N. Y. 222), “ the rule against incorporation has not been set aside. It has been kept within bounds which were believed to be wise and just. The rule is sometimes spoken of as if its content had been defined by statute, as if the prohibition were direct and express, and not inferential and implied. But the truth is that it is the product of judicial construction. Its form and limits are malleable and uncertain. We must shape them in the light of its origin and purpose. All that the statute says is that a will must be signed, published and attested in a certain way. * * * From this the consequence is deduced that the testator’s purpose must be gathered from the will, and not from other documents which lack the prescribed marks of authenticity ” (p. 232).

[448]*448In the Fowles ease there was reference by the testator to his wife’s will, .The latter, of course, was executed according to statute.

In Matter of Martindale (69 Misc. 522) the will bequeathed capital stock “ mentioned in a certain agreement * * * subject to all the terms and provisions of the said agreement.” It was held that the agreement mentioned was not incorporated in the will by reference and that it should not be included in the probate.

In Matter of Emmons (110 App. Div. 701) Frederick L. Emmons attempted to execute his holographic will. It was signed by him and executed with all the statutory formalities, except there was but one witness. Later the decedent properly executed a codicil to the insufficiently executed will. On Emmons’ death both papers were found in his safe deposit box. Both instruments were offered for probate, the proponents contending that the properly executed codicil, referring to the defectively executed will, validated it and incorporated it in the latter instrument. Said the court in this case: “Many English decisions and those of many of our sister States give support to the proposition that extraneous unattested documents may be incorporated into a will by proper reference thereto, In this State, however, that doctrine does not prevail and the rule is that no testamentary provision in other unexecuted or unattested papers can be incorporated into a will. * * *

“ The prior instrument executed by the decedent was not a will, for it lacked the attestation of the two witnesses required by statute, and being, therefore, unexecuted and unattested, it could neither be revived by nor incorporated into subsequently validly executed testamentary instrument denominated a codicil ” (pp. 703, 704).

In the last case cited it should be noted that the will denied probate was signed by its maker and one witness, while the notation upon the envelopes in question bear no signature whatever.

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Related

In re the Probate of the Will of Brown
6 Misc. 2d 803 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1957)
In re the Probate of the Will of Le Collen
190 Misc. 272 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1947)
In re the Estate of Stege
161 Misc. 667 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
147 Misc. 445, 264 N.Y.S. 29, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-angle-nysurct-1933.