In re the Estate of Hug

201 Misc. 711, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2886
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 201 Misc. 711 (In re the Estate of Hug) 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 Hug, 201 Misc. 711, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2886 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

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A son of the decedent instituted a proceeding for issuance of ancillary letters testamentary based upon a will established in Switzerland and for the vacatur of a decree of this court admitting to probate an earlier will which related only to property located in this country. Petitioner contends that under Swiss law the effect of the Swiss will was to revoke all prior wills, including the American will. The Swiss courts have never ruled on the effect of the Swiss will on the earlier American will.

Before granting ancillary letters testamentary upon a will probated elsewhere, the courts of this jurisdiction must determine whether the will disposes of personal property here.” (Matter of Gifford, 279 N. Y. 470, 477.) The fundamental question, therefore, is whether the American will has been revoked by the Swiss will so that the latter disposed of all property wherever situated or whether the Swiss will operated only on property outside the United States. The American will already has been probated in this jurisdiction and petitioner does not seek original probate of the Swiss will here. The first question to be taken up in orderly procedure is whether the probate decree of October 25, 1941, should be reopened and petitioner given permission to file an answer in that proceeding alleging revocation of the American will. In accordance with a prior direction of the court (201 Misc. 709), proof has been submitted on two preliminary issues: first, on the defense interposed by the executor that petitioner is estopped to contest the will admitted to probate here, and, secondly, with respect to the reasonable probability of petitioner’s success on the question of revocation.

The testator died on July 7,1941, a resident of Zurich, Switzerland. It had been his practice to keep certain personal property in this State and he left in this State a will dated May 7, 1934, which, by its terms, disposed only of property located in the United States. The will declared that the disposition of such property was to be “ controlled, construed and regulated pursuant to the laws of the State of New York. ’ ’ That instrument was offered for probate as the will of a nonresident who died without [714]*714the State leaving personal property in this county. The distributees or heirs of the testator, under both New York and Swiss law, were his widow and three children. The 1934 will gave one half of the American property to the widow and the other half to a son and a daughter. The will stated that no provision was made for the other son, the petitioner herein, “ due to the fact that he has heretofore been amply provided for ”. On August 28, 1941, petitioner and his half-brother executed and acknowledged written waivers of citation and consents that the will of May 7, 1934, be admitted to probate. Citation was duly served upon the widow and daughter. The. will was admitted to probate by decree dated October 25, 1941, and the corporate executor entered upon the administration of the estate.

The testator left in Switzerland a holographic will in the German language which had been executed on March 2, 1940. This instrument was established in Switzerland by decree dated August 16, 1941. The New York probate proceeding had not then been concluded. Apparently none of the parties knew at this time of the Swiss proceedings. The 1940 will did not in express terms revoke any other will or make reference to any other testamentary instrument. An English translation of the German text states that the testator’s future estate will consist of the unencumbered real estate Kurhausstrasse 15, Zurich 7, as well as of securities.” The will does not state what securities are intended to be disposed of or where they are located. With respect to the securities, the will reads: “ From my property consisting of securities the amount of 50000 francs shall be eliminated right at the beginning because this represents the dowry brought in by my wife Anna, nee Huber. * * * All of my securities and outstanding claims shall be turned over to my wife * * * as her absolute property.” With respect to the Swiss real property, the will directs that it be sold and that the proceeds, up to 96,000 francs, be divided among the widow and three children, including petitioner. Any excess over the sum stated was to be the sole property of the wife. Apparently, the securities located in Switzerland at the time of decedent’s death were insignificant in value. Estate taxes and other expenses ate heavily into the realty proceeds.

It is to be noted that petitioner takes no portion of the personal property under either will. He was not a beneficiary at all under the 1934 will. Under the 1940 will he took nothing except a one-fourth interest in the proceeds of sale of a parcel of realty located in Switzerland. His interest in the personal property [715]*715located in New York is accordingly not a direct interest and is based upon his claim that had the New York assets been administered under the 1940 will and by the domiciliary executor, his share of the realty proceeds would not have been so greatly diminished by the dowry and other charges payable out ol" personalty.

Petitioner contends that under Swiss law a later will takes the place of an earlier will even without an express provision of revocation insofar as it is not without doubt merely a completion thereof.” He argues that the 1940 will is not without doubt merely a completion of the 1934 will and that it, therefore, revokes the earlier will. He also claims that the later will cannot be fully effective unless it was intended to include the securities located in New York because there were not, at the time of death, securities in Switzerland of any appreciable value.

The administration of the New York assets has long been completed. The assets were distributed among the widow and two children in 1942 and early 1943. The widow and the two children who are beneficiaries under the 1934 will executed a discharge and release of the New York executor under date of March 1, 1943. They have taken no part in this proceeding. They have never attempted to challenge the releases. The Swiss executor takes no part in the pending proceeding. The widow and the two children who have received their legacies are nonresidents of the State, with the result that none of the distributed assets are presently within this jurisdiction. What petitioner really seeks, therefore, is to compel-the New York executor to pay him out of its own funds the amount by which his one fourth of the proceeds of sale of the Swiss realty was reduced by Swiss administration charges. His right to ultimate relief is obviously not determinable in the present proceeding but, if successful here, could be realized only after litigation in successive proceedings leading up to a compulsory accounting by the New York executor and a surcharge against it either as to the whole fund or as to a portion of it. In the pending proceeding, the sole questions are whether petitioner may seek to vacate the decree of probate to which he consented in 1941 and, if so, whether the 1940 will revoked the earlier one and stands as the sole testamentary instrument.

Petitioner is met at the very outset of the litigation with the charge that he is estopped in equity from maintaining the pending suit to vacate the decree of October 25, 1941, admitting the will to probate here. This defense, as it developed on the hearing and in the argument, involves more a question of laches than [716]*716true equitable estoppel.

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Related

In re the Estate of Bobst
165 Misc. 2d 776 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1995)
In re the Estate of Engelken
103 Misc. 2d 772 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1980)
In re the Estate of Hug
284 A.D. 870 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
201 Misc. 711, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-hug-nysurct-1951.