In re the Probate of a Paper Propounded as the Last Will & Testament of Hermann

12 Mills Surr. 468, 87 Misc. 476, 150 N.Y.S. 118
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 12 Mills Surr. 468 (In re the Probate of a Paper Propounded as the Last Will & Testament of Hermann) 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 Probate of a Paper Propounded as the Last Will & Testament of Hermann, 12 Mills Surr. 468, 87 Misc. 476, 150 N.Y.S. 118 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

The 'testamentary paper of November 25,1912, brought into court for probate is objected to by George Hermann, one of the heirs at law and next of kin of Magdalena Hermann (formerly Mrs. Rollwagen), the alleged testatrix, and also by Henry Leis, claiming to be the executor of an earlier testamentary paper, purporting to be made by the same testatrix. The testimony offered in support of the probate and by contestants in opposition thereto is very voluminous. The hearings on the issues of fact began in October, 1918, and occupied for many months the sessions of this court. Portions of this testimony were taken subject to the usual objections, the validity of which may in a probate cause heard by the surrogate be often advantageously reconsidered by the surrogate before the close of the case. If any such objections after deliberations [470]*470are then found to be well taken the testimony can be disregarded without prejudice to the litigants. This is one of the advantages offered by the old practice in Surrogates’ Courts, nevertheless, perhaps fated to be superseded by more modern and less deliberate methods of procedure.

Much of the testimonial evidence taken doubtless relates to very trifling matters, but intermingled with such matters at long intervals possibly are facts of importance in a probate cause. In no other kind of litigation are the parties so anxious to unbosom, without reserve, their affairs and relations to the will in question. When the lines of evidence are not objected to I do not feel it incumbent on me to question the character of the evidence except on factum; for it, even if very unscientific evidence, often affords a fairly good picture of the surroundings of a testator, and the circumstances and atmosphere in which a testamentary paper is produced. To obtain an accurate picture of a situation or a thing not seen, considerable and trifling detail is often necessary in courts of this character.

Magdalena Hermann, whose will is contested, was at the time of its inception, as found in Rollwagen v. Rollwagen, 63 N. Y. 504, nearly eighty years of age. In this cause her age is made even greater. She was the widow of one Frederick Rollwagen, and consequently had herself been the principal actor in a very leading case on the law of wills in this state. Rollwagen v. Rollwagen, 63 N. Y. 504. The judgment in that case gives with unsparing precision an account of the early life of our testatrix Magdalena, and it need not, therefore, be again reviewed at length. It is a matter of record. It there appears that Rollwagen, a wealthy old butcher by trade, had married his young housekeeper, this testatrix, and that his will in her favor was the product of undue influence imputed to her. The will in question in her favor was rejected. The judgment is most unsparing in its denunciation of her acts and conduct. Prior to her employment by Mr. Rollwagen it appears [471]*471Magdalena had been a saleswoman in a bakery establishment in this city. From the bakery and from penury she passed to affluence as the wife of Mr. Rollwagen. She seems to have been somewhat better educated than Mr. Rollwagen, who was adjudged to have been an illiterate. She could both read and write, and one witness testified to her fondness for the poetry of Goethe and Schiller. Notwithstanding Mrs. Rollwagen’s censurable conduct in respect of her first husband’s will, which is not precisely germane to this case, the evidence before me shows that her life thereafter was respectable, according to the standard of her environment. It was the ordinary life of an elderly retired workwoman of means who preferred the quiet of her own dwelling to the outside distractions of a great city. It is, however, established that it was through her marriage to Frederick Rollwagen the testatrix derived the large estate which is now involved in this controversy. The final judgment in Rollwagen v. Rollwagen, just referred to, was rendered in the year 1876.

Between the year 1876 and the year 1912, the date of the" paper propounded, Magdalena had been remarried, divorced her husband, one Hermann, and had finally entered on what I cannot help regarding as a somewhat pathetic and isolated or lonely old age. It was in her old age that she made the disputed testament. She then had no near relatives, and was surrounded, in the main, by persons who as strangers in blood could have no great affection for an old woman living alone. The fortune which Mrs. Hermann had derived from her first husband, Mr. Rollwagen, obviously furnished her chief attraction in the eyes of many of those who were about her in her later life. The testimony reveals that the various wills of the old woman were matters of some anxiety to those who profited by them. Consequently, when a favorite was superseded in a later will by a rival, the old legatees evinced great solicitude and the criticism became occasionally more liberal than firmly founded. Between [472]*472legatees thus situated who have no natural claims to the bounty of testatrix there can be but little choice, and the law is free in such a case to view the testamentary act with dispassion and without danger of being influenced by those sympathetic or equitable considerations which in an unguarded moment may inadvertently creep into a will contest carried on between discarded children and other near relatives of a testator.

We are relieved in this case from the necessity of inquiring into the natural capacity of the aged testatrix to testaméntate, for that is conceded in contestant’s brief, and the contest is, placed by counsel solely on the allegation of conspiracy, undue influence and the weakness of old age, with the added contention that tin the day of making the propounded paper the testatrix was induced to drink an excessive quantity of champagne in order that the scheme of those accused of the exercise of such influence might be the more readily consummated. There is some proof of this allegation of excessive alcoholism, but, taking into consideration the fact that testatrix came from a country where wine is regarded as an article of diet, and also the fact that she was surrounded by persons accustomed to partake of wine in her house on all occasions, I do not think the allegation merits any extended consideration, especially in view of the contradictory testimony before me on this point. There is no sufficient evidence that at the moment of making her will or at any other time Mrs. Hermann was incompetent by reason of a want of sobriety.

The pleas, allegations or objections interposed to the probate-are undue influence and conspiracy. On these pleas, objections or allegations the contestant alleging them has, in this state, the burden of proof and the onus of sustaining it. This burden does not shift—it is said. Matter of Kindberg, 207 N. Y. 220, 228, 229; Matter of Will of Falabella, 139 N. Y. Supp. 1003; Matter of Will of Gedney, 142 id. 157, 160. While this rule governing burden of proof in probate cases is being rapidly [473]*473repudiated in many states (Herring v. Watson, 105 N. E. Rep. 900; Steinkuehler v. Wempner, 169 Ind. 154), such is now the rule in this state in reference to both procedure and proof, or the weight of evidence, on an allegation of undue influence.

Pleas or allegations of undue influence have been so often before courts of justice that, as I have often stated, unless something new can be added to the discussion there is little justification for repetition or amplification of settled authority. Matter of Van Ness, 78 Misc. Rep. 598.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Mills Surr. 468, 87 Misc. 476, 150 N.Y.S. 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-a-paper-propounded-as-the-last-will-testament-of-nysurct-1914.