In re the Probate of a Paper Writing Purporting to be the Last Will & Testament of Alfaya

122 Misc. 771
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 122 Misc. 771 (In re the Probate of a Paper Writing Purporting to be the Last Will & Testament of Alfaya) 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 Writing Purporting to be the Last Will & Testament of Alfaya, 122 Misc. 771 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Slater, S.

This is a contest of an alleged will of the testatrix had before the court without the aid of a jury upon framed issues relating to the execution of the will, mental capacity of the decedent, fraud and undue influence.

The proponent is one Mary Alice Lansley, who offered for probate the alleged will dated October 2, 1923. The contestants are a sister and a niece. The real question is whether the will is the will of the testatrix, or the will of Mary Alice Lansley, the sole beneficiary. Is it the valid testamentary wish of the decedent, or the result of a wrongful endeavor?

The decedent was the eldest of a family of one brother and three sisters who lived in New Rochelle for many years. They were of Spanish extraction. A brother and sister predeceased leaving children. The title to the home is in the decedent’s name and valued at about $6,000. The lot had been paid for by contributions from members of the family. There are bank deposits of about $5,000, as well as deposits held in trust, for the surviving sister of about $2,500. Euphemia, the surviving sister, and the decedent lived together in the home. They were unmarried and elderly people, Euphemia being seventy-three years of age, and the decedent being eighty-four years of age. The decedent before her latter days had been engaged in the business of making the American flag, and thus acquired her property. Euphemia assisted and was the housekeeper. For four years prior to her death, which occurred on November 11, 1923, the decedent had been confined to her bed by an illness that produced muscular contraction of the legs and arms. During the month of August, 1923, the sole beneficiary of the will, Mary Alice Lansley, appeared on the scene, visited and conversed with the neighbors, alleged she was connected with a city board doing welfare work and said she would become interested in, and care for the old people. This she did. She was assiduous in her attention for a few subsequent weeks to the little feeble old lady, who had laid in bed for four weary years. She was an absolute stranger to the neighbors, as well as to Euphemia, the sister, and a niece, Mrs. Booth. She had never called before. She was not a relative. She was not even of Castilian blood. She had a home of her own in New Rochelle; and made visits day and night upon the decedent.

Were the services rendered charitable or mercenary? In the [773]*773early part of September she consulted a lawyer with the specific purpose of drafting powers of attorney to be executed by the decedent, wherein she was to become the attorney in fact with authority to draw upon the sums deposited in three several local banks. On October 1, 1923, we find the stranger meddling with the testamentary affairs of the decedent. This sole beneficiary visited a highly respectable and able attorney in the city of New Rochelle and at Miss Lansley’s request he drew a will for the decedent, without direction from, consultation with, or observation of Miss Alfaya. The court ascribes no improper motive to the attorney. Miss Lansley evidently had in her possession a former will of the decedent dated July 21, 1921, indicated by the testimony of the attorney. It was offered in evidence. The sister Euphemia was remembered by a gift of the money held in trust for her. The rest of the property was given according to directions left in a memorandum referred to in the will. The court asked the attorney who directed him regarding the drafting of the new will and especially with relation to paragraphs 2 and 3 of the will, which are as follows:

“ Second. In view of the fact that my sister who is my only near relative has means as ample as my own and is now an elderly woman, I have decided not to make any provision for her in this my will.

“ Third. I give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real, personal, or mixed and wheresoever situated, of which I shall die seized or possessed unto my friend Mary Alice Lansley, in appreciation for the many kindnesses she has always shown me.”

The attorney testified that Miss Lansley had directed him as to its entire contents. True. He prepared the will as Miss Lansley told him. Proof is lacking that the decedent had directed Miss Lansley to perform this service. See dissent by Judge Gould in Delafield v. Parish, 25 N. Y. 9, 77. On the following morning, October second, he sent the prepared typewritten will addressed to Miss Lansley, at the home of the decedent. That same day Miss Lansley telephoned to one Harry T. Davis of New Rochelle, and asked him to come to the house of the decedent to act as a witness to a will. She called for him in a taxicab that afternoon, and took him to the home of the decedent, where she produced the will. The decedent, the witness Davis says, was in bed; she signed it in his presence, declared to him that it was her will and asked him to become a witness. No one was present, except the decedent, the witness Davis and Miss Lansley. The sister Euphemia, the natural object of testatrix’s bounty, who lived in the home, and [774]*774was then present in the home, was not informed that a will was being executed and she, of course, was not invited to participate. He thereupon signed his name as a witness and handed the will to Miss Lansley. Either on the same day, or the following day (the witness was not sure), the then attending physician, Dr. ¡Reardon, was asked to act as a witness to the will by Miss Lansley. He treated the decedent at Miss Lansley’s request. She again produced the will. He testified that he asked the decedent whether the signature already affixed to the paper writing was her signature. She said it was. She also said it was her will and she asked him to become a witness. At this time no one was present, except the decedent, the witness Dr. Reardon, and Miss Lansley. The attestation clause, later signed at the office of the witness Davis, has no use, nor force, presumptive or otherwise. It was not read at the time of the execution, nor observed. It is a misstatement, as disclosed by the narrated facts. Matter of Turrell, 28 Misc. Rep. 106, 109; affd., 47 App. Div. 560; 166 N. Y. 330; Matter of Kunkler’s Will, 147 N. Y. Supp. 1094.

Each time after the witnesses had signed, the will was handed to Miss Lansley as its custodian. The will was not read to the decedent in the presence of either of the witnesses. The will was produced by Miss Lansley and offered for probate in January, 1924. Matter of Van Den Heuvel, 76 Misc. Rep. 137, 167; Matter of Jacobs, Id. 394. It was not shown to have been with the decedent at any time, except for signature. This is not a will drawn in the open and above board by a lawyer of decedent’s own choosing and with the knowledge of her people.

There is no proof that the decedent was able to read on October 2, 1923. There is no evidence that she knew or approved of the contents of the instrument signed by her. She did not direct or order it to be drafted. There was no attempt made to prove that there was any conversation with the decedent regarding the contents of the paper, or its terms, or provisions, before she signed it. No explanation is offered as to why the propounded paper disinherited those dependent and remembered in a prior will, executed by a testatrix suffering great bodily weakness, and in favor of a stranger. Matter of Regan, 206 App. Div. 403; Matter of Carter, 199 id. 405, 422; Tyler v. Gardiner, 35 N. Y. 559; Seaman v. McLaury, 134 App. Div. 180; Matter of DeCastro, 32 Misc. Rep. 193.

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122 Misc. 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-a-paper-writing-purporting-to-be-the-last-will-nysurct-1924.