In re the Probate of the Instrument

17 Mills Surr. 101
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Mills Surr. 101 (In re the Probate of the Instrument) 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 the Instrument, 17 Mills Surr. 101 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Order affirmed, with costs, on the opinion of the county judge, acting as surrogate.

All concurred.

The following is the opinion of the court below:

Tierney, J.—

This is a motion made upon a petition filed March 3, 1915, for the discontinuance of proceedings to probate the above-named instrument as the last will and testament- of Charlotte Potter, deceased.

Charlotte Potter died on the 2d day of April, 1914. On the 7th day of October, 1914, an alleged will, together with a petition asking for its probate, was filed in the Surrogate’s Court of Rensselaer county, which said alleged will bore the date of May 8, 1912, and upon s-aid application a citation was duly issued and made returnable on the 9th- day of November,' 1914.

Subsequent to the filing of said will and petition and. the issuance an-d service of said citation on the parties mentioned therein, and on the 9th and 21st days of November, 1914, Alonzo H. Potter, a son of the testatrix, appeared by his counsel, Shaw, Bailey & Murphy, and produced and, either voluntarily or at the suggestion of the surrogate, caused to be filed in the surrogate’s office an instrument in writing, dated September 8, 1913, purporting to be a will of the said Charlotte Potter, deceased, which said mentioned alleged will made a different distribution of the estate of the deceased than the earlier alleged will of May 8, 1912, and named as executor of said last alleged will, William C. Feathers, of the city of Troy, and upon the petition of said Feathers, as executor, a citation tember 8, 1913, should not be admitted to probate as the will was duly issued to show cause why said instrument of Sep[103]*103of Charlotte Potter, deceased. So that there then was filed in the surrogate’s office in Rensselaer county and before the surrogate of Rensselaer county, two instruments in writing, each purporting to be the last will and testament of Charlotte Potter, deceased. One óf May 8, 1912, naming Augusta Gould as an executrix, and Augusta Gould, Agnes Kirk, Sarah L. Cook, Alice E. Feathers and Alonzo H. Potter, the five children of the deceased, as beneficiaries, share and share alike, and the other and later instrument of September 8, 1913, naming William C. Feathers as executor, and Alonzo H. Potter and Alice Feathers, the two youngest children, as beneficiaries, share and share alike, and citations to show cause why each should not be probated as the last will of the said deceased duly issued. Subsequent thereto objections were duly filed by each of the proponents of said alleged wills by their counsel to the alleged will offered for probate by the other, and these objections not having been verified, at a later time verified objections were in like manner duly filed by them.

On December 17, 1914, Augusta Gould, through her attorneys, filed, in writing, a demand for a jury trial of all the issues raised by the objections filed' to the will of May 8, 1912, and.on December 19, 1914, Calvin S. McChesney, surrogate of Rensselaer county, filed his certificate of disqualification on the ground that it was improper for him to act in said proceedings, and the proceedings subsequent thereto were had before the Rensselaer county judge, acting as surrogate.

The objections filed .by the proponent of the alleged will of September 8, 1913, set forth that the alleged will of May 8, 1912, is not the last will and testament of Charlotte Potter, deceased, and further declare that a will revoking said instrument of May 8, 1912, is filed and on record in the surrogate’s office, so that it would seem that the demand for a jury trial was in substance a demand to try out the question as to which instrument of the two was in truth and in fact the last, will and testament of Charlotte Potter, deceased.

[104]*104Later, and! on March 3, 1915," a petition asking that a supplemental citation issue to William C. Feathers, the executor named in the alleged will of September 8, 1913, was filed with the acting surrogate. Objections to the issuance Of such citation were duly filed by Shaw, Bailey & Murphy, Mr. Feathers’ attorneys, and on the 4th day of March, 1915, an order directing supplemental citation in accordance' with said petition was duly made, and on March 6, 1915, an appeal from said order was duly taken by the attorneys for Mr. Feathers. On March 3, 1915, a petition for the discontinuance of the proceeding instituted for the probate of the alleged will of Charlotte Potter, deceased, dated September 8, 1913, was filed by William O. Feathers, as executor of the said alleged will, accompanied by the written consents, duly verified, of Alice E. Feathers and Sarah" L. Cook, and the consent of Alonzo H. Potter by his attorneys, Shaw, Bailey & Murphy, and on March 26, 1915, affidavits of Augusta Gould and Agnes Kirk, beneficiaries under the alleged will of May 8,’ 1912, Augusta Gould being an executrix and the proponent of said will, in opposition to the petition of Mr. Feathers for leave to discontinue the proceedings, were filed. This last motion for leave to discontinue is the subject now before me for consideration, and I have given so much of the history of this controversy, from its inception down to now, as it seems to me I should give in order to make clear in one statement the reasons for my decision.

It matters not under what conditions or why the alleged will of September 8, 1913., was filed in the surrogate’s office and its probate sought. Its apparent and alleged purpose was to defeat the probate of the alleged will of an earlier date, which had there been filed and offered for probate. The proponent of the will of May 8, 1912, has asked for a jury trial of the issues raised. The proceeding is a proceeding in rem. The petitioner for the discontinuance of the proceeding of the alleged will of September 8, 1913, prays “ that this proceeding may be [105]*105discontinued without prejudice, and with the same force and-effect as though it had not as yet been instituted' or commenced,” and moves that it be discontinued without prejudice as above desired; ” but it nowhere appears that either the petitioner for the discontinuance of, or others who may be interested' in the will are content to forever abandon its probate, nor has any one declared that the instrument is other than it has been alleged to be and filed as, viz., the last will and testament of Charlotte Potter, deceased.

Section 2610 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended by chapter 443 of the Laws of 1914, which provides who are to be cited upon a petition for the probate of a will, provides, among other things, as follows: “ The • following persons must be cited upon a petition, presented as prescribed in the last section. * * * In every case, each person designated in the will as executor, testamentary trustee or guardian, and each person named as executor, testamentary trustee or guardian, or beneficiary in any other will of the same testator filed in the surrogate’s office.”

Tinder this section it was proper that a citation should issue to William C. Feathers, the executor of the alleged will of September 8, 1913-, upon the petition for such citation by the proponent of the will of May 8, 1912, and all the writers on Surrogate’s Court practice are a unit on the proposition that where two instruments are propounded by different parties as wills, and several applications made for probate, they will be consolidated and tried together as one proceeding. This, undoubtedly, was in the mind of Surrogate McChesney when, as is alleged, he urged the filing of the will of September 8, 1913.

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Related

Matter of Lasak
30 N.E. 112 (New York Court of Appeals, 1892)
In re the Probate of the Alleged Last Will & Testament of Miller
141 A.D. 349 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
17 Mills Surr. 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-the-instrument-nysurct-1915.