In re the Probate of the Will of Parkman

3 Misc. 2d 1014, 156 N.Y.S.2d 22, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1680
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Misc. 2d 1014 (In re the Probate of the Will of Parkman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme 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 Will of Parkman, 3 Misc. 2d 1014, 156 N.Y.S.2d 22, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1680 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1956).

Opinion

George Frankenthaler, S.

The writing which is offered for probate as the decedent’s last will is inscribed upon a brown paper envelope the dimensions of which are 11 inches by 6 inches. The flap of the envelope, extending along its greater dimension, bears the printed name and address of a safe deposit company. The body of the purported will consists of a date and a single sentence and reads: ‘ ‘ Aug. 30, 1947 Having given half of what I own to my daughter Regnia I leave everything I may accumulate in the future to y [sic]my sister Georgia Iverson, if living, if not living then to my cousin Pearl Fagan.”

The quoted matter is typewritten on the extreme right side of the face of the envelope and parallel to its narrow dimension. The typing is single spaced and occupies an area approximately six inches by one inch at the very end of the envelope. The purported signature of the decedent and his address are inscribed near the left side of the envelope, parallel to its longer dimension and at right angles to the typewritten matter. The handwriting begins at a point nine inches removed from the typewritten portion and reads: ‘‘ W. G. Parkman 1293 — 2d Ave N. Y. C. c/o Mrs. O Malley.” Between this writing and the typewritten matter and also parallel to the long side of the envelope and at right angles to the typewritten text are the name and address of a person designated as “ sister ” and below such writing are the name and address of a person designated as “ cousin ”. The persons so designated are those named as legatees in the typewritten sentence. The names and addresses of the decedent and the two other persons are written in pencil and all appear to be in the same hand. These penciled writings occupy the greater portion of the face of the envelope [1016]*1016extending over nine inches of its length and they would appear to have been the first writings on the envelope and placed there without contemplation that other matter would be written on the envelope. At the extreme lower left corner of the envelope, below and parallel to the purported signature and address of the decedent, are the words and mark ‘ ‘ Witness by X ” followed by a signature and in order below that signature are two more signatures. The words indicating the place for attestation and the three signatures of the witnesses are written in ink and are within an area four and one-half inches by one and one-half inches.

Unexplained, this paper is a most unusual form of will. Not merely curiosity but suspicion and disbelief are aroused as to its genuineness because of many things, particularly as to the choice of a brown paper envelope for so solemn an instrument as a will, as to the reason for the signatures of the decedent and the attesting witnesses appearing at right angles to the dispositive portion rather than below and parallel to such portion, as to the relative areas occupied by the dispositive portion and the signatures of witnesses contrasted with the space occupied by the testator’s signature and the identification of the legatees and also as to the significance of the penciled address of the decedent and the penciled names and addresses of the legatees. The appearance of the envelope gives the firm impression that the cramped typewritten dispositive text and the crowded signatures of the witnesses were squeezed into the only spaces left available around the penciled writings which were the first writings on the enevelope. The decedent’s address, a street number and the additional information c/o Mrs. 0 Malley ”, is a form that would be appropriately inscribed upon an envelope to designate ownership of its contents rather than a method of identifying a testator. It also is most peculiar that a testator having named his legatees as his sister Georgia Iverson and his cousin Pearl Fagan in the body of his will, would feel a need to repeat their names and relationship again alongside his signature. It seems much more reasonable that such information was written on an envelope in relation to its contents at a time when testamentary language was not on the paper.

The sister of the decedent predeceased him and the proponent of the purported will is the cousin whose name twice appears on the envelope. The typewriting is said to have been done by the proponent’s sister Beatrice who in August, 1947 was employed as a cashier at the University of New Hampshire and had been in the employ of that university for many years. At [1017]*1017the date of the trial Beatrice was dead. The typing is said to have been done in the kitchen of the proponent’s home on a portable typewriter which Beatrice had been using in doing some work for the university. Adjoining the kitchen was an office which the proponent used in conducting a rooming house business. If Beatrice had occasion to type a will, some stationery was probably at hand in the kitchen in connection with her use of the typewriter and it is a fair assumption that writing paper was available in the adjoining office but the explanation offered for the use of the brown envelope is that the decedent removed this creased envelope from his pocket and directed its use. It was further testified that the portable typewriter would not accommodate the full length of the envelope and rather than fold it the typing was done across its narrow width. It was also stated that Beatrice indicated the place for the signatures of the witnesses by writing the words Witness by ” and marking the place with an X. It may well be asked why she failed to indicate with her typewriter a place for the decedent’s signature and places for the signatures of witnesses and it is most unfortunate that Beatrice is not available to explain how an experienced clerical worker could have produced this unfinished and unworkmanlike piece of writing.

A number of instruments were introduced in evidence to establish that the decedent signed his name on formal documents as William Gordon Parkman or as William G. Parkman and there is before the court no document, other than the propounded paper, signed W. G. Parkman. Although not conclusive, this is at least an indication that the inscription on the envelope was a notation of ownership rather than a formal signature. The fact that the decedent chose to sign in pencil while the witnesses signed in ink would not necessarily cast suspicion upon the validity of a will but here the use of pencil presents another unusual aspect of a strange picture.

The decedent under the name of William Gordon Parkman had been a lessee of a safe deposit box for some years prior to the date appearing on the propounded paper. In 1954 he deputized the proponent to have access to that box. Four days after the decedent’s death the proponent removed the contents of this box without having procured a court order for such purpose and without the notice to the tax authorities that is required by section 249-t of the Tax Law. The propounded paper was not found in the safe deposit box. Information is lacking as to what then was in the box but when, subsequent to the institution of this proceeding, the box was opened in the [1018]*1018presence of a tax representative it was empty. Whatever occasion the decedent had to rent a safe deposit box for 10 years, proponent herself asserts that he did not use it as the repository of the paper now offered as his will.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Misc. 2d 1014, 156 N.Y.S.2d 22, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-the-will-of-parkman-nysupct-1956.