In re the Probate of the Will of Waldron

2 Gibb. Surr. 264, 19 Misc. 333, 44 N.Y.S. 353
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 Gibb. Surr. 264 (In re the Probate of the Will of Waldron) 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 Will of Waldron, 2 Gibb. Surr. 264, 19 Misc. 333, 44 N.Y.S. 353 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

Lapham, S.

The petitioner is the executor named in the alleged will of George W. Waldron, which, -the-petition states, was duly executed by decedent on February 29, 1892, while he was competent, and was afterwards destroyed by him after he had become incompetent, which destruction, it is claimed, amounted in law to a fraudulent construction of the will in the lifetime of testator.

The contestants unite in objections which allege testamentary incapacity in the testator a.t tire date of the alleged will, and assert that if such will was made it was procured through fraud and undue influence.

The proofs on part of petitioner showed that such an instrument was executed by decedent on the day specified and was declared by him, in presence of three subscribing witnesses, to be his last will; the only approximate defect in their evidence as to the execution being the failure of two of these witnesses to-recollect and so testify positively that they signed at the request of testator.

The proofs showed also with sufficient certainty that this instrument was burned by the testator in presence of one Korn-beau and that such destruction occurred, as Kornbeau recalls it, about the middle of July, 1893.

The evidence respecting the contents of the instrument so executed and destroyed is furnished in part by Mr. Gooding, one of the attesting witnesses, who first made a draft of a will and submitted it to an attorney, Mr. Andrews, from which draft a new document was prepared by said attorney and forwarded by mail to said Gooding and became, Gooding says, the alleged will.

The contents of this final draft are given in substance by Mr.

[266]*266. Andrews as well as Mr. Gooding; but the former had nothing . further to do with the execution of said instrument and no personal knowledge of what the will contained after its execution, except as he assumed on the strength of Gooding’s evidence that the contents of the draft remained unchanged.

The only other evidence relating to the contents of the executed instrument came from Miss Dorrance, a legatee under it, it is said, who has waived her right to the legacy and who testified to the contents óf a paper shown her by decedent about the middle of August, • 1893, as she states, which paper she says decedent then threatened to burn, declaring that it had been placed, in his chest by some one fraudulently, but admitting that the signature of himself to the paper was genuine.

The testimony of this witness respecting the contents of the paper so shown her, and the disposing parts of that instrument agrees, so far as it goes, with the testimony of the .witness Gooding in that regard, with the exception that she cannot recall the names of all the residuary legatees nor state, as he does, that William G. Marble was one of them. It identifies fairly the writing she speaks of with the alleged will of which Gooding testifies; though her evidence that she saw the document in August, 1893, which Kornbeau says was burned in July of that year, throws a degree of discredit on one or the other of these witnesses.

The additional evidence given by proponent in the first instance, before resting, related chiefly to the question of testator’s mental condition at the date when he made and at the date when he destroyed the alleged will.

The counsel for proponent assumed when he SO' rested that Kornbeau was mistaken concerning the latter date, and that Miss Dorrance was correct, and that her evidence, with the evidence of Gooding and Andrews, sufficiently established the contents of the alleged will.

These assumptions were opposed by the contestants, who by their respective counsel united in a motion for dismissal upon [267]*267the grounds that there was not sufficient proof of a due execution of the instrument destroyed, or of Waldron’s ineompetency at the time he destroyed it, or of the contents of the instrument so destroyed.

This assertion that Waldron had not been shown incompetent to destroy the will, coming from those who alleged in their objection that Waldron was incompetent when he made the will, indicated that the question of ineompetency in the case was a serious one. The evidence, as it stood, showed primarily that Waldron was competent at the date of the alleged will.

But there was grave doubt whether the contents of that instrument had been sufficiently established to meet the requirements of the statute. To pass upon the'question of Waldron’s ineompetency in July or August, 1893, without first hearing-contestants’ evidence on the subject of his competency, was unsatisfactory at least; and to decide the motion upon the remaining ground alone involved the liability of greater expense and more protracted litigation to the estate than would result from denying the motion to dismiss and putting the contestants to such proof as they might choose to offer on any branch of the case. Without passing definitely, therefore, upon any of the grounds underlying the motion, the application to dismiss was dsnied at that time and the evidence of contestants has been received, together with additional evidence on the part of proponent. But no further testimony whatever has been offered touching the contents of the alleged will.

BEowever credible Mr. Andrews is, of whose credibility there is no doubt, he cannot be regarded as an independent 'witness, at least, to the contents of the instrument as finally executed; but only as a supporting witness to Mr. Gooding respecting the substance of the writing which went into the latter’s hands and which, he says, became the alleged will. The testimony on that subject seems deficient. For example, suppose it were asked whether William G. Marble was named as a residuary legatee in the instrument which Waldron executed. The proponent al[268]*268leges that- he was so named. If he was, that is a fact which the statute requires the proponent to establish. In the absence of a correct copy or draft of the will, he must establish it by the evidence of at least two credible witnesses. Miss Dorrance does not recall and cannot tell whether or not Marble was ‘so named. Andrews cannot -know and does not presume to tell of his own knowledgei that Marble was so named in the executed will. IIo does state, from memory, refreshed by another paper he some time drew and by a letter and draft of a will which Gooding wrote, that in the draft of a will which he prepared at Gooding’s instance Marble was named as such legatee. But he does not know that such provision was retained in the executed will except by hearsay from Gooding that the draft of a will which was delivered to Gooding by Andrews was adopted and executed by Waldron. Gooding alone, of the three witnesses who have anything to say about the contents of the will, states of his own knowledge that Marble was so named in the will which Waldron executed.

The two credible witnesses which the statute requires respecting the contents of a lost will need not necessarily have been witnesses also to the execution of the will. But it is reasonable to read the statute as meaning that they must both be able to speak of an actual will from personal knowledge, and not of a possible will. The execution of a will and the contents of a will are distinct facts, as counsel suggest.

If, after Mr. Waldron had executed the alleged will, Mr. Gooding had taken it to Mr. Andrews and these two men had possessed themselves of its contents and could now fully recall and give those contents in evidence, they would be the credible witnesses required.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Gibb. Surr. 264, 19 Misc. 333, 44 N.Y.S. 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-the-will-of-waldron-nysurct-1897.