Trustees of Theological Seminary v. Calhoun

11 N.Y. 422
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1862
StatusPublished

This text of 11 N.Y. 422 (Trustees of Theological Seminary v. Calhoun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees of Theological Seminary v. Calhoun, 11 N.Y. 422 (N.Y. 1862).

Opinion

Gould J.

This case comes up on a very narrow question. It is entirely plain, and is, indeed, conceded on the argument, that the deceased, Mr. Douglas, was a competent, energetic man, who, with a full understanding of what he was doing, [424]*424had made several different wills. And there can be no doubt that, as to the will propounded for probate, he perfectly under- . stood what he was doing in executing it, and that he intended to execute it according to the requirements of the law, and thus make it effectual as a disposition of his property. To do this, he (as is fully proved and not here questioned) signed it himself in the presence of two witnesses; he requested the two witnesses to sign it, and they did so in his presence. There is only one other requisite to due execution, and that is, that he should, in the presence of) or to both witnesses, have declared it to be his will, thus making due publication of his act.

One of these witnesses, Starr, had been, for some hours immediately preceding the execution, engaged in the presence of Mr. Douglas in drawing the will; the. other witness, Mary Fitzgibbon, was a servant in the house, and was called in by Starr to witness the execution. Starr states that Mr. Douglas, in his presence, not merely stated to Mary F. that it was his will, but explained the fact to her at some length. She, on the other hand, says that Mr. D. did not, to her, call it his will; and that she does not remember (what Starr states) that he said it was such a paper as she signed a short time before, and which she knew to be a will. She says that Starr, in Mr. D.’s presence, told her that the paper she was called to sign was Mr. D.’s last will; but that (as Mr. D. was quite deaf) she don’t think Mr. D. “ heard all of what Starr said.” If he did hear it, or so much of it as that it was his will, the execution is fully made out, as there is no pretence of any dissenting by him from what Starr said.

This is certainly reducing the question to a very narrow compass, and it would seem to be too narrow to conform to the well-sanctioned rule that, in regard to the whole matter of wills apd their execution, the substance of the testator’s acts (they being such as the law recognizes) is to govern in preference to any formal or literal following of the words of the statute. (26 Barb., 77; 23 N. Y., 15.)

Take, then, -the whole transactions of the day when the will Was executed, and consider them as a whole, and can there be [425]*425any doubt that Mr. D. intended that Starr was to see that the will was duly executed, and that, whether or not he distinctly heard every word that Starr said to the other witness, he knew what was going on, and heard enough to keep himself fully aware of what Starr was doing and the substance of what he was saying. This court has no doubt on that point, and we consider the execution of the will fully proved. By adopting such a course in regard to the execution of this or of any will, we incur no danger of failing to carry out the purpose of the statute. That purpose is to make sure that the testator is aware that he is making a will, and that he be not imposed on and procured to sign a will when he supposes it to be some other instrument. The witnesses’ knowing it to be a.will is of no moment, except as their being.then and there, in his presence or by him told so, makes it certain that he knows it to be such an instrument. It is, of course, too late to claim that the facts making due execution must all, or any of them, be established by the concurring testimony of the two subscribing witnesses. -Both of those witnesses must be examined, but the will may be established,* even in direct [426]*426opposition to the testimony of hoth of them. This is too well settled to call for the citation of authorities.

[427]*427It would seem that the decision of the Supreme Court, and that of the surrogate, should be reversed; and the surrogate [428]*428would be directed to admit the will to probate, except that the statute compels this court to remit the case to the Supreme Court for a trial by jury on the one question of fact.

[429]*429Selden, J., took no part in the case; all the other judges concurring,

Judgment reversed.

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26 Barb. 68 (New York Supreme Court, 1857)
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2 Barb. Ch. 40 (New York Court of Chancery, 1846)

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.Y. 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-theological-seminary-v-calhoun-ny-1862.