Wyckoff v. Wyckoff

16 N.J. Eq. 401
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 5, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 N.J. Eq. 401 (Wyckoff v. Wyckoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wyckoff v. Wyckoff, 16 N.J. Eq. 401 (N.J. Ct. App. 1863).

Opinion

The bill is filed by certain legatees under the will of Lany Vandoren, deceased, to establish the *Page 402 will, to the end that letters testamentary may be issued thereon.

The factum of the will, the competency of the testatrix, and the destruction of the instrument after the death of the testatrix, are clearly established. There is no suggestion that there was any revocation of the will. The only question is, whether there is sufficient proof of the contents of the instrument. They are proved by the testimony of one witness alone, and that witness interested in the result. He is the residuary legatee under the will, and not only so, but the will was voluntarily destroyed by him. Upon this statement of facts, three distinct questions are presented for consideration.

1. Is the witness competent ?

2. Is he credible ?

3. Can the will be established upon the testimony of one witness alone as to its contents ?

The interest of the witness in the event does not disqualify him. But the more important question is, whether a party who has voluntarily destroyed a will or other instrument, will be permitted to prove its contents by secondary evidence, either by his own testimony, or by the testimony of others. In considering this question, it is proper to regard the evidence as offered by the witness in his own behalf. For although the bill is filed in the name of other legatees, it is not denied that it is filed by the procurement of the residuary legatee, and that he is the principal legatee under the will.

The mere proof of the loss or destruction of an instrument does not, as a matter of course, let in the party to give secondary evidence of its contents. "He who voluntarily, without mistake or accident, destroys primary evidence, thereby deprives himself of the production and use of secondary evidence.". Broadwell v. Stiles, 3 Halst. R. 58.

If the destruction was accidental, or if it occurred without the agency or assent of the party offering it, secondary evidence is admissible. But if the instrument was voluntarily *Page 403 destroyed by the party, secondary evidence of its contents will not be admitted, until it be shown that it was done under a mistake, and until every inference of a fraudulent design is repelled. Riggs v.Tayloe, 9 Wheaton 483; Renner v. Bank of Columbia, Ibid. 581;Blade v. Noland, 12 Wend. 173; Cow. Hill's notes to 1 Phil. Ev. 452, note 861, p. 1214.

The circumstances under which the will was destroyed are clearly proved. The property of the testatrix was derived from her father, Jacob Vandoren, who died in 1811. By his will he bequeathed a share of the residue of his estate to his daughter Lenah (the testatrix). And if she died without issue, he further bequeathed such part of her share as remained unexpended, to his surviving children. Her share had been paid over to her by the executors. On the 1st of April, 1824, she placed in the hands of John M. Wyckoff, as her agent and attorney, promissory notes amounting to $1250. On the 20th of January, 1853, she executed the will now sought to be established, and placed it in the hands of her attorney and agent. By the will she appointed Wyckoff the sole executor, and made him the residuary legatee. He retained possession of the will, and continued to act as the agent of the testatrix to the time of her death. She died in May, 1859, without issue. Immediately upon her death, this property was claimed by the executors of Jacob Vandoren, as a part of his estate, being bequeathed over to his other children in the event of his daughter's death without issue. If the witness himself read the will, he would naturally have concluded that such was its true meaning. The surrogate whom he consulted, so advised. Eminent counsel, upon whose judgment he would naturally rely, entertained and expressed that opinion. The true construction of the will was indeed a question of doubt and difficulty, and was settled by a decree of this court upon a bill filed for that purpose. That Wyckoff was firmly convinced that his testatrix had no right to dispose of the property, and that it reverted to the estate of her father, is *Page 404 evinced by the fact that he did not offer the will of the testatrix for probate, but consented to give up the property to the executors of Jacob Vandoren. He was in fact only prevented from doing so, by a question that arose as to the amount for which he was responsible. While under this belief, and because, as he states, he deemed the will of Lany Vandoren useless and inoperative, he destroyed it. Its destruction is clearly proved, and that at the time of its destruction, Wyckoff stated that it had been decided that the testatrix had no right to make a will, and that it was good for nothing. It is proved past all controversy, that the will was destroyed by the witness under the honest belief that the testatrix had no right to dispose of the property, and that consequently the will was worthless. Nor is there any rational ground to infer any fraudulent purpose in the destruction of the will. The party by whom it was destroyed is the executor of the will, and the legatee of a large portion of the estate. He was not one of the next of kin of the testatrix, and could gain nothing by her intestacy. There is a suggestion in the testimony of one of the witnesses, that the will might have furnished some evidence of the amount of property in the hands of Wyckoff, and that this was the real motive of its destruction. The answer to this suggestion is, that the will of the testatrix could furnish no competent evidence of the amount of her property in the hands of her agent, he not being the scrivener; much less could a will, made in 1853, furnish any competent evidence of the amount of her property in 1859. A more decisive answer is, that when an adequate motive for the destruction of the will is assigned by the party, and clearly established by the evidence, the court will not, upon mere conjecture, impute an inadequate and dishonest motive.

Is the party a credible witness ? His character for veracity is unimpeached. There is nothing in his testimony, calculated to impair the confidence which the court may repose in the testimony of an unbiased witness. The circumstances under which the will was destroyed, are calculated *Page 405 rather to strengthen than to shake confidence in his integrity. He was the confidential agent and attorney in fact of the testatrix, having in his hands the bulk of her property for more than thirty years. He is constituted her sole executor and residuary legatee. It is evident that the testatrix reposed entire confidence in his integrity of character. The court see no reason to suppose that her confidence was misplaced.

It is said in some of the older authorities, that if the will be lost,two witnesses, who are superior to all exception, who read the will, prove its existence after the testator's death, remember its contents, and depose to its tenor, are sufficient to establish it. 4 Burn's Eccl.Law 209; Toller on Executors 71.

But this statement does not define the limit of the rule even in the Ecclesiastical Court.

In Trevelyan v. Trevelyan, 1 Phill. 149, the will was established upon the testimony of one witness, and proof of what the testator said he had done.

In Davis v. Davis, 2 Addams

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16 N.J. Eq. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyckoff-v-wyckoff-njsuperctappdiv-1863.