Wyman v. Wyman

118 A.D. 109, 103 N.Y.S. 64, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 624
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 118 A.D. 109 (Wyman v. Wyman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wyman v. Wyman, 118 A.D. 109, 103 N.Y.S. 64, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 624 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Claeke, J.:

This is an action for partition in which the interpretation of a' will is asked, brought by an alleged devisee under the will. An issue is raised by one of the defendants, a daughter of the decedent, that the testator at the time he executed the will did not have testamentary capacity, and that the instrument was not signed, published and declared in the manner provided by law so as to be entitled to probaté as a last will and testament.

Upon the trial plaintiff offered in evidence the deeds establishing the title of the premises in question in the decedent at the time of his death and the record from the Surrogate's Court showing the admission to probate on the 26th day of January, 1904, of the will of Isaac.Wyman, dated May 26, 1902, as a will of real and pérsonal property, and the necessary evidence as to the heirs at law of the decedent, and rested.

[111]*111Section 2627 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that a decree admitting to probate a will of real property made as prescribed in article 1 of title 3 of chapter 18 of the Code of Civil Procedure, establishes presumptively only all the matters determined by the surrogate pursuant to said article as against a party who was duly cited or a person claiming from, through or under him. The defendant-appellant thereupon undertook to destroy that presumption.

The testator was fifty-seven years of age at the time of his death on January 11, 1904. The will bears date and purports to have been executed on the 26th day of May, 1902. The decedent ivas a lawyer and an insurance man. The will is holographic and contains a complete attestation clause and is signed by three witnesses, each of whom attaches his address to his signature. The will was found after- the testator’s death in his safe at his house in an envelope sealed with two sealing wax seals with the impression of his watch charm. Said envelope bore the inscription in the handwriting of the decedent “ Last will and testament of Isaac Wyman ” and “ May 26, 1902.” With the envelope containing the will was found a second envelope containing the inscription in the. decedent’s handwriting, “Notice. In case of my death, I request my family to open this letter of instructions and wishes immediately. I. Wyman,” and on the back of this envelope the following, “Isaac Wyman, 48 East 91st St., New York.” In this latter envelope were instructions as to the conduct of his funeral, funeral notice to be inserted in the papers, and a desire that his wife should furnish all his daughters their mourning suits and pay for the same, and that they should be dressed alike.

The testator was suffering with tuberculosis of the throat, and upon the advice of his physician went to the Adirondacks for his health within a day or two after the date of the will, May 26,1902. From this fact and from the contents of these papers, it is a conclusive inference that, knowing the condition of his health and mindful of the uncertainty of life, he had put in order his worldly affairs before going away. As the will was in his own handwriting and was carefully preserved in his own possession in the safe in his own house for nearly two years after its execution, the envelope containing it indorsed with his own statement that it was his last will [112]*112and testament, it is impossible to reach any other conclusion than that, so far as he was concerned, he had intended to dispose of. his property by a valid last will and testament, and that lie supposed that he had done so. • "

Two of the attesting witnesses appeared on the probate proceedings on the-26th day of January, 1904, before the assistant to the surrogate and subscribed the usual depositions in probate proceedings, which depositions contain the verification of said assistant that the witnesses were sworn and examined before him on that day. Cohn’s deposition contains the statement that he had been acquainted with the decedent fifteen years before his death, and Traub’s that he had been acquainted with the decedent for twenty years before his death, and each contains the statement that the subscription of the name of the decedent was made by him ill the presence of deponent and the other two subscribing'witnesses, naming them ; that at the time of said subscription to said instrument decedent declared the instrument so subscribed by him to be his last will and testament, and that the deponent then signed his name, as witness at the end of said instrument at the request of said decedent' and in his presence,, and that the decedent at the time of executing said instrument was, in the opinion of said deponent, of sound mind, memory and understanding, not under any restraint or in any respect incompetent to make a will; that deponent saw the other subscribing witnesses sign their names as witnesses at the end of said will arid knows that they did so at the request and in the presence of the decedent.

There is no dispute but that the body of the will is in the handwriting of the decedent and was written, with a broad-nibbed pen and in one kind of ink, while the signatures of the decedent and of each of the three subscribing witnesses with their addresses added are written with a sharp-pointed pen and with 'an ink different from that used in the body of the will, but of. a similar appearance as to each of the signatures. There is also no dispute but that each of the four signatures to the will is in the proper hand^ ' writing of each of the persons purporting to have signed the same.

Nearly three years after the date.of the will and one year after its probate upon the depositions of two of the subscribing witnesses these witnesses attempt to destroy this instrument, which [113]*113undoubtedly embodies the testamentary intentions of the decedent, by evidence given upon the trial in flat contradiction to the attestation clause subscribed by them and to their depositions in the probate proceedings. They testified "that at the time they signed the paper they did not know that it was a will, although each of them added his residence to his signature, a will being the only instrument to which the law requires that the residences of the witnesses be so added; that the signature of the decedent was not upon the will when they signed it; that their signatures were not made in the presence of each other, and although each swears that he signed at the request of the decedent that at the tithe of the signing he did not declare it to be his last will and testament. The paper was executed during the morning of May" 26, 1902, at a saloon which had been the common meeting place of all of these parties for a number of years. There seems to be no doubt but that the pen and ink with which all the signatures were written was furnished by the barkeeper who testified that shortly before the decedent went away to the Adirondaclcs he remembered an occasion of the signing of a paper by the decedent and these witnesses when he furnished the pen and ink.

The subscribing witnesses contradict each other in some respects in the account of the proceedings upon the morning that they admit they signed the paper. In view of the fact that the decedent was a lawyer and, therefore, acquainted with the requirements of the statute (2 R.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A.D. 109, 103 N.Y.S. 64, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyman-v-wyman-nyappdiv-1907.