This is a bill to establish a will of real and personal estate alleged to have been duly executed by one Mrs. Ann E. Martin and to have been accidentally destroyed by fire previous to her death, without her knowledge and without having been revoked. Ann E. Martin died on June 16th, 1894, seized of a tract of
This rule was declared in a case where the execution and the destruction of the will were not contested, and the question was as to the proof of the contents, but the same principle is applicable as well to the points of execution and loss as of contents. All three points are here disputed, and the direct evidence as to all three points is to some extent connected.
John K. Van Ness was an attorney, about forty-five years of age, who had been practicing in New York since 1875, but who came from Mrs. Martin’s neighborhood and knew her from his youth. He transacted some business for New Jersey clients, and in the early spring of 1890 was building a residence at Plainfield, to which he removed in June of that year. Without going into full details of his testimony, it may be said that his testimony, if believed, establishes the following facts as to the
I find nothing in the evidence to shake Clum’s credibility as to these substantial facts.
Mr. Cowles, the third witness on the point of the execution of the will, testifies that in 1890, and as he recollects, between the latter part of January and the first of March, he drew or engrossed a will from a pencill draft given to him by Van Ness, and at his request took the will to Van Ness, at the City Hotel in Plainfield, the next day. He delivered these papers to Van Ness at this place at the time appointed,”and he there saw an elderly lady introduced to him as Mrs. Martin by Van Ness, and to whom he was introduced as the gentleman who drew the will. He was present when Mr. Clum came into the parlor, but left shortly afterward and before the actual execution of the will. Van Ness returned to him at Plainfield the pencil draft, and he (Cowles) returned this to Van Ness at his office in New York a day or two afterward.
The witness, on cross-examination, being asked whom he met that day in Plainfield, stated that he thought he met a Mr. Holcomb, and being then questioned as to what occurred in meeting Holcomb, gave the details of the meeting.
It appeared by the subsequent examination of Holcomb that in March, 1890, and for some time before and after, he was not then living in Plainfield, but in California. He had, however, met Cowles in Plainfield previous to 1890, and two or three times. It was urgently insisted that the credibility of Cowles was entirely destroyed by reason of his detailed statements as to meeting Holcomb on that day, and their falsity. I cannot consent to this view of his evidence. The witness was mistaken if the evidence as given warrants the conclusion that he intended to assert positively that this day in March, 1890, was the day on which he met Holcomb, but as he certainly met Holcomb in Plainfield previous to the day named, I see no reason for holding that his entire story of the drafting and execution of this will is a fabrication because of a mistake on this collateral fact. H's testimony, when he declines to identify the draft now
A decree will therefore be advised establishing the will as prayed and enjoining the distribution of the estate of testatrix as that of an intestate.