116 Misc. 157 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1921
The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is the brother of William H. Cooley, deceased; that said decedent died February 20, 1913, intestate and that letters of administration upon his estate were thereafter issued to the defendant, his widow; that said William H. Cooley was at the time of his death the owner in fee and in possession of four several parcels of real estate; that the defendant, when the action was commenced, was in possession of the parcel designated number one and that the plaintiff was in possession of the other three parcels.
The answer denies that said William H. Cooley died intestate and that the plaintiff is in possession of any part of the property in question; by failing to deny the other allegations in the complaint they are, of course, admitted; the ’answer then sets forth two com
The issues were tried in March, 1920, and they were finally submitted in February, 1921.
In the brief of the defendant’s counsel it is conceded that the defendant has failed to establish any right to relief under the alleged deed and the right to relief under the first complete defense contained in the answer, upon which was predicated the demand that
It must first be determined, however, whether under the pleadings the defendant should be permitted to prove that her husband made a will and the terms of it by common-law proof, that is by testimony of less probative value than the statute requires; of this there seems to be no doubt; the complaint alleges the intestacy of Mr. Cooley, and the answer denies it; the testacy or the intestacy of the decedent is, therefore, an issuable fact. Whitney v. Whitney, 171 N. Y. 176.
In a long line of decisions, the courts have consistently held that title to real estate could be shown by common-law proof, that the property was devised by a will that had been lost, or destroyed by accident or
We are brought now to consider the testimony relating to the essential facts upon which the title, if any, of the defendant depends, (1) the making of the will, (2) its existence at the death of the testator,. (3) its destruction after his death by the plaintiff, and (4) the contents of it.
It may be taken for granted in our discussion that somewhere between five and eight years before his death, a sufficiently near approximation for a granted fact, the testator made a will, witnessed by his lawyer who drew it, Mr. Davison, who died about 1911, and Cornelia T. Butler; the latter testified upon the trial to the due execution of the instrument but knew nothing of its contents; we may also assume that it was this will which the witnesses, Mr. and Mrs. Swarts, saw at the home of William H. Cooley on the Sunday preceding the Thursday on which he -died, though if the testimony of Mr. Swarts were subjected to a critical examination it might fail to sustain this, assumption. Matter of Burbank, 104 App. Div. 312; affd., 185 N. Y. 559.
While it may not be necessary to consider this charge for the practical purpose of deciding the issues, nevertheless, the bases upon which it is claimed to rest may properly be stated; Mr. Cooley died on Thursday, and was buried on Sunday following; on Saturday night the plaintiff reached his brother’s late home in Brockport, with his young son; they were given the front second-floor room in the house to occupy during their stay; Mr. Cooley’s workroom, where the will and deed were presumably kept in his desk, was on the same floor in the rear; entrance to this workroom could be had from the front room, occupied by the plaintiff, by coming from the latter into the hall, going from the hall into another bedroom and thénce to the workroom; the defendant testified that before the plaintiff’s arrival she locked the door leading from the upstairs hall into the bedroom, secondly above mentioned, thus cutting off the passage on the second floor from the front bedroom to the workroom; another means of entrance to the workroom was the back stairs, leading from the dining-room so-called on the first floor; two witnesses testified that on Sunday morning they saw the plaintiff go up the
The plaintiff denied with emphasis that he liad taken the will and deed; he neither denied nor admitted that he went to the workroom, and his testimony upon this subject leaves very much to be desired.
The circumstances above detailed are urged as proof that the will was in the desk when Mr. Cooley died, that the plaintiff, took it and the deed, because they were hostile to his advantage and that his taking them fortified the claim that the provisions of the will were favorable to the defendant; the testimony goes no further, however, than showing that the plaintiff had the opportunity to get possession of the documents whieh it would be to his profit to conceal; this alone is not enough. Knapp v. Knapp, 10 N. Y. 276; Collyer v. Collyer, 110 id. 481; Matter of Barnes, 70 App. Div. 523.
The diligent counsel for the defendant stresses with forceful argument, manifesting commendable indus
That the will by its terms gave the property in question to the defendant rests solely upon declarations of the testator and the testimony of Mrs. Swarts; the latter witness was the only one produced who claimed to know the contents of the will by'having read it; Mr. Swarts, it is true, told of the provisions in the will, but his information was derived from the testator who read the will in his presence, but this is not other than a declaration of the testator; such declarations, though admitted in evidence on the trial, are incompetent. Matter of Burbank, 104 App. Div. 312; affd., 185 N. Y. 559; Matter of Kennedy, 167 id. 163.
There remains then to examine the testimony of Mrs. Swarts, that she saw the will and knew that its provisions were favorable to the defendant; when first called to the stand she testified, “ Mr. Swarts read the will and I asked him — a woman’s curiosity — if I could glance over it as I had never read a will, which I did * * • * I glanced over it hastily;” when asked in a variety of forms to give the substance of the words contained in the will she replied, ‘ ‘ it was all left to Mrs. Cooley * * * I don’t remember how it was made out entirely * * * all that I remember distinctly was that he left it all to Mrs. Cooley. Left it in full to Mrs. Cooley, to be administrator without bonds. That is all that I remember, I just read it hastily;” to the further question, “ Mrs. Cooley’s name was not in the body of the will was it or wasn’t
From this quoted testimony, given in the circumstances mentioned, the court is asked to find that the will of William H. Cooley devised the four parcels of land in controversy to his Avife, the defendant; the testimony, I am confident, does not justify such a conclusion; the witness could have had no interest not even curiosity to examine the instrument for the -purpose of learning its contents, for she had just heard it read and the wish to see it must have been prompted by the desire to see how it Avas fashioned and yet of the latter we are told nothing, Avhether it was in handwriting or whether it Avas typeAvritten, whether signed or unsigned, and the ansAvers first given to the questions were her interpretation of the legal effect of the writing rather than the language by which that effect was accomplished; to hold that ownership of property can be made to depend upon testimony of such character would imperil the stability of real estate titles and render quite useless those formalities which experience has shoAvn to be necessary in order to safeguard a change of OAvnership by grant or devise.
The above considerations lead to the conslusion that the defendant has not established title to the real estate, having failed to prove that the will was in existence at Mr. Cooley’s death and, therefore, not destroyed
It is, of course, regrettable that the defendant’s hopes cannot be realized, but the fault, if any, is not to be attributed to the law, but rather to the neglect either on the part of the decedent in not making provision for the defendant in approved form or if that were indeed done, the joint neglect of himself and the defendant in not taking the simply adequate precautions against the hazard, of which the defendant now claims to be the victim, and which, if the testimony be credited, both anticipated.
The plaintiff may proceed hereon as he may be advised.
Ordered accordingly.