129 N.Y.S. 165 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
Cornelius Corcoran died January 17, 1894, leaving, him surviving, a widow and one son, the appellant, and three daughters, the respondents, his only heirs at law and next of kin. The widow survived her husband about seven years. The will in question bears date January 17, 1894. Petition for its probate was presented to the Surrogate’s Court June 14, 1910. Objections to the probate were filed by the son, which fairly put in issue the making and execution by deceased of the instrument in question. The evidence on the hearing was given by proponent; contestant offering no proof. The effect of . the disposing provisions of the will is to give to the widow, if she should survive the testator, a life estate in his property, both real and personal, and subject to the life estate the whole property is given to
“In witness whereof I have hereunto subscribed my name and affixed my seal at the city of Utica, state of New York this seventeenth day of Janu-
his
ary, eighteen hundred and ninety-four. Cornelius X Corcoran. [Seal.]
mark
“Witnesses:
“Rieh’d W. Mclnrow.
“Thomas S. Geary.
“The foregoing instrument, signed, sealed, published and declared as and for and acknowledged to be his last will and testament by Cornelius Corcoran, the testator therein named in our presence and we in his presence and in the presence of each other subscribed our names at the end thereof subscribed our names as witnesses thereto at the city of Utica, N. Y., this 17th day of January, A. D. 1894.
“Riehd. W. Mclnrow, residing Utica, N. Y.
“Thomas S. Geary, residing Utica-, N. Y.”
At the time the will was offered for probate, both of the subscribing witnesses were dead. Mclnrow was a lawyer who had for many years prior to his death been in active practice of his profession in the city of Utica. The will is entirely in his handwriting, except the cross-mark between the words “Cornelius” and “Corcoran” at the end of the will, and the signature of Geary below the word “Witnesses,” and his signature and the words “residing Utica, N. Y.,” appearing at the end of the attestation clause. The genuineness of Geary’s signatures and that the words indicating his residence were written by his hand were duly proved. The instrument is free from interlineations and erasures. It was found by one of the executors named therein after testator’s death. When and under what circumstances it was found do not appear. Sarah McCaffrey, a daughter of the testator, who was not a beneficiary under the will, testified on the hearing that on the day before his death she had a talk with her father, and relates the conversation as follows:
“He told me that Mr. Geary was a witness to the will and didn’t speak of any other witness. He said Mr. Mclnrow, the lawyer, drew it. That is not the only talk I had with him on the subject of the will. I had another talk before that. It was all of two or three years before he died. It was at the same place in the dining room of his home. He told me he had made his will; that he had made it for my sisters and wanted to know if it was satisfactory to me, and I told him it was. He said my sisters kept the house and did the work, and also, T suppose you have enough and don’t care.’ He did not tell me how he had given it, what share to each one. He said he had made his will for both girls, both sisters. He didn’t say how much he had left them. * * * He toId me Mr. Mclnrow drew the will and that Mr. Geary witnessed it. In either of these talks he did not tell me where he kept the will, nor where it was left.” °
This evidence was taken subject to contestant’s objection and exception. The same witness testified:
“My father could not write. He wrote his name- by putting a cross on the paper.”
Appellant’s principal contention is that proponent failed to establish that Cornelius Corcoran signed the instrument offered for probate as his will.
“The testator may subscribe the will by his full name, or by bis mark, and, if he does so, that is the subscription required by the statute.”
“If all the subscribing witnesses to a written will are * * * dead, * * * the will may nevertheless be established upon proof of the handwriting of the testator and of the subscribing witnesses and also of such other circumstances as would be sufficient to prove the will upon the trial of an action.”
The statute seems in terms to require proof of the handwriting of the testator. But, if the testator cannot write, clearly he has no handwriting in the ordinarily accepted sense. If he signs by cross-mark, that is his signature, not the words written around it by another. Jack-Son v. Jackson, supra.
“Proof of the signature of a deceased subscribing witness is presumptive evidence of the truth of everything appearing upon the face of the instrument relating to its execution; as it is presumed the witness would not have subscribed his name in attestation of that which did not take place. But this presumption may be rebutted, and hence the propriety and even necessity of permitting him to be impeached in the usual mode as if he were living and had testified at the trial to what his signature imports.”
This statement of the law has been quoted and adopted when the probative force of the recitals in the attestation clause of a will was under consideration. One of the more recent of such cases is Matter of Hesdra, 119 N. Y. 615, 23 N. E. 555. This principle is thus stated in Wigmore on Evidence, § 1511:
“When the attester’s signature is identified as genuine, what does the attester thereby purport to testify to? Does he purport to testify at all? Assuming that the signature is appended to a clause of attestation expressly stating the facts of execution, it is clear that the signed attestation is a testimonial assertion of all the facts thus required to he stated. This has never been doubted for the case of an attester deceased, or otherwise unavailable in person.”
The probative force of an authenticated attestation clause to a will, complete in its recitals, as, either presumptive proof of the evidentiary facts stated therein, or a source from which such facts may by inference be established, has long been recognized. Orser v. Orser, 24 N. Y. 51; Willis v. Mott, 36 N. Y. 486, 488; Jackson ex dem. v. Van Dusen, 5 Johns. 144, 4 Am. Dec. 330. This latter case was an action at law in which a will signed by mark had been admitted in evidence on proof of the handwriting of two of the three deceased attesting witnesses, and it was held that the evidence was sufficient to establish the formal execution of the will. The fact that a subscribing witness was, as Mclnrow must be presumed to have been, accustomed to drawing and supervising the execution of wills, and familiar with the law upon that subject, gives persuasive force to the inference drawn from his certificate that the requisite formalities were observed. Orser v. Orser, supra; Matter of Cottrell, 95 N. Y. 339. The abundance of reported cases in which controlling effect in determining as a fact that the formalities required by the statute have been observed has been
Cases in Surrogate’s Court may be cited where it was held that independent proof of testator’s signature was required and probate has been denied because such proof was not furnished. Among these are Matter of Walsh, 1 Tuck. 132; Matter of Reynolds, 4 Dem. Sur. 68; Matter of Porter, 1 Misc. Rep. 262, 22 N. Y. Supp. 1062. The contrary view is maintained in a well-reasoned opinion by the learned surrogate, who made'the decree from which this appeal is taken. Matter of Foley, 55 Misc. Rep. 162, 106 N. Y. Supp. 474. His position receives support from the decision of Surrogate Calvin in Matter of O’Hara’s Estate, 2 N. Y. Monthly Law Bull. 83, cited in his opinion. Appellant’s counsel urges the case of Matter of Burbank, 104 App. Div. 312, 93 N. Y. Supp. 866, affirmed 185 N. Y. 559, 77 N. E. 1183, as an authority decisive of the present case. That case is an authority that the signatures of both subscribing witnesses to the will must be established by competent proof. The effect of the recitals in an attestation clause when the signatures of the deceased witnesses had been duly proven was not directly involved, or determined.
The decree should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.