148 N.Y.S. 917 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1914
The only question here is the sufficiency of the execution of the paper propounded. The statute of wills requires proof of testator’s subscription in the presence of each of two attesting witnesses or of testator’s acknowledgment of such subscription to each of such- witnesses, and also of testator’s declaration that the instrument so subscribed is his last will and testament. The only point of law in this contested proceeding concerns the sufficiency of the' proof of the declaration by testatrix. I may observe that no lawyer was present at the execution, and there is. no certificate of attestation attached to this propounded will on which to found a presumption of regularity of execution. The declaration required by the present statute is something more than publication, which at common law ' might be presumed wholly from circumstances. The declaration required by the present statute of wills, while often termed "publication” in legal parlance, is required to be made out with more particularity than the former act of publication known to the older law. Matter of Moore, 109 App. Div. 764, 96 N. Y. Supp. 729. Such declaration has become, indeed, the supreme evidence of animus testandi under our present statute of wills. Doubtless the statutory declaration may be made out in divers ways, and even" constructively, but it must be made out in substance in some way, even when the testamentary paper is a holograph. Matter of Wilmerding, 75 Misc. Rep. 432, 135 N. Y. Supp. 516, and cases there cited. Here there is no sufficient, or any proof of an express declaration. Indeed, there is proof by the attesting witnesses themselves that there was no such express declaration to both attesting witnesses. Miss Koeller’s testimony, standing apart, discloses that to her the testatrix said and did enough, taken altogether, to establish the will. It was unfortunately not all said in the presence of the other attesting wit