147 N.Y.S. 1094 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1914
“She says, ‘Sign that—your name and where you live. Maybe I am dying, and I want to have that settled.’ ”
To render the execution of a will or codicil valid, the testator must declare the instrument to be his last will and testament to the witnesses, and, where there is no satisfactory proof that the testator has done so, probate must be denied. Seymour v. Van Wyck, 6 N. Y. 120. Anna Jones, the other subscribing witness, testifies positively that Margaretha Kunkler declared the papers to be her last will and testament both to herself and to Lena Schmidt, so that there is a conflict of testimony here. She further testified that she signed the will in September and the codicil “the next time she calldd” in October, and she swears positively that at the time she signed her name as a witness both to the will and the codicil the name of Margaretha Kunkler was not written on either, but that Margaretha Kunkler signed after she had affixed her name as a witness. It is elementary that a testatrix must sign her name to the will before the witnesses are requested to sign their names, as otherwise they have no signature or making of á will to attest. A signing by the witnesses before the testator is not a compliance with the statute or a due execution of the will. Jackson v. Jackson, 39 N. Y, 153; Sisters of Charity v. Kelly, 67 N. Y. 409. The petitioner cannot rely upon the attestation clause in this will and codicil to cover a lapse of memory of the witnesses or to reconcile contradictions in their testimony as to the exact method of execution of the instruments because they are on their face defectively executed. Upon all the evidence adduced I am convinced that the will here presented for probate has not been properly executed in conformity with the statute, and probate of the same must be refused.