5 Dem. Sur. 295 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1886
A paper purporting to be the will of Mary McMulkin, deceased, has been propounded in this court for probate. The petition praying for such probate alleges that the decedent died in Glasgow, Scotland, on November 19th, 1885,
It is argued with much ingenuity that the first clause of the section above quoted was not intended to cover wills of non-residents without this State, and that in passing upon the sufficiency of the execution
I should be greatly disposed to put this interpretation upon the statute if its language would permit. But it seems to me to assert very squarely that if a testamentary paper is shown to have been executed in conformity with the laws of this State, it is, so far as regards the formalities of execution, entitled to probate wheresoever and by whomsoever executed, whatever the nature of the property whose disposition it seeks to effect, and wherever such property may be situated. One of the sections added by ch. 320 of the Laws of 1830 to the first title of ch. 6, part 2 of the Revised Statutes (which section appears as § 69, at page 71 of 3 Banks’ Statutes, 6th edition) provided as follows: “No will of personal estate made out of this State by a person not being a citizen of this State shall be admitted to probate under either of the preceding provisions . . . unless such will shall have been executed according to the laws of the State or country in which the same was made.” This provision was never repealed in terms until the passage of the General Repealing act (L. 1880, ch. 245), which ushered in the Code; but it was provided by ch. 118 of the Laws of 1876 that “ every will and other testamentary instrument made out of the State of New
I can discover no indication that the provisions of the statute just quoted were intended by the codifiers or the legislature to be altered, so far as they relate to the matter here under discussion, by the substituted provisions of the Code.
There is no inconsistency between § 2611, as thus interpreted, and § 2694, which declares that “ the validity and effect of a testamentary disposition of personal property situated within the State are regulated by the laws of the State or country of which the decedent was a resident at the time of his death. A will may be entitled to probate although all its dispositions of property may be discovered to be invalid.