45 Misc. 554 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1904
The instrument propounded in this proceeding as the last will and testament of the above-named decedent purports to give, devise and bequeath all her property, both real and personal, to her sister, Delia, and to appoint Delia the sole executrix thereof. It also contains a clause revoking all former wills made by the testatrix. The probate of this paper is opposed on the ground that Delia died before the testatrix and that the devise and bequest to her lapsed; that letters testamentary cannot, for that reason, be issued to her and that the will is, therefore, inoperative for any purpose and is not such an instrument as is entitled to probate by this court.
The statute provides that a will of real and personal property, executed as prescribed by the laws of this State, may be proved as prescribed in chapter 18 of title 3 of article 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure; that if it appears to the surrogate that the will was duly executed and that the testator, at the time of executing it, was .in all respects competent to make a will, and not- under restraint, it must be admitted to probate, as a will valid to pass real property, or personal property, or both, as the surrogate determines and the petition and citation require.
It is said by Redfield (Redf. Sur. [6th ed.], § 182) that the instrument propounded must be testamentary in its character and that the character of an instrument depends on its substance and not on its form.
Williams says (Williams Exrs. 6) : “ A last will and testament is defined to be the just sentence of our will touching what we would have done after our death and in strictness, perhaps, the definition might be narrowed by adding ‘ respecting personal estate.’ ” Williams adds, at page 7: “ ‘ The naming or appointment of an executor,’ says Swinburne ‘ is said to be the foundation, the substance, the head, and is indeed the true formal cause of the testament, without which a will is no proper testament, and by the which only the will is made a testament.’ ”
A will is defined by Johnson, J., in Tompkins v. Tompkins, 1 Bailey, 96, to be a declaration of a man as to the manner in which he would have his estate disposed of after his death.
Jarman defines it as an instrument by which a person makes -a disposition of his property to take effect after his decease. 1 Jarm. Wills, 16.
At the present day and under the jurisprudence of our State there is no doubt that, as the word “ will ” is employed in our statutes, it is not limited to instruments which appoint an executor; for it is well settled that there may be a valid will without the appointment of an executor, and out statutes provide for the administration of the estate in a case where no executor is named in the will. It is equally clear that the word
Accordingly, the most recent definition that I have found. (29 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, 124) defines a will as the legal declaration of a man’s intention which he wills to be performed after his death touching either the disposition of his property, the guardianship of Ms children, or the administration of his estate.
There can be no doubt that a paper which was not intended by 'the decedent to take effect upon his death, should not be admitted to probate, though in the form of a will. On the other hand,, a paper which is intended to be a will, if properly executed, may be proved as such, although it appear in the form of a deed or a.letter.
So it has been held that a paper, though perfectly executed and attested, which was not made ammo testmdi but in jest,, only to exhibit the brevity of expression of which a will was capable, was not the will of the testator. Nichols v. Nichols, 2 Phillim, 180. It has also been held that if two persons intending to make their wills each by mistake, execute the document prepared for the other, the instruments thus executed are-not the wills of the parties executing them. Matter of Hunt, L. R. 3 P. & D. 250. And if the document was intended only as a contrivance to effect some collateral object, e. g., to be shown to another person to induce him to comply with the testator’s wish, it is not a will. Lister v. Smith, 3 Sw. & Tr. 282.
It is equally clear that a paper once duly executed as a will,, but which has been expressly revoked by the testator, or which] is presumed to have been revoked by the happening of those facts which the law declares shall raise a presumption of revocation, ought not to be admitted to probate. The question of revocation touches the testamentary intent and it is the duty of the surrogate to investigate the question of testamentary intent and to hear all legal proof that may be germane to thaif question.
It is said in Rice on Probate Law and Practice (p. 100), that it is essential to a valid will, that there be “ A person to take, capable of talcing; for to- render a devise or bequest valid, there must be a donee in esse, or in rerum nautra, and one that shall have capacity to take the thing given when it is to vest, or the gift shall be void.”
And it was at one time the rule in this State that a- will which devised the testator’s real estate to the United States was not entitled to probate, for the devisee was incapable of taking and the will was, therefore, void. Matter of Will of Fox, 52 N. Y. 530.
The rule thus established seems a reasonable one and would relieve the probate courts of the State from the necessity of entertaining proceedings for the probate of instruments as willsi that are void on their face and from spreading such instruments ■at length upon their records. And it may be well urged that a doctrine which renders -Surrogate’s Courts powerless to escape from such a vain task relegátes them to a state of singular impoteney.
But a different rule seems to have been established by the Court of Appeals in Matter of Will of Merriam, 136 N. Y.
And if it may not he determined by the surrogate that, by reason of the incapacity of the devisee to take, the will could never have had any effect, even at the moment of its execution, for an infirmity that appears upon its face and requires no proof to develop it and that it is, therefore, no will at all, much less can the surrogate determine that a paper which would have been effectual at the time of its execution and for a long time afterward to dispose of the entire estate of the testator, in case of her death, has, by reason of facts which will have to he established by proof, ceased to be effective and, for that reason, has ceased to he entitled to probate.
Whatever rule may obtain, therefore, in other States or countries, or may have previously prevailed here, the present rule in this State must now be deemed to be that which is laid down in the Merriam ease; and it is my opinion, therefore, to reach the conclusion that the paper offered neither disposes of property nor appoints an executor, requires an investigation and the taking of proof that lies outside the scope of a proceeding. for the probate of a will; that the present instrument, since it assumes to make a devise of realty or is broad enough to include a transfer of such property, the surrogate must admit to probate as a will of real property as the petitioner requests if it is established that it was executed by the decedent animo testandi at a time when she was competent to make a will; and that the present proceedings should be continued for the purpose of enabling the parties to litigate those questions.
Decreed accordingly.