152 N.Y.S. 822 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
On June 20, 1914, Mrs. Lizzie H. Holme died leaving a will executed by her on July 22, 1907. After a variety of gifts to relatives, friends and charitable organizations, testatrix provided: “I have made the above disposition of my property conscious of the fact that I have a living husband and also other relatives for whom I have made no provision in this my Last Will and Testament, and it is my express determination that they shall not have any share or benefit under this, my Last Will and Testament, nor in any manner share in my estate.”
The executors named in the will offered the paper for probate by petition dated September 22,1914, and thereafter the answer of Leicester Holme, the surviving husband of the testatrix, verified on the 28th of October, 1914, was filed. This answer set up that the paper offered for probate was not the last will and testament of said decedent, that it was not duly executed by her and that she did not publish the samó as her will in the presence of the witnesses whose names were subscribed thereto. That she did not request said witnesses to be witnesses and that they did not sign in her presence or in the presence of each other. That on said 22d day of July, 1907, the said decedent, Lizzie H. Holme, was not of sound mind or memory or mentally capable of making a will. That the said paper writing was not freely or voluntarily made or executed by the said Lizzie H. Holme as her last will and testament, but that the said paper writing purporting to be her will was obtained and the subscription and publication thereof, if it was in fact subscribed or published by her, was procured by fraud and undue influence practiced upon the decedent by certain persons acting in concert whose names are at present unknown to this contestant.
That the paper propounded for probate herein is invalid as a last will and testament and is illegal and void in all respects.
No one else filed objections.
On the thirty-first of October an order was entered setting the case down for trial on the first Monday of January, 1915. On the call of the calendar at the Trial Term by Mr. Surrogate Fowler on the first Monday, namely, the 4th day of January, 1915, the attorney for the contestant applied for an adjournment on the ground of the illness of counsel. Thereupon the trial was adjourned to the second Monday, the eleventh of January. Upon the case being called that day the attorney for the contestant said that as counsel’s illness still continued, he would ask for an adjournment until the following Monday, and would state that he had decided to waive all issues raised by the objections except one, and that in case his counsel did not so improve by the following Thursday as to afford assurance that he would be able to try the case on Monday, the eighteenth, he would at once retain other counsel and proceed with the trial on that day, Thereupon counsel for the proponents said that to avoid all possible misapprehension he would say that that one issue was the due execution of the will and that he consented to the adjournment on that stipulation and on the further understanding that the case should proceed to trial on the following Monday, and thereupon the surrogate remarked: “We have only one issue to try, the due execution of the will,” and adjourned the trial to the eighteenth.
On Wednesday, January thirteenth, new counsel was retained by the contestant, and on Thursday, January fourteenth, this counsel obtained an order to show cause from Surrogate Cohalait why an order should not be made permitting the contestant to withdraw the answer heretofore filed by him and to file an answer de novo in the form annexed and directing the trial by jury of the issues raised by such answer. The proposed new answer was identical with that already served except there was added thereto the following: “ Leicester Holme, the contestant herein, demands a jury trial of the issues raised by this answer.” Upon the return of this order to show cause the proponents of the will appeared and asked that it be sent to Trial Term where the case then was and where a stipulation had been
Section 2537 of the Code of Civil Procedure (added by Laws of 1914, chap. 443) provides: “Whenever in any proceeding in the Surrogate’s Court, the order or decree of the court will determine any issue or fact as to which any party has a right of trial by jury in any court, such trial shall be deemed to be waived, unless such party, personally, or through his attorney, guardian, committee, or special guardian appears and seasonably demands the same, in which case such trial shall be had according to the practice of such court. * * *. ”
Section 2538 (as amd. by Laws of 1914, chap. 443)
Section 2617 (added by Laws of 1914, chap. 443) provides: “Any person interested in the event as devisee, legatee or otherwise, in a will or codicil offered for probate; or interested as heir-at-law, next of kin, or otherwise, in any property, any portion of which is disposed of or affected * * * by a will or codicil offered for probate; * * * may file objections to any will or codicil so offered for probate.
“Such objections must be filed at or before the close of the testimony taken before the surrogate on behalf of the proponent, or at such subsequent time as the surrogate may direct, and if a jury trial of any issue is desired the same shall be demanded in the objections.”
It is clear that the demand for a jury trial had not been seasonably made because it had not been demanded in the objections, and, therefore, it had been waived under the express provisions of the statutes quoted. To permit the withdrawal of objections from the files in order that the precise objections as made might be refiled with the addition of a demand for a jury trial, the time allowed for such demand having long since expired, was an obvious attempt to avoid the statute which is not to be approved.
We are also of the opinion that under the division of the work of the Surrogates’ Courts as provided in section 2504 of the Code of Civil Procedure (now section 2506, as amd. by Laws of 1914, chap. 443), motions directly affecting contested probate proceedings on the calendar for trial should have been exclusively in the Trial Term. (See Matter of Martin, 80 Misc. Rep. 17.)
But the main reason why the order appealed from was erroneous is that it was made on a breach of a stipulation made and entered into in open court. Up to the time that new counsel appeared in the case no one upon either side, proponent, contestant or their respective attorneys and counsel, had
The attempted violation of the well-understood stipulation made in open court by which the trial was postponed to another month before a different surrogate and before a jury receives our emphatic disapproval. The order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Ingraham, P. J., Scott, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Since amd. by Laws of 1915, chap. 275.— [Rep.