In re Proving the Last Will & Testament of Law

80 A.D. 73 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903

Hatch, J.:

It is not essential to a disposition of this case that we follow the argument of the learned counsel- for the appellant in his discussion of the probate jurisdiction conferred upon the surrogate by the several provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, or of the authorities bearing thereon both before and since their enactment. Ho useful purpose would be served by so doing. The question as to whether the will of an inhabitant of this State, made and executed herein, can be admitted to probate by the surrogate without the production of the will itself is settled by decisive authority. In Matter of Cameron (47 App. Div. 120) it was said: The implication of the 1st subdivision of section 1861 and of section 2620 of the Code of Civil Procedure, is that the surrogate cannot admit such a will to probate.” This decision was affirmed in the Court of Appeals upon the opinion below (166 N. Y. 610). The fact that in the Cameron Case (supra) the surrogate found that he was not satisfied from the evidence that any such will was in existence did not affect at all the question of the power to admit to probate if not produced. While it is true that in that case the application was for the issuance of letters of administration upon the estate of the decedent, yet, upon the hearing before the surrogate, the appellants therein asked for a commission to take additional testimony in Chicago as to the original instruments, their custody and the proceedings for their probate. This application was denied, and the question raised thereby was presented for determination. Consequently, the question as to the power of the surrogate in the premises was directly involved, and it was thought that such ruling was proper, for the reason that, without the production of the will, the surrogate had no power to admit it to probate. Hor could it be established by the issuance of a commission, for the reason that the witnesses to the instrument involved in the proceeding resided within the State of Hew York, and, therefore, could not be produced before the commissioner to take such *76proof. For both these reasons the ruling of the surrogate was sustained. The court cites Russell v. Hartt (87 N. Y. 19) and Matter of Delaplaine (45 Hun, 225) as authorities, showing that, under the circumstances presented by these cases, a will may be established by producing the same before a commissioner appointed to take testimony for that purpose, when the production of the will before the commissioner is deemed in law to be the production of the same before the surrogate. It is evident that the court, in the Cameron Case (supra), did not intend to lay down any different rule from that which had been announced in the cases which it cites as authority. It simply announced the doctrine determined therein. In Russell v. Hartt (supra) it was held that where a testator, not an inhabitant of this State, died, leaving assets within the jurisdiction of the surrogate, proof might be taken of a will by interposition of a commission, where the original will was in the possession of a court or tribunal of another country and could not be physically produced. Matter of Delaplaine (supra) was decided upon the authority of this case and does not extend its doctrine.

In the case before us the will has been probated in the State of Connecticut. The testator was an inhabitant of this State, the will was executed herein and the witnesses to the will and codicil all reside in the State of Hew York. It is evident, therefore, that under such circumstances the will could not be established before a commissioner, as the proponent would be confronted with the same difficulty as existed in Matter of Cameron (supra). While it is true that wills may be admitted to probate which have been lost or destroyed, yet where a written will is established, having a present physical existence, it is required by the provisions of section 2620 of the Code of Civil Procedure to be produced before the surrogate, and it must be filed and remain in the surrogate’s office. The will established by the petitioner in the present case, and found by the surrogate to exist, is a written will, having a present existence, and under the provisions of this section it must be produced and be filed in the surrogate’s office when it is admitted to probate. The cases which we have cited clearly so recognize.

This conclusion is strengthened by the provisions of section 1861 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which authorizes an action to establish or impeach a will under the following circumstances: 1. *77Where a will of real or personal property, or both, has been executed, in such a manner and under such circumstances, that it might under the laws of the State be admitted to probate in a Surrogate’s Court, but the original will is in another State or country under such circumstances that it cannot be obtained for that purpose, or has been lost or destroyed, by accident or design, before it was duly proved and recorded within the State.” This section clearly contemplates the existence of a condition such as the present case presents, and, therefore, an action might lie to establish this will. (Younger v. Duffie, 94 N. Y. 535.) If it were an original question we should not hesitate to hold, in the case of a will made by an inhabitant of this State and executed within its jurisdiction, that it cannot be probated without the physical production of the will, where such will is in writing and in existence.

The authorities which we have cited are conclusive in support of this doctrine.

It follows that the decree of the surrogate should be affirmed, with costs.

Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.

Decree affirmed, with costs.