145 N.Y.S. 838 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1914
The maker of the will offered for probate was lost on the high seas in the disaster to the Titanic. The place of the testator’s birth is not established, but it is alleged in the petition for probate that he died without family or heirs at law or next of kin. It is shown that his last domicile or residence de facto was in this county. Mr. Attorney-General appears in behalf of the state in oppsition to the probate, 'asserting the caducary succession of the state by virtue of an escheat or under the rights of ultimate reversion vested in the state.
The right of the state to contest the will of the deceased in a court of probate was not presented to me, and nothing, therefore, will be decided on that point. But throughout the trial I was resting under a mere impression that unless some statute expressly permits it, the right of Mr. Attorney-General to contest a will, not raising a charity, ought to depend on some proceeding in a common-law court in the nature of office found, and no such proceeding was called to my attention. I am aware that sections 2616, 2617 of the Code of Civil Procedure require the attorney-general to be cited on some probates, and his right to contest a probate may be argued to arise by implication. But the point is not clear, as such an implication is contrary to the course of the common law which should always be regarded in the first instance. But as no such point was raised by counsel I am not at liberty to consider it further. I might correct my impression if the point were presented to me and the impression were found to be erroneous.
Treating the state as rectus in curia it appears that
Let us next examine the evidence offered on this point for the state. Mr. Attorney-General called to the stand acquaintances of the deceased and interro
The testamentary common law, as part of the common law in force in the province of New York, was continued in force by the first Constitution of the state, since several times readopted and confirmed by amended Constitutions. Chancellor Kent’s decision in relation to the continuance of the old equity jurisprudence as part of the common law, adopted by the Constitution, covers that point. Manning v. Manning, 1 Johns. Ch. 529-531. It would be flying in the face of all principle to exclude the testamentary common law. Manning v. Manning was perhaps the most important cause ever decided by Chancellor Kent, for it fixed the boundaries of equity jurisdiction in this country. Why should the Constitution be taken to have adopted the old rules of chancery- as part of the common law of the state and to have rejected the old testamentary law, always admitted to be part of the common law and placed solely on that foundation after the reign of Henry VIII? It would be difficult to give a reason.
Mr. Attorney-General called to the stand two non-expert witnesses familiar with the testator’s handwriting. The testimony of one of them, Mr. Carter, was inadequate. He did not depose that the subscription to the will was not that of testator. Mr. Carter simply said it did not look like Mr. Smart’s signature, but the witness was unwilling to swear that it was not
Probate decreed.