165 Misc. 675 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1937
While the probate contest in' this estate was still in progress and at a time when no distribution of estate assets could have been made with safety, claimant here, through her general guardian, sought a decree compelling the executor of deceased to pay claims of Marjorie Browning which are outlined in her guardian’s petition. To that petition answers were interposed by the interested parties. The issues so formulated were placed upon the reserved generally calendar of the court to await the result of the attempt to probate the fraudulent document propounded as the second codicil of deceased. When the probate proceeding was concluded the issues in this proceeding were restored to the active calendar and a hearing was had at which oral testimony was taken.
In substance the claims seem to be based (a) on contracts alleged to have been entered into between deceased and the natural parents of claimant in the years 1918 and 1923, (b) on a contract with the former wife of deceased also made in the year 1918, and (c) on a further and separate contract with the former wife of deceased made in the year 1923.
Each and every of the claims of Marjorie Browning is dismissed on the merits. The court holds that there never existed any basis to such claims and that the proof furnished in support thereof is not entitled to credence. The testimony given in support of the claims is in direct contradiction to the records of this court, is in direct contradiction to the acts of the parties while deceased was living and is contradictory of all the probabilities derivable from known and undisputable facts. The case is of the sort which evoked the condemnation vigorously stated by the Court of Appeals in. Hamlin v. Stevens (177 N. Y. 39, 47, 50) and Rosseau v. Rouss (180 id. 116). While the discussion of the evidence required to support claims against dead men’s estates was stated too broadly
Separate comment may be warranted on the testimony of persons who were called as witnesses'to support the claim of contract and who are not directly interested in the result. These witnesses undertook to repeat the exact words alleged to have been used by deceased on occasions where his exact language was at the time of no consequence at all to any of the persons who professed to recall it. It is the common experience of trial judges that witnesses in good faith repeat their versions of transactions because they have in effect hypnotized themselves into believing that they recall something which in truth they never heard. A commentator on the defects in human testimony has said:
“ In the case where the sound is articulate, as in overhearing a conversation, we are in the presence of still other sources of error, due to illegitimate inference and the association of ideas. For words which are not heard will be supplied by the witness in all good faith. He will have a theory of the purport of the conversation, and will arrange the sounds he heard to fit it. * * *
“ When the witness is not isolated, but is a member of a group, the defects we have before noted, due to the creative imagination, are likely to be accentuated. The event will have been discussed and a uniform version gradually prepared. It is almost impossible, from the unanimous testimony of a number of witnesses who have been in consultation, to extract the original perceptions.” (J. W. N. Sullivan, Human Testimony.)
It would not be just to ascribe intentional falsity to the witnesses who offered their recollection of words uttered more than a decade ago in their effort to promote the cause of the claimant with whom or with whose foster mother they are on friendly terms. The court may not regard such proof, however, as constituting that clear and convincing evidence which should be required if claims such as these are to be sustained.
The closing argument of the attorney of record for petitioner perhaps contains a suggestion that by an allowance to claimant the court should readjust the property dispositions made by deceased so as to do what counsel thinks deceased ought to have done for claimant; and perhaps a suggestion that the court should look with an approving eye upon evidence which in a less appealing set of circumstances would be rejected out of hand. Perhaps the court has misapprehended the nature of the argument presented by counsel. In any event the court cannot so decide cases. This case lacks any basis in fact to support the claims and they must be and are dismissed on the merits.
There is presented by tendered proof in this case and the court’s rulings excluding it a question of law upon which some comment ought to be made. In Rosseau v. Rouss (supra) it was held by the Court of Appeals that section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure (now Civ. Prac. Act, § 347) forbade the giving of testimony by the
Submit, on notice, decree denying on the merits the prayer of the petition.