28 Misc. 363 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1899
This case was tried before Mr. Surrogate Arnold, but no decision was rendered by him before his retirement from office. Subsequently a motion was made, of which all persons having any interests, had due notice, by which the matter was brought before me, as Judge Arnold’s successor, to complete the trial as unfinished business pending before my predecessor, in accordance with the practice suggested in the Matter of Lawrence, 27 Misc. Rep. 473. This motion was opposed by the counsel for contestants, who insisted that the case should be tried before me de novo. After hearing long and able arguments •of counsel, I held that I had full power to proceed with the determination of the case, and allowed the contestants an exception to my ruling. See Matter of Johnson, 27 Misc. Rep. 167. Inasmuch as this case was not tried before me, an especially careful •examination of the testimony taken on the trial (more than 1,175 typewritten pages) has been necessary. The testatrix, Mary Johnson, died March 10, 1897, being then about fifty-six years old, leaving an estate estimated at about $50,000 of personalty and •$500,000 of realty. She was a woman of fair intelligence, but of humble origin and little education and coarse of manners and speech, who had emigrated from Ireland when quite young, and who seems, from the evidence, to have been from about the time of her arrival in this country, indifferent, if not even hostile, in feeling towards nearly all her blood relatives on account of the treatment she received from them when she came to the United States. There was, however, one exception, her brother, Stephen Lovejoy, who predeceased her in 1893, and from whom she inherited the bulk, if not all, of her large fortune. Subsequent to his death, and on February 14, 1895, she executed a will which is in evidence herein and is substantially like that now presented for probate, ■except as to the residuary legatees and devisees, who are, however, in both wills charitable and religious corporations. The will now under consideration was executed April 25, 1896, and a codicil thereto on the day of her death, March 10, 1897. Legacies are given by the will to several Roman Catholic priests and to a number of relatives, friends and servants, and the residue of the estate is given to the executors in trust to convert into money and apply
Probate granted.