13 N.Y.S. 255 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1890
I have given very careful and painstaking attention to every word of the testimony in this proceeding, and I have listened with a great deal of interest to the careful statements, by both counsel, of the law, and in the main I agree with them. The duty of the Surrogate is made very clear by our statute. This proceeding presents but a single question of fact to be determined. It is conceded that the paper propounded as the last will of this decedent, Andreas Kiedaisch, was executed by him on the 13th day of July, 1888. It is also conceded
I am not required by the law to state my reasons for the decision which I feel it my duty to make in this case, nor, indeed, am I required by law in any probate case, except under certain conditions, which do not obtain here, to state my reasons; but it is my conception of duty, sitting as judge and as a jury, upon a question of this sort, to state briefly, in all cases, the reasons for my conclusion, sometimes at the risk, perhaps, of reaching a right conclusion, though giving the wrong reason, but that risk I am always willing to take, because to change places with those who are interested—aside, I mean, from counsel—to change places with those who are interested in the estate, either for the will or against it, in their place I should be better satisfied to see the mind of the judge,
This case has taken a great many days to try. It has been very carefully and very ably presented on both sides. The question is one of importance in a pecuniary sense to the beneficiary named in the will, and to the kin of the decedent. I have had occasion to examine all the questions which are presented in this case heretofore very carefully. Several cases have been decided by me which have not been referred to by counsel, and in which I had at the time studied the questions with great care, and came to my conclusions, and cited authorities which seem to have sustained the views expressed; and those cases are the law of this court, because they have never been reversed, and of course they stand as the law here, unless for some reason I myself see that I have been mistaken. I said (and I again say in this case) in February, 1889, in Matter of Lissauer, 5 N. Y. Supp. 260; 22 N. Y. St. Rep. 877, (which will was rejected upon the ground of incapacity,) that the rule of decision in this state is that, if there be a reasonable doubt whether one or more of the directions of the statute have not been complied with, then probate must be refused, even if it appear probable that the paper expresses the testator’s intention. That remark was more properly applied to the ceremonies of the execution of the paper; and in this case there is no dispute about the due execution of this paper,—the formalities required by the statute. The will was signed by this man, and signed at the end of the paper. It was signed in the presence of two subscribing witnesses.
Ordinarily the burden of proof, which is upon the proponent always, to satisfy the court that the paper propounded was executed by a person capable at the time of making a will, is successfully carried' by the testimony of the subscribing witnesses. They are the persons who have the best opportunity of judging of the condition of the testator’s mind and of his surroundings ; and the law has wisely (we all think) given these witnesses the right to testify to their opinion of the testator’s mental capacity at that time. No other lay witness has that right for obvious reasons. The law is, as 1 view it, and applicable to this case, well stated in the case of Weir v. Fitzgerald, 2 Bradf. 42, where the court say: “ Something more is necessary
I have already said that I have entire confidence in the good faith and honesty of all of these witnesses. Never, in my experience, have I known 25 or 30 witnesses to testify against each other where, to my mind, although the conflict was rather sharp in some respects, I felt that they were all endeavoring to tell the truth. The will itself is an item of evidence. It has been referred to briefly by counsel. It is always to
Counsel for the contestants have referred to the value of expert testimony. I think I ought, in justice to him, to state that the law, as I remember it as "it has been laid down in our state, and I have cited it, is not as he supposes. I know that our Court of Appeals, in a case which I supposed I had under my eye, condemns the testimony of medical witnesses where it is produced against the testimony of witnesses—lay witnesses—who have actual view of the person whose capacity or sanity is the subject of controversy. The court said in that case: “ The medical discussions of men learned and eminent in that profession are no doubt interesting as matters of general information, and often as the argument of eminent medical counsel, and are illustrations of the zeal and positiveness with which doctors disagree upon subjects upon which human knowledge is imperfect, and which will continue to be shrouded in mystery until we see face to 'face, and know even as we are known.” That is the language of the opinion; and I think Judge Browne, will agree with me that the testimony of experts,’ al
,: The evidence in this case satisfies me, and I think it must satisfy everybody, that this man might have and did have a lucid interval at that time; and that a will may be made in a lucid interval, of course, is established over and over again. It is not necessary to quote any. authority for that. The fact that this man had been committed to a lunatic asylum may be presumptive evidence of his insanity, although that is controverted by Mr. Spink, (and I am inclined to think that he is right about it,) but for the sake of the case we will admit that. I have a case here, Matter of Pendleton, 1 Connoly Surr. Rep. 480, where the will of a person (who, at the time the will was made, was under the care and custody of á commission in lunacy) was admitted to probate. That, however, proves nothing. That case is no authority to us, except that the existence of the commission in lunacy was not regarded as conclusive at all upon the question of capacity. As to that, the court inquired independently,