1 Mills Surr. 496 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1900
The evidence of the death of the testatrix, by being burned in the fire which consumed the Windsor Hotel, on March 17, 1899, though circumstantial, is entirely sufficient. She parted from her hairdresser at about twenty minutes past one o’clock in the afternoon, and declared that she then intended to return to the hotel, and, later, to go to the opera. She was subsequently seen in house attire on the ground floor of the hotel by two of the clerks, and by a guest, and then procured cash for a check of ten dollars, which she drew on her account in the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co., and went towards the elevator leading to her room on the sixth floor. She was seen when leaving the dining-room on the second floor, at about a quarter after two, and then went to the elevator and rang the bell. She called at the room of a friend on the sixth floor within less than an hour before the beginning of the fire. The fire became known at about three o’clock, and raged most furiously in the upper floors in the vicinity of her rooms. In forty minutes after the first warning the walls of the building began to fall, and proceeded to the utter destruction of everything consumable in it. Hot a single article of furniture was spared, and even the cast-iron work was nearly melted. Ho person who was known to have been on the sixth floor of the building at the time of the first alarm is shown to have escaped, and the remains of the victims were so completely consumed as to be incapable of identification. From the time of the fire until now, being nearly a year, no friend of the testatrix has seen her or heard from her; and no checks
Probate decreed.