24 Misc. 459 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1898
The decedent died on the 6th of May, 1896, at No. 32 Union square in this city, where he had lived" for fifty years prior to his death; he Was then over ninety
The estate of the decedent will amount to about $2,000,000. The body of the will is in the handwriting of his deceased wife. The scheme of the will is to divide the estate into 100 parts, the persons who are to receive these shares appear in the running writing of the will, and the intention of the decedent to bequeath his entire estate to the beneficiaries named is manifest. The pro rata of shares to be allotted to each of the beneficiaries was, however, originally left blank. There now appears in each of these blanks, in some instances pencil writings, superimposed’ over other pencil writings which have been either wholly or partially erased, and in other instances ink writing, different from the body of the instrument in the material em-
There is no statutory or legal requirement that a will shall be drawn on a particular kind of paper, nor with the same ink, nor exclusively in ink, nor all at one time; and there is no presumption that blank spaces left for the insertion of names or amounts in a will were filled in after execution.
I am convinced from , all the circumstances that in using lead pencil to fill-up the spaces left for the insertion of the number of shares, the decedent was in a deliberative mood; but when deliberation had ripened into determination, he used the more lasting and more dignified material — ink. It seems quite certain that the decedent appreciated the importance of using the more durable method, for we find that in ten out of the fourteen spaces left for the insertion of the number of shares he has superimposed ink over the penciling. It is a common experience even for practicing lawyers to fill in spaces left for the insertion of matter concerning- which deliberation is required and afterwards to write over it in ink the final result of the deliberation; .and, I think, this must have been the case here. Whether the decedent believed that if he left the other portions of the will filled out in lead pencil
The will is admitted to- probate.
Decreed accordingly.