159 N.Y.S. 59 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
Tirso Mesa y Hernandez was born in Cuba on January 28, 1847, and resided continuously there until his marriage on February 24, 1881, to Josefina Garcia Pola, also a native of Cuba. They went to live immediately after their marriage at his sugar plantation “La Vega ” at Manguito, Cuba, which remained their sole family home until 1904, when he purchased a town house, Ho. 2 San Lazaro, Havana, Cuba. He resided in Cuba uninterruptedly from his marriage until the time of his death, save for the years 1895 and 1899, which he spent in Europe because of the Cuban insurrection, and for periods of the other years between 1888 and 1908, when he spent his summers in Europe, with short stays in Hew York on his way there and on his return. There being no direct passenger
It is further urged that while in New York city on December 19, 1906 (where he spent a week on his way from England to Cuba), he executed his last will and testament, wherein he was recited as “a native of Colon, in the Province of Matanzas, in the Island of Cuba, but now a citizen of the United States, residing and domiciled at the City of New York.” He named therein four executors and trustees, two of whom were residents, of New York city, the others of Havana. The two resident executors petitioned for the probate of the will of decedent, “ late of the County of New York, deceased.” Citations were prayed to be issued to those interested, including the widow and children, to' attend the probate, and January 29, 1909, a decree was made admitting the will to probate, wherein no appearance by any of the parties was recited, but it was- set forth that the probate was not contested; that it appeared to the surrogate that the will was duly executed and that the testator was at the time of executing it in all respects competent to make a will and not under restraint. There was no recital in the decree of
In Matter of Grant (83 Misc. Rep. 257; affd., 166 App. Div. 921) it appeared that General Grant’s widow had filed his will for probate in the Surrogate’s Court of New York county, alleging that he was a resident of that county, had qualified as executrix thereunder when probate was allowed, and had filed thereafter with the transfer tax appraiser an affidavit that her late husband died a resident of the city of New York. Yet she was allowed in the transfer tax proceedings to litigate the question of his actual domicile at the time of his decease, and was not deemed estopped from questioning the same, either by the decree of probate or by .her own affidavits upon the subject. Her contention that her husband was actually domiciled in Federal territory, having abandoned New York city as his
Having reached the conclusion that the decree admitting the will of decedent to probate was not conclusive in this proceeding and that the record amply warrants the finding that decedent was not a resident of the State of New York, but of Cuba, at the time of his death, the only other question involved is whether his widow was entitled to a one-half ownership of the joint estate under the law of Cuba, being the so-called “ gananciales.” The decedent and his wife were married in Cuba; continuously resided there; and the Cuban court, the executors appearing and opposing, determined and upheld her right to such “gananciales” under the Cuban law, which also appears in the record herein. Concededly there was no express contract between the parties and, therefore, the law of matrimonial domicile governed not only as to all the rights of the parties to their property in that place, but also as to all personal property everywhere, upon the principle that movables have no situs, or rather that they accompany the person everywhere, while as to immovable property the law rei sitce prevails. (Story Confi. Laws [8th ed.], 267.) It follows that the deduction for the widow’s equal half of the joint estate was proper. The decision in Matter of Majot (199 N. Y. 29) is not opposed to this conclusion, for in that case the decedent and his wife had emigrated to this country from France and actually resided here twenty-two years until the time of his death, and all the property, real and personal, of which he died seized or possessed had been acquired after he came to this State.
The order appealed from will, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Page and Davis, JJ., concurred.
' Order affirmed, with costs.