26 Barb. 416 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
The appellant, James Vandemark, presented the will to the surrogate, and was a petitioner for its probate. It is insisted that he cannot appeal from the order made upon his own application. But this objection is untenable. The statute provides that, after any will has been proved before the surrogate, any devisee or legatee named therein, or any heir or-next of kin to the testator, may, within three months thereafter, appeal from the decision. (2 R. S. 66, § 55.) This provision is, of course, sufficiev 'vy broad to authorize this appeal, even though the mt was a petitioner for probate.
.•eble attempt was made, upon the hearing before the te, to show the incapacity of the testator, but the
But, however willing we might be to see the will annulled, and what might seem to us a more equitable distribution of the property take place, it is not the province of this court to interfere. The will was executed in due form of law, and by a competent testator. I am not aware that a mere alteration of the estate has ever been allowed to work a revocation of the whole will. The doctrine of implied revocation had, indeed, been carried so far, in respect to specific devises, that the legislature, in the revision of our statutes in 1830, thought fit to interpose, and to define the cases in which it should be allowed to operate. (2 R. S. 64, §§ 46 to 48.) Now, a change in the property of the testator, subsequent to the execution of his will, operates as a revocation of the devises in the will, just so far as the alteration in the property has had the effect to place it beyond the operation of the provisions of the will, and no further. In Adams v. Winne, (7 Paige, 97,) a testator had devised certain portions of his real estate to his two sons, and certain other portions to his two daughters. Sub
W. B. Wright, Hartiss and Gould, Justices.]