Citation Numbers: 60 N.Y. St. Rep. 53
Judges: Kellogg
Filed Date: 12/15/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The instrument purporting to be the last will of Patrick T. Trenor was, on petition of the executors named therein, presented to the surrogate of the city and county of New York in April, 1888. All the parties claiming as legatees or devisees under the will, and all the heirs at law of the deceased Trenor, appeared in that court; and each, represented by able counsel, took part in the contest there over the probate of the will, as a will of real and personal property. The contest was long continued and vigorous, as appears by the papers offered in evidence. The will, among other grounds, was claimed by the contestants — the heirs at law and the attorney general of the state—to have been procured by fraud and undue influence; and it was decided by the surrogate, who made his decree in October, 1889, “ that the execution thereof [the will] by him [Trenor] was procured by -fraud, and while he was under restraint and undue influence, and that the said instrument was null and void, as for the last will and testament of Patrick Trenor.” The decree of the surrogate has not been reversed on appeal, or revoked by the surrogate.
.The plaintiff in this partition suit contends that the decree is conclusive upon the devisees as to all matters determined by the surrogate. The defendant,. Annie Stover, devisee in the will of this property sought to be partitioned, and in possession, claims the right to make proof here of the will, notwithstanding the decree of the surrogate. If this was a new question, it might be regarded as a serious one, and one surrounded with doubts not easily and satisfactorily solved. There is no doubt but the surrogate had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of all the parties, and had power to make just the decree he did make. Under the well understood general law as to the1 effect to be given to decrees or judgments, this decree ought to be
Justice Kent held in Jackson v. Rumsey, 3 Johns. Cas. 558, as to this law : “ That it never intended that the proof so taken should be conclusive upon the heir. * * * Nor does there Seem to be any ground for the suggestion that the statute had an eye to this mode of proof as a substitute for the mode of establishing a will in chancery; for if a question of fraud in obtaining the will or on the sanity of the testator arises in that court, it- is never tried there, but an issue of law is uniformly directed.”
No material change was made in the law, or in the construction given to it by the courts, down to the adoption of the Revised Statutes in 1837.
That, before the Revised Statutes, it was not necessary to establish, probate, or record a will of real estate, before the will could be offered in evidence in an action at law, is abundantly shown by reference to Jackson v. Blanshan, 3 Johns. 291, 292; Jackson v. Le Grange, 19 Johns. 386; Jackson v. Luquere, 5 Cow, 221; Jackson v. Vickory, 1 Wend. 407; Jackson v. Christman, 4 Wend. 277, 278 ; Bogardus v. Clarke, 4 Paige, 623. The original will might be offered and proved upon trial, though never probated or recorded; and when the will was old, and the party claiming under it was in possession, it $tood upon a footing with ancient deeds, and was received in evidence without proof. The Revised Statutes provided (§ 29): “The probate of any will of personal property taken by a surrogate having jurisdiction, shall be conclusive evidence of the validity of such will until such probate be reversed on appeal or revoked by the surrogate as herein directed, or the will be declared void by a competent tribunal.”
After providing for probate of wills of real estate before a surrogate, § 15 says: “Every will so proved shall have a certificate of such proof endorsed thereon, signed by the surrogate and attested by his seal of office, and may be read in evidence without further proof thereof. The record of such will made as aforesaid and the exemplification of such record by the surrogate in whose custody the same may be shall be received in evidence, and shall be as effectual in all cases as the original will would be if produced and proved, and may in like manner be refuted by contrary proof.”
An action had been once brought by the devisees, in the supreme court, to establish the will as a lost or destroyed will, and judgment had been rendered in that action, after a contest by the heirs at law, against the will. This judgment, in the case above cited, was held to determine nothing agains.t the devisees.
We next come to the provisions of the present Code. Section 2626, relating to wills of personal property, reads as follows: “A decree admitting to probate a will of personal property, made as prescribed in this article, is conclusive as an adjudication upon all questions determined by the surrogate pursuant to this article,” etc.
Section 2627 reads as follows: “ A decree admitting to probate a will of real property made as prescribed in this article establishes presumptively only all the matters determined by the surrogate pursuant to this article, as against a party who was duly cited or has offered a person claiming from, through or under hifii,” etc.
While the language here is different from that used in the Revised Statutes, the meaning is clearly the same, and expresses just the construction placed by the courts upon the provisions of the Revised Statutes.
That it was the intention of the codifiers to make no change in this respect, if not entirely clear from the new language used by them,' becomes clear by reference to their notes upon revision.
It only remains to determine whether the decree of the surrogate, and papers connected therewith," offered in evidence by the counsel for plaintiff, are admissible to establish prima facie the invalidity of the will, or are admissible for any other purpose. As under the stipulation, the questions touching the validity of the will must be tried-before a jury, with or without precise questions being framed before trial, this question is hardly pertinent here, since it does not bear upon any other issue in the case. I think it should be left to the decision of the court, when that issue shall be tried. The Code provides that a “ decree admitting to probate a will of real property ” is presumptive evidence of all matters determined by the surrogate, but is silent as to the effect of a decree refusing probate. The same language is used, however, relating to wills of personal property; and here, too, the Code is silent as to the effect of a decree refusing probate. It would, I think, in the case of a decree refusing probate of a will of personal property, hardly be contended that this had not the same force given by tne Code to a decree admitting the will to probate. Section 2625 provides, as to both wills of personal and of real property, that, where the surrogate decides “against the sufficiency of the proof or against the validity of the will," he shall make a decree accordingly, and, if required, must state the grounds of his decision. The object of providing for a decree in such cases, and the effect of such a decree, is not clear, unless it is to be regarded as res adjudícala as to wills of personal property, and as to the right to administer the personal estate; and as to wills of real estate, I think, such a decree must at least be regarded as res adjudicata as to the right to have it probated at all. Whether it may be further regarded as prima facie evidence of the invalidity of the will, I do not decide. What may be the rights of Fitzgerald, and how such rights, if any, in equity, he has, should be protected by the final decree, I do not determine, since it-is provided by the stipulation, or in open court, that, in case any question shall be submitted