Judges: Moss
Filed Date: 11/13/1958
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Contestant’s motion to continue the examination of Louis Lip skin, one of the named coexecutors and trustees, as a subscribing witness is denied. Although examinations pursuant to section 141 of the Surrogate’s Court Act are no longer restricted by the statute to be held prior to filing objections (cf. Matter of Feldstein, 133 Misc. 255) and the courts have adopted a liberal attitude in such examinations (Matter of Ericson, 200 Misc. 1005), their scope is still limited to the relevant facts and circumstances surrounding the execution of the will (Matter of Hermann, 178 App. Div. 182, affd. 222 N. Y. 564; Matter of Young, 47 N. Y. S. 2d 779). When objections to probate have been filed delineating the issues.
The subject matter of the proposed continued examination of the subscribing witness deals with a memorandum dated November 18, 1950, relating to ownership of corporate stock in decedent’s business constituting the chief asset of the estate. The memorandum predates the propounded instrument about five and a half years. It is not pertinent to the “ conditions prevailing at the time the propounded paper was executed” (Matter of Ericson, supra, p. 1007), or, in the language of the statute, to “ all the facts and circumstances ” bearing upon the “ genuineness of the will, and the validity of its execution ” or upon ‘ ‘ the testator, at the time of executing it, [being] in all respects competent to make a will and not under restraint ” (Surrogate’s Ct. Act, § 144). “ The words ‘ competent ’ and ‘ restraint ’ used in this section * * * refer and are limited to mental competency, and a restraint exercised, at the time of the preparation and execution of the will offered for probate” (Matter of Hermann, 178 App. Div. 182, 190, supra). The statute does not permit denial of probate based upon facts and circumstances unrelated to the genuineness of the instrument and the validity of its execution as affected by testator’s competency and freedom of restraint at the time of its execution. It may be, as alleged by contestant, that the question of the manner in which the shares of stock were transferred to Frank Martin on or about the date of the aforesaid document “ is a matter of primary importance on the subject of fraud and undue influence,” but any such fraud and undue influence would involve the 1950 stock transaction unrelated to the alleged fraud and undue influence affecting the propounded instrument executed much later. The ownership of the stock and the manner
Settle order on notice.