Shaw v. Shaw

Court: New York Surrogate's Court
Date filed: 1882-06-15
Citations: 1 Dem. Sur. 21
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Lead Opinion
The Surrogate.

The paper which has been admitted to probate as the last will of Mrs. Shaw was executed by her on the 6th day of March, 1878, more than two years before her death. It bequeaths to her son Robert the sum of five hundred dollars; makes equal division of her real estate among her three other children, Matthew, William and Helen, and gives to the latter the residue of the personalty. This seems to be a discrimination in favor of Helen and against Robert, though whether to a large or an inconsiderable extent does not appear by the evidence, as the value of the property is not disclosed. The will was proved in February, 1881; nearly a year thereafter, proceedings for its revocation were instituted by Robert Shaw, who filed a petition stating divers, grounds upon which he contested its validity.

Only one of the grounds seems sufficiently serious to require discussion. The deceased, when she executed this

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instrument, had reached an advanced age, but she had such possession of her mental faculties as fully to qualify her for making testamentary disposition of her estate. There is no reason to doubt that the formalities, prescribed by law for the execution of wills, were substantially observed by herself and her witnesses; these things, indeed, are scarcely disputed by contestant’s counsel. But it is claimed that the will does not really speak the purpose of the testatrix; that it is the offspring of undue influence exerted upon her by her sons Matthew and William, and her daughter Helen. Nothing in the evidence tends seriously to establish this fact, except the testimony of Mrs. Margaret Shaw, wife of decedent’s son Matthew. This lady testified to the following declarations of the testatrix: that she had made a will giving Robert only $500; that she was sorry she had thus discriminated between him and the other children, but that she was getting old and wanted peace, and could have it under no other conditions; that her daughter Helen was “cranky by spells,” and would have made her uncomfortable, if she had insisted upon an equal distribution of the estate. The same witness also stated that, on various occasions, she had heard the brothers and sister of Robert say harsh things about his wife, sometimes in their mother’s hearing; and that once William had deelared with bitter words, that he could not bear the thought of Robert and his wife having any of the property, and that he would strive to prevent it.

Upon the cross-examination of this witness, it appeared that she had been the wife of Matthew Shaw for eight years, and that her married life had been very unhappy. Matthew had ill-treated her, she said, and driven her from

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his house, claiming that she had robbed him, and she had commenced proceedings for a divorce, which were still pending. The testimony and demeanor of the witness showed that she was animated by the sentiments which such a state of things would naturally arouse in her mind. I do not, for this cause, feel at liberty to discard her testimony as wholly untrustworthy, but I accept it with some grains of allowance. And, as it furnishes substantially the sole support to the assault upon the will, I cannot, upon the faith of it, revoke the decree which has pronounced that will valid. Very little of the testimony given by this witness was competent. The court would have been bound, under the rules of evidence, to exclude the bulk of it, if objection had been made, as it ought to have been made, to its admission. For in view of the fact that the mental capacity of the decedent, though technically put in issue by the pleadings, was not practically questioned at the trial, and that, aside from her declarations, there was really no proof of the fact of undue influence, those declarations tending to impeach the integrity of her will, and to ascribe its contents to the improper interference of her children, were not admissible in évidence for any purpose. They were proved, however, without objection, and will accordingly be considered by the court, although they might, perhaps, be safely disregarded, in view of the decision in Hamilton v. N. Y. Central R. R. Co. (51 N. Y., 106).

In determining the legitimate force and effect of this evidence, regard may very justly be had to the grounds upon which its exclusion might have been successfully requested. The Supreme Court, many years since, se

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verely criticised evidence of this character, in the case of Jackson v. Kniffen (2 Johns., 31). The question was there presented for review, whether the trial court had erred in excluding certain declarations of a decedent impeaching his will. These declarations had been rejected under the following circumstances: Counsel had proposed to show that the decedent had frequently and emphatically asserted that he executed the instrument in question against his will, and through fear that a refusal would endanger his life. There was also an offer to show that, scarcely an hour before he died, the decedent, with great earnestness and solemnity, had invoked all who heard him to bear witness that he repudiated the instrument which was called his will, because it was extorted from him by menace and duress.

In sustaining the decision below, the learned Judge who pronounced the opinion of the Supreme Court says: “To permit wills to be defeated, or in any manner whatever impeached, by the parol declarations of a testator, appears to me repugnant to the very genius and spirit of the statute.”

Best, C. J.,

in Provis v. Reed (5 Bing., 435), in a case similar to the present, says: “We shall not establish' a doctrine which would render useless the precaution of making a will.” And, in the same case, Park, J., adds: “The evidence of declarations of the testator incompatible with the validity of the will was properly rejected. It would be most mischievous, and a violation of all established principle, to allow such declarations to be received in evidence.”

Similar views have since been repeatedly expressed in the courts of this country (Waterman v. Whitney, 11

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N. Y., 157; Neiheisel v. Toerge, 4 Redf., 332; Cudney v. Cudney, 68 N. Y. 148; Sisson v. Conger, 1 Thomp. & Cook, 569. See also Griffith v. Diffenderfer, 5 Md., 480; Hayes v. West, 37 Ind., 24; Dickie v. Carter, 42 Ill., 388).

The slightest reflection shows the folly and injustice of departing from this well settled doctrine. A wide door would at once be opened for those very mischiefs, whose prevention was one of the most important aims, and has been one of the most satisfactory results of our statute of wills.' If a written instrument, duly signed, attested and published as a will, can be denied probate upon the mere disclosure of its maker’s verbal declarations assailing its validity, the legal formalities attending the execution of such an instrument are robbed of their seriousness and significance.

The power of making nuncupative wills is now limited bv law to soldiers in service and mariners at sea. The power of revoking wills by nuncupation neither .has nor ought to have any wider range. Our statutes expressly prescribe the formalities by which alone, except by its actual destruction, a testator who has once made a valid will can deprive it of validity. And it would be a practical violation of the letter, as well as of the spirit of that statute, to sustain the claim of the petitioner in the case at bar.

I find, therefore, in the absence of evidence establishing that Mrs. Shaw was led by any restraint or undue influence to execute this instrument, that it is, as it purports to be, her last will and testament.

Decreed accordingly.