Court Opinion

ID: 6142111
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-05 14:41:18.506543+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:41.408181
License: Public Domain

The Surrogate.
The proponent’s position—that the petition is sufficient to give this court jurisdiction—is sound, yet this is jurisdiction only to entertain the proceedings, and adjudicate without proofs in case the petition is not controverted. Here the important allegation of the petition—that the testator is dead—is controverted, and the burden of proof is upon the proponent to prove that fact. That this may be an issue triable in this court is, I think, recognized in Carroll v. Carroll (60 N. Y, 121, 123), where Miller, J., in passing upon the question whether probate proceedings were evidence of the testator’s death, referred to certain authorities sustaining the affirmative of the proposition, and said: u This is undoubtedly the true rule, and it will be found, upon examination, that the authorities cited upon this question relate mainly to cases where the right of the administrator or executor to sue is involved, or where the parties were connected with the proceeding, interested in the estate, and had their rights adjudicated upon when the will was established before the probate court.”
If, then, the probate proceedings are evidence of the death of the testator, against the parties to the proceedings, it must follow that they have the right to cross-examine witnesses testifying to the fact, and the right to advance counter-proofs.
I do not think the documents from England competent proof, nor could the death of the testator be proven by repute.
It follows, there is not now sufficient proof before me of the death of Robert T. Front the alleged testator.