
    Matter of the Estate of Patrick Reynolds, Deceased.
    (Surrogate’s Court, New York County,
    November, 1914.)
    Wills—Attestation clause—Omission of word “him”—Witnesses.
    Where an attestation clause was very slightly defective in that because of the omission of the pronoun him it did not conclusively appear therefrom that it was the testator who published the will, and does not refresh the recollection of the survivor of the two subscribing witnesses, a lawyer, who drew the will but had no independent recollection of the circumstances attending the execution of the will and who testifies to nothing which makes against the validity of its execution, and the verity of the signature of the deceased subscribing witness is established by independent testimony, the will which the proof shows to have been last in testator’s own custody will be admitted to probate.
    Proceeding upon the probate of a will.
    Michael J. Scanlan, for proponent.
    Edmund Fletcher Driggs, for contestant.
   Fowler, S.

The probate of the will, dated June 1, 1899, is contested, and the proper execution of the paper propounded is formally put in issue by the contestant. The case has been elaborately argued for the contestant.

It appeared on the hearing that one of the attesting witnesses, Mr. Baker, is dead; the surviving attesting witness, a lawyer, and the draftsman of the will, was sworn and testified substantially that he had no independent recollection of the circumstances attending the execution of the will. The certificate of attestation annexed to the paper in court is very slightly defective in that it omits the pronoun him, so that it does not conclusively appear therefrom that it was the testator who published the will. The certificate does not refresh the recollection of the surviving witness on that point. If any celebration of the will occurred, it was on the day of its date, some fourteen years ago. The will is in the handwriting of the surviving attesting witness who drafted and prepared it in the course of his professional employment by testator. This witness recognizes his own signature attesting the will. He recollects also the testator’s signing a will in his presence, and he recognizes the testator’s signature to the paper propounded, and states that it is the only will the witness ever prepared for testator. Thus in reality he recollects the testator’s act of subscription. Witness testified that he was paid for his professional services in and about the making of the will offered, and he has no doubt that all the legal forms were complied with, but he has no independent recollection. He remembers neither the place of execution nor the presence of the now dead attesting witness, nor does he identify the signature of such other witness. He, however, states that the omission of the pronoun him in the certificate of attestation was his own clerical error. He does not recall reading the attestation certificate aloud in the presence of the testator or the other attesting witness. His testimony standing alone is insufficient to entitle the paper to probate. It is, however, important in this matter to notice that the forgetful witness testifies to nothing which makes against the validity of the execution of the paper propounded. All he testifies to makes for such validity. The verity of the signature of the attesting witness, now dead, was, however, duly established by independent testimony.

A contemporaneous written certificate of attestation in proper form of law, signed by the attesting witnesses, whose signatures are otherwise proved, affords in itself a presumption of regularity of the execution of a will, even though the witness cannot recollect the facts stated in the certificate. Matter of Sizer, 129 App. Div. 7, 9; Matter of Kellum, 52 N. Y. 517. Even in the absence of an attestation clause a will may from other circumstances be presumed to have been duly executed. Matter of Abel, 136 App. Div. 788, 791; Dack v. Dack, 84 N. Y. 663, 665. If this last is the proper inference or presumption in the absence of any certificate, as it undoubtedly is, a certificate so slightly defective as that annexed to the will now here is unquestionably presumptive evidence of regularity of execution when it is proven, as here, to be defective only by reason of a clerical error or omission on the part of the draftsman of the •will.

There being no testimonial evidence or any other evidence to contradict the presumptive or prima facie case made for the will, and the paper having been proved to have been last in the testator’s own custody, the decree must be for probate.

Probate decreed.  