
    Will of Mandelick.
    (Surrogate’s Court—New York County,
    December, 1893.)
    A will, prepared on the first page of a printed blank, was signed by the testator and duly attested by the subscribing. witnesses, with proper testimonium and attestation clauses, the same being apparently a completed instrument and the execution properly proved; on the second page were further provisions of disposal signed by the testator, but not attested by the witnesses, who remembered, however, that there was writing on the second page, but did not recollect the testator’s signature. Held, that the writing on the first page, being a completed instrument, should be admitted to probate.
    Application for probate of a will. The opinion states the facts.
    
      Clark Brooks, for proponent.
   Fitzgerald, S.

The paper propounded as the will is written in a printed form, and on its first page is a completed instrument,- with a full attestation clause. The testimony shows that all the requirements of the statute were complied with in its execution. On the second page of the paper is a further provision for the decedent’s mother, small bequests to two sisters and to two friends, and a direction for the expenditure of some money for a stone to mark his grave. This last is marked out by cross lines. At the foot of the second page is the decedent’s signature, but without attestation. One witness recollects seeing some writing on the second page, and the other that the greater portion of the page was covered with writing, but neither recollects seeing his signature on that page. It is, however, proved that there was no declaration by the decedent in respect to the writing on the second page, and the disposing provisions on the two pages are distinct and have no relation to one another. It is probable that the writing, as it appears on the second page, was there at the time of the execution of the will. As there is no evidence to show that the signature was on the second page at the timé of execution, I cannot presume that it was intended to be a part of the will, and much less in view of the fact that it is not subscribed by witnesses. So far as appears, the completed instrument, which ends on the first page above the attestation clause, was intended to be the will, and a decree may be presented admitting that ¡Dart to probate.

Probate decreed.  