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What is required is to provide facts and circumstances that support the making of the two conclusions that we want to prove:
"Will Remains Valid" Declaration: Decedent's
lost Will has not been revoked; and
"Authentication" Declaration: The document that we have is a true and correct copy of Decedent's lost Will.
The task is accomplished by providing one fact or circumstance after another that, taken together, forces the Court to draw the factual conclusions stated about. Remember, however:
The witnesses (Declarants) provide the facts and
circumstances (ie, you should provide one fact after another); and
The Court draws the conclusions (ie, you should minimize explanation, justification, rationalization, conclusion).
Two issues:
Personal Knowledge. A
substantive requirement: All witnesses who testify in Court (as the
Declarants will need to do if anyone objects) are required to have
"personal knowledge" of the facts and circumstances that they are
testifying (declaring) to. Not that somebody told them, or they read
it in a book, or they heard it on the radio or TV, or they think that it
sounds reasonable, or this is what they would like to have happened, or
this is what they think the Court wants to hear, or this is what they
think is "right," or "fair," or "just," etc. Personal knowledge
means:
I saw what I am describing, or
I heard what I am describing, or
I smelled what I am describing, or
I felt what I am describing, or
I thought what I am describing, or
I did what I am describing, etc, etc, etc.
In other words ---
I am describing my own personal experience, my own perceptions, thoughts,
feelings, actions, etc --- I perceived this, I thought that, I felt
whatever, I did blah-blah-blah and so forth ... Lots of "I'
statements about one's own personal experience. Therefore, you need
to select as the persons to provide your Declarations those persons who
have direct personal knowledge of the facts and circumstances that will
lead to Court to draw the necessary two factual conclusions.
Furthermore, in making their Declarations, those persons should provide a
series of statements describing one of their experiences after another,
ie, "I did this, then I saw that. Etc." To tie the knot, your
author may include a final, "wrap-up" statement of the Declarant's
ultimate belief --- "What I think this all means is ...."
The Deadman's Statute. A procedural requirement: All of Decedent's possible heirs and beneficiaries are potential adverse parties whose testimony is potentially inadmissible, due to the Deadman's Statute. Consequently, if at all possible, those persons you select to provide any Declaration should be a disinterested party --- one who has nothing to gain or lose whether or not Decedent's lost Will is admitted to probate.
Here, we are trying to prove a negative --- that something didn't happen, namely, that Decedent didn't revoke the Will. In order for Decedent to have revoked the Will:
Decedent would have had to have been alive,
and
Decedent would have had to have obtained access to the Will.
We will proceed to "prove the negative" by mounting fact after fact that from the time of the execution of the Will to Decedent's death, Decedent did not access the Will. And if Decedent did not access the Will, Decedent could not have revoked it (at least not by physical means --- he/she could have revoked it by making a later Will).
First possibility:
Second (better) possibility:
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I was Decedent's personal assistant. In that capacity, my responsibilities included making appointments for him/her with others, both in and out of his/her office, supervising all of his/her correspondence and other documents, and cataloguing and filing them. Several months ago, Decedent asked me to make an appointment for him/her to see his/her lawyer about his/her estate plans, which I did. My daily log shows that Decedent's first appointment for his/her estate planning was on [Date] and the last of a series of appointments following that one was on [Date]. I remember Decedent returning to the office an hour or so after that appointment, handing me a series of documents, and asking me to catalog and file them, and that one of those documents was his/her Will dated that date. I catalogued and filed the documents among Decedent's personal files in the office. I have attached a copy of the pertinent portion of that catalog to this Declaration, showing that those documents were filed and catalogued on that date. Several months later, we moved our offices, including all of its files. A week or so ago, I received a telephone call from Decedent's lawyer's office asking me to mail them the original of Decedent's Will. Upon attempting to locate it, I discovered that it was missing from Decedent's personal files in our office, as was the entire file of Decedent's estate planning documents. I have no knowledge of where that file or Decedent's Will may be. After I placed the Will in the file at Decedent's request, I have no memory either of my accessing the file or Will thereafter, of Decedent having done so, or of Decedent having said anything to me about the file or his/her Will. I am left to presume that somehow, the file including Decedent's Will was inadvertently misplaced during our office move.
Besides what I have stated above, after I discovered a week or so ago that Decedent's estate planning document file was missing, I checked our office document catalog for the disposition of Decedent's estate planning documents including the Will. I did this because in my experience, Decedent was a very organized person for whom it was important that things were in their proper place and accounted for, and I would believe it highly unlikely that he/she would have removed any document, including the Will, without noting that in our office document catalog. In working with him/her over many years, I never knew him/her to have removed documents, other than for reviewing them in our office in the normal course of business, without either returning them to their catalogued file, noting their removal from the document catalog, or asking me to do so. Consequently, had Decedent removed the Will him/herself, I would have expected that he/she would have entered its removal in our office document catalog. I have attached to this Declaration a true and correct copy of the pertinent portion of our office document catalog, which shows that according to the catalog, Decedent's estate documents, including the Will, remain located in his/her estate planning file where I put them months ago. I can only conclude that they were mislaid during our move. |
First possibility:
Second (better) possibility:
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