François Sevez

François Sevez (October 22, 1891 - February 29, 1948) was a French general during World War II. Sevez was present at the German surrender in Rheims, and signed the German Instrument of Surrender as the official witness.

Military career
At the end of the First World War he had attained the rank of Captain, and received the Légion d'honneur in 1918 after being wounded seven times.

During early part of the Second World War, he fought in Belgium. Captured and held prisoner, he was repatriated in 1941 and was named the Chief of Staff to General Juin. He fought in the Tunisian campaign as a brigadier General in 1942, and took command of the 4th Moroccan Mountain Division in September 1943, participating in the Italian campaign as well as the liberation of Alsace in 1944. In October 1944, he joined General de Monsabert as a commander of the French Army reserve destined to occupy Germany.

In Rheims, on 7 May 1945, acting in his capacity as General Charles de Gaulle's chief of staff, he signed the German Instrument of Surrender as the official witness, in the presence of General Alfred Jodl and General Walter B. Smith, the chief of staff of U.S. General Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Death
He died following a hunting accident near Offenburg, hit by another hunter's bullet that had ricocheted off the thick skin of a wild boar. He was buried temporarily in a chapel in Baden-Baden.