Andrews v. Andrews

48 Miss. 220 | Miss. | 1873

Peyton, C. J.:

This is an appeal from the decree of the chancery court of Yazoo county, admitting to probate and establishing the nuncupative will of Joseph Andrews, Jr., who, being informed by one of his attending physicians that he was in danger of death, was asked by him *223-what he intended to do with his property, and in answer thereto stated as follows: “ I wish it to go to Mollie and the child and the old man, and Wilkinson and Bowman to take charge of it.”

Are these words sufficient to constitute a nuncupative will under our statute, which provides that no nuncupative will shall he established unless it be proved by two witnesses that the testator called on some person present to take notice or bear testimony that such is his will, or words to that effect? Bev. Code 1857, p. 433, art. 38.

The above provision of our statute is substantially a re-enactment of the English statute of frauds upon this subject, as will appear by reference to the 19th section of that statute, which provides that no nuncupative will shall be good unless it be proved that the testator, at the time of pronouncing the same, did bid the persons present, or some of them, to bear witness that such was his will, or to that effect.

The stringent provisions of this statute- upon this subject are supposed to have originated from the circumstance of a gross fraud attempted the year before its enactment, in setting up a fictitious nuncupative will. Cole v. Mordaunt, 4 Ves. 196, note.

It seems always to have, been regarded as essential to the validity of ordinary nuncupative wills, in the English ecclesiastical courts, that there should have been a distinct calling of the witnesses to take notice of the testator’s declarations of a will, and that the testator make the declarations animo testandi, with a view to have the very words then uttered by him constitute his will. Bennett v. Jackson, 2 Phillim. 190.

The statute is strictly construed with respect to its requisition that the testator shall bid the persons present, or some of them, to bear witness that such is his will, or to that effect, which is technically called the rogatio testium. Thus, where a mother, in her last sick*224ness, called several of her children and the daughter of the person with whom she lodged, to her bedside, and declared her wishes as to the disposition of her effects and the conduct of her family after her death, such declaration was held inadmissible to probate as a nuncupative will on account of the want of the rogatio testium; for the words of the statute are very strong, and must be held strictly that the deceased shall call upon the persons present to bear witness to the act. He must declare that the words were spoken with the intention of making a will at the time. 1 Williams on Executors, 105; 1 Lomax on Executors, 37.

Nuncupative wills, though tolerated, are by no means favorites of the law. Not only must all the provisions of the statuté be strictly complied with to authorize the probate of such a will, but added to this, and independent of the statute altogether, the factum of a nuncupative will requires to be proved by evidence more strict and stringent than that of a written one in every particular. This is requisite in consideration of the facilities with which frauds in setting up nuncupative wills are obviously attended; facilities which absolutely require to be counteracted by courts, insisting on the strictest proofs as to the facta of such alleged wills. Hence the testamentary capacity of the deceased, and the animus testandi at the time of the alleged nuncupation, must appear, in the case of a nuncupative will, by the clearest and most indisputable evidence, and that the proof embodies the real testamentary intentions of the deceased. 1 Williams on Executors, 105; 1 Eedf. on Wills, 188, 189; Yarnell’s Will, 4 Rawle, 62; Frick’s Will, 4 Watts & Sergt. 360; Werkheiser’s Will, ib. 189.

In the case of Haus v. Palmer, 9 Harris, 300, it was held that the substance of the will, the intent to will, the call upon disinterested witnesses to bear witness to it as a will, must each and all appear with great clearness in order to amount to proof.

*225It was said by the court, in Rankin v. Rankin, 9 Ired. 160, that nuncupative wills were found to give rise to so many frauds and perjuries, that it was necessary to guard them by many requisites in respect to their execution and their probate. To render the protection safe against those wills, the court ought faithfully to observe every one of the. provisions of the statute. It is important that the deceased give the requisite evidence that his words were not uttered in loose discourse, but animo testandi, by calling on persons present to bear witness to that intention. Brown v. Brown, 2 Murph. 350. And this is the doctrine of the state of Georgia, where it has been determined that no nuncupative will can be good unless it be proved that the testator, at the time of pronouncing the same, did bid the persons present, or some of them, to bear witness that such was his will, or to that effect. Sampson v. Browning, 22 Ga. 293.

The statute of Illinois requires that the deceased, at the time of making his will, shall desire the persons present, or some of them, to bear witness that such was his will, or words to that effect.

In the case of Arnett v. Arnett, 27 Ill. 247, arising under that statute, two witnesses testified that the following words, as a nuncupative will, were reduced to writing within the time required by the statute: “ Be it known that we, the undersigned, were present on the 22d day of April, 1856, at the residence of Nathan Arnett, now deceased, in Clinton county, Illinois, then in his last sickness. The attending physician, Dr. A. R. Stickney, informed the said Arnett, that if he had any disposition to make of his worldly affairs it would be proper to do so.”

That the said Arnett said: “ I desire my personal property to be divided equally between my wife’s sister, aunt Hannah, and the two girls now living in my family. I desire my real estate to be left to Nancy Jane, a girl *226I have raised in my family from the time that she was two weeks old.”

The said witnesses declared that they were present and heard the above words spoken by said Nathan Arnett during his last sickness, and that at the time of pronouncing the same they regarded him to be of sound mind and memory, and that the said Arnett departed this life on the 23d day of April, 1856.

' The court say, in this case, that every requirement of the law was complied with, except the last member of the sentence quoted. That requires that the testator shall, at the time of pronouncing the words of the will, request some of the persons present to bear witness that such was his will, or words to that effect. It is not enough that the words of the will alone should be spoken in the presence of those who might bear witness to it, but the testator must also use some words indicating his desire or wish that those present, or some of them, should bear witness that such was his will. But here we find nothing to satisfy this last clause quoted. No word was spoken, no sign made, no indication manifested, that the testator desired any one present to bear witness to his declared wishes. There is nothing to show that he ever expected or wished that any one present should remember what he had said, or should ever repeat those declarations, or should ever go before any tribunal to prove that such was his will. If we say that such must have been his desire, from the nature of things, that is but conjecture at least, and the legislature has declared that such conjecture shall not be sufficient.

In Taylor’s Appeal, 47 Penn. St. 31, it was held that in committing to writing a nuncupative will, other facts should be stated in addition to the testamentary words or their substance, such as his request to the bystanders to bear witness that the words used are his will. And this not having been done, the proof was, *227therefore, entirely insufficient to authorize their pro-hate as a will.

In the case of Priscilla E. Yarnell, before referred to in 4 Rawle, it was held that to entitle a nuncupative will to probate, the provisions of the law must be strictly complied with, and the absence of due proof of a strict compliance with any one of them is fatal. The rogatio testium must be at the time the alleged nuncupative will is made. It is an important part of the nuncupation, and goes far to show the animus testandi of the deceased, and for this purpose it was that the act requires that the testator should call on the witnesses to remember that such was his will.

It was held in the state of Tennessee that, if the testator had addressed himself to the witnesses without calling them by name, saying, “ I wish to make a disposition of my effects,” and then proceeded to make a disposition, it might have be sufficient. Baker v. Dodson, 4 Humph. 343. But in the case of Ridley v. Coleman, 1 Sneed, 616, the deceased made the disposition of her property in the presence of the' witnesses without addressing himself to any one or more of them in particular. This was regarded as insufficient. The court say: “ If a case like this could stand, the important provisions of the statute, so essential to prevent abuses, would be entirely nugatory, and such a construction would amount to a judicial repeal of the statute.

The object of the statute, as we have seen, was to prevent frauds and perjuries in setting up fictitious nuncupative wills. This object can be effectuated only ■by a strict adherence to the terms of the law: Any construction of the statute, with a view to make it extend to cases not within the contemplation of the legislature, would open the door to all the evils which its enactment was intended to prevent. It is certainly safest to follow the plain and beaten track. Whenever *228courts, by construction, strain a statute beyond its legitimate meaning, with a view to relieve bard cases, they are in danger of making bad law. The statute of limitations furnishes an illustrious instance of this, and of the danger.of frittering away statutes by construction, although it be for the laudable purpose of attaining what is supposed to be the ends of justice.

It will be found upon examination that the best considered cases, not only in this state, but elsewhere, show a close adherence to the provisions of the statute. In the case of Garner v. Lansford, 12 S. & M. 561, the court set aside the probate of a nuncupative will, because it did not appear that the decedent called upon any one to take notice that the disposition then made of hi's property was his will. The court say: “ Without such proof the disposition cannot be regarded as valid.”

In Woods v. Ridley, 27 Miss. 146, it was held that much greater strictness is required in several respects ixi the proof of wills of this character, than in the proof of written wills. If the proof fail in establishing a strict compliance with any one of the provisions of the statute, according to the unvarying current of decisions in England and this country, it will be fatal to a case of this description; for example, the rogatio testium which is required by the statute.

And in the case of Lucas v. Goff, 33 Miss. 629, it was held, that owing to the facility with which frauds may be committed in setting up nuncupative wills, the law requires every one of the provisions to be strictly complied with. Hence, it is laid down that the testamentary capacity and the animus testandi at the time of the alleged nuncupation must appear, in the case of a nuncupative will, by the clearest and most indisputable evidence.

In the case at bar, the words which are sought to be established as a nuncupative will were drawn from the *229deceased by an interrogatory put by one of his attending physicians. A nuncupative will procured in this way may be valid, but when so made, the court must be more upon its guard against importunity, more jealous of capacity, and more strict in requiring proof of spontaneity and volition than it would be in an ordinary case. Where a nuncupative will is drawn from the decedent by interrogatories, full and clear proof of spontaneity of the animus testandi is indispensable. Dorsey v. Shepherd, 12 Gill & Johns. 192.

It nowhere appears from the evidence that the deceased called upon any person present to take notice, or bear testimony that such was his will. To sustain this will, it must be shown that he used “ words to that effect.” His' wish as to the disposition of his property was a mere answer to the interrogatory put to him by his physician, and is not equivalent to calling upon some person present to take notice, or bear testimony that such was his will. The deceased had not previously expressed any desire to make a will. His attention was first drawn to the subject by his physician, when he expressed a wish that certain persons should have his property. It may well be doubted whether the answer of the deceased furnishes that full and clear proof of the spontaneity of the animus testandi, which is deemed indispensable where a nuncupative will is drawn from the decedent by interrogatories. Be this, however, as it may, the natural effect of the absence of the rogatio testium, at the time of the nuncupation, is to diminish the force of the evidence relied on to establish the animus testandi. No word was spoken, no sign was made, no indication was manifested that the testator desired any one present to bear witness to his declared wish. If it- be said that such must have been his desire from the nature of things, that is but conjecture at last, and the legislature has declared such conjecture shall not be sufficient.

*230If a case like this be sustained, tbe wise provisions of the statute, intended to prevent the setting up fictitious wills by fraud and perjury, would be rendered entirely nugatory, and such a construction would amount to a judicial repeal of the statute.

.For the reasons herein stated, the decree must be reversed.

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