59 Miss. 513 | Miss. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
The domicile of the testatrix was in Mississippi, and the
The will in that case was such as the statute had in view in providing for admitting to probate in this State an authenticated copy, i. e., the will of one not domiciled in this State, but “ touching or disposing of estate within this State,” and which had been proved according to the laws of another State or country. In the case we are now considering, the will is not such as the statute was passed for. The Chancery Court of Washington County did not have jurisdiction over an authenticated copy of it, but could only admit to probate the original will; and the presumption that the witness who proved the will in the County Court in Tennessee testified to every fact necessary to due execution of the will to pass real estate in Mississippi, cannot be indulged, in view of the fact that the law of Tennessee requires but two witnesses to a will of land; and, although this will appears to have been attested by three subscribing witnesses, as the law of Tennessee required only two, the statement of the record, that it was duly proved by one cannot be taken to import more than that it was duly proved according to the requirement of the law of that State, that is,, that it was proved to have been attested by two witnesses, which was not sufficient to satisfy the law of this State at the time when this will was made. But, if the record of the probate of the will in Tennessee had shown that it was duly proved by the three attesting witnesses, an authenticated copy could not have been admitted to probate here, because the statute does not embrace it. The conclusion that § 1105 of the Code of 1871 did not apply to the wills of persons domiciled in this State is an end of the controversy, and we have called attention to the cases in our reports for the purpose of showing that this conclusion is properly deducible from them, and is not inconsistent with the doctrine of any of them. This will was provable in Tennessee, whose courts had jurisdiction of it as affecting property situated in that State; but
We think it clear that the testatrix had her domicile in this State, as shown by the bill. It avers that the complainant and his wife (the testatrix), from the time of their marriage, some years before, made their home on the wife’s plantation in Washington County, Mississippi, until the year 1871, when in May of said year, she died at Memphis, Tennessee, having previously made her will. Although the husband was a subject of the kingdom of Italy, and that was his national domicile, he and his wife made their home in Mississippi, which was their domicile for the purpose of succession. The will under which the appellee claims an interest in the land sought to be partitioned must be proved in the proper court of this State before his claim can be recognized here.
Decree reversed.