Drohan v. Avellar

276 Mass. 441 | Mass. | 1931

B,ugg, C.J.

Manuel José d’Avelar, alias Manuel J. Avellar, died in Brockton in our county of Plymouth in May, 1928. He was for many years prior to the events to be narrated and continuously until his death domiciled in Brockton and a citizen of this Commonwealth. He left as his only heirs at law and next of kin a sister and brother living in Oakland, California, and a sister and two brothers living in Corvo, Azores Islands. His entire estate is personal property in Brockton. While sojourning temporarily on the Island of Flores in the Azores Islands, a dependency of the sovereign State of Portugal, and there visiting relatives, he executed on August 30, 1921, in accordance with the laws of that place an instrument purporting to be his last will. The instrument was written by a notary in an official book of record of wills kept for that purpose by a notary, the officer provided by the law for that purpose, and was signed by the decedent in the presence of three subscribing witnesses known to the notary who identified to him the decedent and also verified the perfect sanity of the decedent and his freedom from all duress and coercion. The notary under the Portuguese law is a public officer named for life by the government whose f-unctions, among others, are “to make authentic testaments and to draw up the act of approbation of private wills.” The instrument was executed with all the formalities prescribed by the laws of Portugal, including a declaration by the decedent that it was his last will. After the will was written in this official record it was read aloud in the presence of the witnesses to the decedent. The instrument under the laws of Portugal would need no further action in that State to make it an effectual disposition of so much of the estate of the decedent as was subject to disposition by him. The original book in which the instrument was written was an official record and cannot be transmitted to this Commonwealth but must remain permanently in the jurisdiction of its original execution. A true and attested copy of that official record made in the Portuguese language, duly authenticated by the officer having custody of it, and a true and correct translation into English from the Portuguese language are presented with the petition *443asking for its allowance as the last will of the decedent. The question is whether this petition can lawfully be granted.

The Probate Court of Plymouth County had original jurisdiction of the proof of the will of the decedent and of the settlement of his estate because he was domiciled in that county at the time of his death. G. L. c. 215, § 3. Rackemann v. Taylor, 204 Mass. 394, 397-398. It is provided by G. L. c. 191, § 5, that “A last will and testament executed in the mode prescribed by the law, either of the place where the will is executed or of the testator’s domicile, shall be deemed to be legally executed, and shall be of the same force and effect as if executed in the mode prescribed by the laws of this commonwealth; provided, that such last will and testament is in writing and subscribed by the testator.” This statutory provision plainly would authorize and require the allowance of the original of the instrument here offered for probate if produced and presented for the files of the appropriate probate court, notwithstanding the differences between the law prevailing in the place where it was executed and the law of this Commonwealth. Bayley v. Bailey, 5 Cush. 245. Crippen v. Dexter, 13 Gray, 330, 332.

The point of difficulty arises from the fact that the original instrument itself cannot be produced and placed on the records of the court, because under the law of the sovereign State where it was executed it became an official record there in the custody of a public officer provided by law for that purpose, must perpetually remain as a part of its public records and cannot be transmitted to this Commonwealth. That has been found by the trial judge to be the law of Portugal governing the Azores. The Portuguese Civil Code covering this point is set out in the record. The finding appears to be right and is accepted. The precise question is whether in these circumstances the contents of the will can be proved by a duly authenticated copy.

The contents of a will which has been lost or destroyed may be proved by secondary evidence and if satisfactorily established may be admitted to probate. Davis v. Sigourney, 8 Met. 487. Newell v. Homer, 120 Mass. 277. Tarbell v. Forbes, 177 Mass. 238. Coghlin v. White, 273 Mass. 53. *444That is not because of any statutory provision but because of the inherent function of the court to do justice in con- ' formity to law. In Slocomb v. Slocomb, 13 Allen, 38, it is stated that a nuncupative will executed in the State of Mississippi according to its law was offered for probate. It was held that such a will might be proved and allowed. The form in which the will was offered does not clearly appear in the report of that decision. An examination of the original files shows that an instrument purporting to be the oral testamentary declaration of the decedent, not signed by him but written at his request and signed by the person transcribing it, and attested as a correct transcript by another in whose presence it was made, and signed by still another person, accompanied the petition for proof of the will. In Loring v. Oakey, 98 Mass. 267, 269-270, the court, in speaking of a will, the original of which was in the files of the court having jurisdiction of the subject in New York, said: “. . . we have no doubt that the inability to produce the original, caused by its detention in a foreign court, would make secondary evidence of its contents admissible, as much as if the paper were lost.” This statement although perhaps not essential to that decision was uttered by a court composed of justices eminent for ability and learning. It is based upon sound reason. It is supported by the analogy of proof of wills lost or destroyed. An instrument in the official custody of a civilized foreign nation is quite as susceptible of accurate proof as to its due execution, its contents, its authenticity as is an instrument lost or destroyed. To permit the allowance by official copy of such an instrument as a final testamentary disposition protects the wishes of the decedent expressed in conformity to the law of the place where he was at the time of its execution. To allow such proof tends to the promotion of international comity. It is within the spirit as well as the letter of the statutory provision in G. L. c. 191, § 5 already quoted. As was said in Slocomb v. Slocomb, 13 Allen, 38, at page 41, “A person in another state or country might not be acquainted with the formalities established for the making of wills under our laws; and, when desirous of making a will, might have no *445means of gaining the necessary information. But he might well be supposed to have it in his power to ascertain the formalities required in the country in which he was. If the laws of that country allowed a will made before a notary, and reduced to writing and certified by him, without the testator’s signature; or if they dispensed with any or all of the witnesses which our laws require; a will made accordingly would conform to all the requirements of the 8th section [now G. L. c. 191, § 5]] . . . and the statute was designed to protect him in resorting to the mode of bequest which he might there be advised was legal.” That the decedent made no change in the expression of his testamentary design after returning to the country of his domicil and living here a number of years is some confirmation, if any were needed, that he was satisfied with the terms of the Portuguese instrument.

We are therefore of opinion that the instrument ought to be allowed as the will of the decedent. In accordance with the terms of the report, decree to that effect is to be entered upon the petition for administration with the will annexed and letters of administration with the will annexed are to be issued to Minot H. Bates and William C. Drohan, they first giving bond with sufficient sureties in a sum to be fixed by the Probate Court.

Ordered accordingly.