239 P. 404 | Cal. | 1925
This appeal is taken from an order revoking the probate of a certain document, holographic in form, theretofore admitted to probate as the last will and testament of Josephine Bernard, deceased. The order of the lower court revoking the probate of the alleged will rests upon two grounds: (1) That it was not signed by the decedent; (2) that it was not entirely written by the decedent as required by section 1277 of the Civil Code.
The document in question consists of four sheets of hotel stationery. The first page, as it appears in a photostatic copy incorporated in the record, is as follows:
*38"The following 4 sheets of paper included, Long Beach, California, Oct. 12, 1918.
"I, Josephine Bernard of the City and County of Denver, Colo. do hereby declare this to be my last will and testament."
This is followed by a number of dispositive clauses and then the document terminates abruptly near the middle of the last page in the following language:
"To her husband Herbert Donahue ruby and diamond stick pin."
It is a conceded fact in the case that the document in question was in the handwriting of the decedent save the words in the date line, "Long Beach, California," which were printed. The only question here presented is whether the document is entirely written and signed by the hand of the decedent.
The rule governing what constitutes a sufficient signing of a holographic will is enunciated in Estate of Manchester,
This rule was approved in the Estate of McMahon,
Marking and measuring the document in question by the above stated "true rule," which has been so often reaffirmed and approved by this court, there is no escape from the conclusion, it seems to us, that there was no executing signature sufficient to give legal effect as a will to the document. There is no signature at the end of the document, where it is the common custom to place a signature intended for authenticating and indicating the completion of an instrument, The signature of the decedent appears only in the exordium, and there is nothing in any other part of the alleged will to indicate affirmatively or by necessary implication that the signature was intended to be or was adopted as the final executing signature in authentication of or in execution of the document as a completed testamentary act. The obvious and natural inference to be drawn from the position of the name of the decedent in the alleged will is that it was intended merely as descriptio personae, and, in the absence of anything affirmatively appearing on the face of the will itself tending to show that such signature was intended to authenticate it, this conclusion is inevitable. This is so notwithstanding the fact that decedent wrote at the very beginning of the document the words and figure, "The following 4 sheets of paper included." These words indicate merely that decedent contemplated making the document her will, but they do not, standing alone, warrant the inference of an intent to adopt the signature in the exordium as her executing signature. Nor are they so intimately connected with the context of the document, as was the situation in theEstate of McMahon, supra, as to justify the inference that she intended such signature to be in authentication of the document as her will. The abrupt termination of the document near the middle of the last page is a strong indication of decedent's intent to do something more in order to make it a complete will. The last clause being, in all general respects, similar to the preceding dispositive clauses manifests that the writer did not intend to terminate the *41 document finally and definitely at that particular point, but, rather, indicates that something additional was to be done and necessarily compels the conclusion that decedent had no intention of adopting the name written in the opening clause of the will as the executing signature to her final testamentary act.
In setting aside the order admitting the will to probate the lower court did so upon the additional ground that it was not entirely written by the hand of the decedent. We are, then, upon this phase of the case, called upon to determine whether the document was executed in compliance with the essential requirements of the law. A holographic document to be given legal effect as a will must be, among other things, "entirely written, . . . by the hand of the testator himself. It is subject to no other form." (Civ. Code, sec. 1277; Estate of Rand,
In Estate of Thorn, supra, the document admitted to probate was, in all of its essential portions, written in the handwriting of the decedent except the word "Cragthorn," which was inserted in two different places in the body of the document with a rubber stamp. This court held that the alleged will was not executed in accordance with the mandatory requirements of the statute and was for that reason invalid. The court stated: "If the words `Cragthorn' stamped with a rubber stamp upon this document, or either of them, constitute a part of the attempted will, it seems obvious that the will is not `entirely written by the hand of the testator himself,' and therefore does not measure up to the mandatory requirements of the statute."
That decision governs and controls in the determination of the validity of the document now before us. The instrument in the present case, it seems to us, does not fulfill the statutory requirements, in that it is not "entirely written . . . by the hand of the testator himself." (Civ. Code, sec. 1277) It will be noted that the clause, "The following 4 sheets of paper included," written at the top of the first page, is written immediately above the date line, and the written word, "included," is carefully adapted to the alignment *42 of the printed words, "Long Beach, California," on the date line of the letter-head. The day, the month, and the year are written with exactitude on the same line with and directly following the printed name of the place where the alleged will was executed. The printed words are incorporated in and doubtless were intended to be made a part of the heading of the document. The care with which the date has been placed upon the precise line with the printed words indicates that the words immediately preceding the date must have been intended to be made a part of the document as the name of the place of the execution of the document. Moreover, this construction, based upon the relative position of the words, is supported by the juxtaposition of the written word "included" and the printed words "Long Beach, California," which are in a direct and immediate line thereto. It thus appears that decedent not only wished to make the date a part of the document, but to make, also, the printed portion, designating the place of the making of the document, an essential part of the document. Unless it can be said that the clause at the very top of the will, which reads, "The following 4 sheets of paper included," is a material part and parcel of the will, then there is nothing on the face of the document which in anywise indicates that the testator had executed a completed instrument; and if we take that clause to be a material part of the will, then we are confronted with the fact that the printed words "Long Beach, California," are likewise a material part and parcel of the will, and therefore it cannot be said, in keeping with the rule enunciated in the Estate ofThorn, supra, that the will was entirely written by the hand of the testator. This being so, we perforce reach the conclusion that the alleged will was not executed in accordance with the requirements of the law.
The due execution of a will is a question of fact, and its determination by the trial court must be sustained unless that determination is unsupported by the evidence. (Estate ofStreeton,
Lawlor, Acting C.J., Waste, J., Richards, J., Seawell, J., Shenk, J., and Houser, J., pro tem., concurred. *43