46 N.H. 125 | N.H. | 1865
Chap. 2090 Pamph. Laws, amending Chap. 1952 Pamph. Laws, which acts removed the disqualification of interest in witnesses, provides, in sec. 2, “that nothing in this act or in the actto which this is an amendment shall in any manner affect the law relating to the attestation of nulls and testaments or any other instrument required by law to be attested.” This leads to an examination of what the law required before the passage of these acts in relation to the attestation of wills and of deeds.
In regard to wills, it is well settled that the “credible witnesses” which the statute in that case requires, must be witnesses who are at the time of the attestation competent to testify and prove its execution. Smith v. Chamberlain, 2 N. H. 440, and cases cited 441; Carleton v. Carleton, 40 N. H. 14; Amory v. Fellows, 5 Mass. 228.
But, in case of a deed of real estate, it has been held otherwise. The two or more witnesses, by whom the deed “must be signed,” by the act of 1791, N. H. Laws (1815) 191, and by the act of 1829, N. H. Laws (1880) 583, and by whom it “must be attested,” by Rev. Stats, chap. 130, sec. 3, are not in terms required to be credible or competent witnesses, as in case of wills, and it has been held that they need not be competent at the time of signing or attesting the deed, but if either be competent to testify at the time the signing or attestation is to be proved, that is sufficient. Smith v. Chamberlain, 2 N. H. 440.
This was the constructian put upon the act of 1791, which act has, as we have seen, been twice re-enacted since, without any change in the language that would indicate any intention to change the law; and ‘ ‘it is an established legal maxim that when the legislature adopt or re-enact a statute the previous construction of the statute as settled by the courts of law is adopted.” Tomson v. Ward, N. H. 9; Mooers v. Bunker, 29 N. H. 420.
Corbett v. Norcross, 35 N. H. 99, cited as an authority by plaintiff, is not in point. There the name of the wife of the grantor appeared upon the deed as one of the subscribing witnesses, and it was there held, as it would be now, that the grantor might as well have witnessed his own deed, as to have had his wife witness it for him.- This was not merely because the wife was interested, but because she is excluded asa witness on grounds of public policy, independent of her interest, in cases in which her husband is a party. Kelley v. Proctor, 41 N. H. 139; Smith v. Railroad, 44 N. H. 325.
Judgment on the verdict.