122 Ky. 195 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1906
OpiuioN by
— Affirming.
A paper purporting to be the last will and testament of Jolm G'arnett, deceased, was tried for probate in the Daviess Circuit Court, where, upon a trial before a jury, the paper was found to be the will of John G-arnett and ordered to probate.
This appeal involves two questions of law. The first is, is it necessary, in prosecuting an appeal from .a county court to a circuit court, probating, or rejecting a will, that the appellant should execute an appeal bond in the circuit court as an antecedent step in taking the appeal? Title 16, Civil Code of Practice, is devoted to practice in.quarterly courts, and police, county, and justice’s courts. Section 724 reads: “Appeals may be taken in the following manner: The party appealing shall produce to the clerk of the court, to which the appeal is taken, a certified copy of the judgment, and amount of costs, and cause to be
It is hard to reconcile the language of section 724 with any other practice, as there is none other relative to this subject found in the Code. There are, however, many instances of practice in the county courts, allowed by statute, that the provisions of the Code cannot and do not apply to. For example, an application to open a road, to grant a tavern license, to remove or appoint an administrator or guardian, to surcharge the settlement of such, a bastardy proceeding, forcible entry and detainer, to list omitted prop^ erty from taxation, to review assessments illegally made, and the like. To all of these proceedings many of the provisions of the Code do apply. But in every instance a special practice, in some particular, is provided by statute other than the Code, peculiar to the particular subject, and which is not treated of at all in the Code. Where the Legislature has been to so much pains, and in so many instances, to provide by statute regulating a given subject for a practice peculiarly suited to it, it cannot be supposed that it
We will allude to some of the characteristics of an appeal from the county court to the circuit court in a will case, showing the difference between such pro-ceding, and an appeal from a judgment for money, in the county court, under the Code.' The Civil Code requires appeals from these inferior courts to be prosecuted within 60 days from rendition. Section 4850, Ky. Stats., 1903, allows an appeal in a will case
The remaining question is as to the sufficiency of the signature of the testator. The will was written
his
“John X Garnett.”
mark
The statute on this subject reads as follows: “No will shall be valid unless it is in writing, with the name of the testator subscribed thereto by himself, or by some other person in his presence and by his direction; and, moreover, if not wholly written by the testator, the subscription shall be made or the will acknowledged by him in the presence of at least two credible witnesses, who shall subscribe the will with their names in the presence of the testator.”
It is contended that the testator’s name, “John Garnett,” must have been written in his presence before the will can be valid as a testamentary document. The statute of 1797 (1 Litt. Laws, p. 611, c. 293, section 1) provided that a devise of land should be valid only if “such last will and testament be signed by such testator or testatrix, or by some other person in his or her presence, and by his or her
We get very little aid in this case from decisions defining a signing of a paper. A mere signature may be by a mark or other symbol by which the act of affixing the name is solemnized. Here the requirement is that the testator’s name must be subscribed by himself or another in his presence and by his direction. A literal compliance would seem to require that, unless the name — not the signature necessarily —is. affixed in the presence of the testator, the paper would be invalid. But the course has never been to demand literal compliance with such provision. On the contrary, the rule in this State has always been that a substantial compliance will satisfy the statute. Soward v. Soward, 1 Duv. 126; Porter v. Ford, 82 Ky., 191; 6 Ky. Law Rep., 60; Mile’s Will, 4 Dana, 1; Upchurch v. Upchurch, supra; Flood v. Pragoff, 79 Ky., 607; 3 Ky. Law Rep., 372. The act in this case was a full acknowledgment of the document and adoption of the subscription of his name by the testator in the most solemn form possible. By adding his mark, he affixed his own signature to it, a work of supererogation it may be, but efficacious at least to adopt as his the act of another in attaching his name to the document. The signature of the name as it finally appeared became, in part at least, his own act. It would have been an idle thing to have had his name erased and again signed, by the same person, perhaps, or at least for the same purpose. His acknowledgment of it in the presence of the requisite wit
The rulings of the circuit court having been in accord herewith, the judgment sustaining the will is affirmed.