204 Mass. 383 | Mass. | 1910
This was a trial in the Superior Court upon three issues, framed upon an appeal from a decree of the Probate Court allowing the will of Charles E. Giles. The first issue presented the question whether the will was duly executed. The second raised the question whether it was procured by the undue influence of the petitioner. The third issue was as follows: “Was said instrument revoked by the said Charles E. Giles subsequently to the date, execution and publication thereof by the making, execution and publication of another will which has been lost or destroyed, and its contents cannot be proved so that it can be propounded for probate ? ”
Upon the first issue, after testimony by the subscribing witnesses tending to show that the will was properly executed, it was admitted in evidence, subject to the appellant’s exception, and at the close of the testimony the jury were directed to return a verdict in favor of the petitioner. To this direction the appellants excepted.
The will was rightly admitted in evidence, and the testimony
The second issue was abandoned by the appellants and was not answered.
Upon the third issue the jury were directed to return a verdict for the petitioner, subject to the exception of the appellants. On this issue the burden of proof was upon the appellants, and the question is whether there was any evidence that would warrant a finding in their favor.
By the R. L. c. 135, § 8, it is provided that “ no will shall be revoked except by burning, tearing, cancelling or obliterating it with the intention of revoking it by the testator himself or by a person in his presence and by his direction; or by some other writing signed, attested and subscribed in the same manner as a will.” It is not contended that this will was revoked unless by some writing. The purpose of the statute is to prevent the revocation of a will by a writing, without as strong proof of the
In the present case evidence of the relations of the testator to the different members of his family was introduced, from which it was argued that the testator would not be likely to leave his property to be disposed of according to the provisions of this will. But this was not evidence of the execution of a revocatory writing in the presence of three witnesses. Upon the appellant’s theory, it was inconsistent with the making of the will which, by the very hypothesis of the question, it was conceded that he had made. It tended as strongly to contradict the fact assumed in the question as it did to show a revocation of the will.
Declarations of the testator, made to some of the appellants who were his children, tending to show that he had disposed of his estate differently from the disposition shown in the will, were introduced. Let ns consider, first, the competency of these declarations, as evidence of the execution of a paper “signed, attested and subscribed in the same manner as a will.” We will consider the subject first, apart from R. L. c. 175, § 66, which greatly enlarges the power of the courts to admit as evidence the declarations of deceased persons. The great weight of authority is that, under statutes similar to ours, a declaration of a testator cannot be received to prove the execution of a will, or of a writing containing a revocation of a will. This is shown with great elaboration, and with a citation and review of many authorities, by Mr. Justice Peckham in Throckmorton v. Holt, 180 U. S. 552. The same doctrine is held, with full discussion and without dissent, in In re Kennedy, 167 N. Y. 163. See also note to Clark v. Turner, 38 L. R. A. 433,436,442 ; 50 Neb. 290. In Stevens v. Stevens, 72 N. H. 360, it was decided that revocation of a will cannot be proved by declarations of the testator.' There are many other cases of similar import. The declarations of a testator which are commonly received in proceedings for the probate of wills are expressions that tend to show his mental conditions and feelings, as bearing upon the probability that the instrument in question was the product of a sound mind, unaffected by undue influence. Declarations to prove a fact, like the formal execution of an instrument, stand upon a different ground, and come within the general rule applicable to hearsay
We are of opinion that, under the R. L. c. 135, § 8, to show a revocation of a will by a writing, the proof that there is a “ writing, signed, attested and subscribed in the same manner as a will,” must be of the same kind and quality as would be required to establish the writing as a will, except that proof of its contents, beyond the fact that they are revocatory, need not be given. We think it plain that, apart from the statute, proof by the declarations of the testator would not be competent.
It remains to consider the effect of the R. L. c. 175, § 66, relative to the declarations of deceased persons as evidence. Does this statute change the law requiring proof of such an instrument by the attesting witnesses ? It does not deal directly with the proof of written instruments, and in our opinion it does not affect the rule at common law that a witnessed instrument must be proved by the testimony of the subscribing witnesses, if they are living and within the reach of process; and if not, that the execution can be proved only by the best evidence. It is conceivable that all the witnesses to a will might be dead, and that - it might be impossible to find any one who could testify to their . signatures, or to the handwriting of the testator upon the will.
In such a supposable case, could declarations of the testator to the particulars of the execution of the will, covering all the requirements of the statute, be received to establish it? If we assume, without deciding, that such declarations as to all the particulars of execution by himself and the witnesses might be received,- this is far from showing that general declarations as to having made provision for his children are sufficient to show
The R. L. c. 175, § 70, relative to the proof of attested instruments is not applicable to wills.
The testimony of one of the sons of the testator that, many years before his father’s death, he saw a sealed envelope, marked as containing the testator’s will, and that he tore the envelope slightly in trying to open it, and that the envelope in which the will was produced by the petitioner was not torn, and was not the same that he saw previously, proves nothing material. The fair inference from it is that the testator, at some time, replaced the torn envelope with a sound one. The exception as to the third issue is overruled.
Verdict on the first issue set aside; verdict on the third issue to stand.