14 Colo. App. 377 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1900
While the statute of frauds, 29 Car. 2, is the cornerstone of the structure built up by the decisions of the judges construing this statute which determines the formalities which must be observed in the revocation of a will, otherwise than by a written instrument regularly executed in conformity to the legal or statutory requirements, the centuries have only sufficed to produce a surprisingly small number of interpretations. Almost a shelf would contain the volumes wherein the English and the American decisions are to be found. The latter very exactly follow the parent cases, for in almost all the states the statutes regulating the matter follow the language of the original law, save where, as in the later statute of Victoria, further restrictions have been put on the power, or where wise legislators, forgetting that a thoroughly well interpreted statute is least liable to misconstruction, have attempted to secure greater accuracy by eliminating some terms or adding others, in their folly imagining the emendations would make the law more definite and certain. The old statutes and most of the modern ones permitted a will to be revoked otherwise than by proper writing only by “burning, tearing, cancelling or obliterating, or otherwise destroying ” the document. -The words used in the Colorado
On the 24th day of June, 1889, Mary Glass then having several children and grandchildren executed the instrument produced as her last will and testament. The devisees are unimportant for the will is not attacked because of illegality in form or irregularity of execution. Proper proof by the subscribing witnesses was duly presented and the instrument offered for probate. This was refused in the county court and the action confirmed on appeal in the district court, both courts concluding the will had been revoked. The character and the circumstances of the revocation will be stated and the nature of it exhibited in print as nearly as may be, that the acts which we shall hold constitute under the statute an absolute revocation, when supported by the proof of intention which was produced, may be fully apprehended and that there may be no opportunity for misapprehension respecting our views of the law. We shall refer only to the testimony of two witnesses, Nancy and Maggie Mettlen. These were granddaughters of the testatrix living at the time of the alleged act in Fremont, Nebraska. In 1894, Mrs. Glass was at their home in Nebraska and there at that date, in their presence and in the presence of their mother, stated that she wished them to witness that she destroyed the will. According’to these witnesses she then took a pen and through her name, Mary Glass, drew a straight line parallel with the signature, and then through each of the two words constituting the name, drew two other lines at an obtuse angle to each word. The name then stood M/xry Glass. The testatrix gave as a reason that her daughters Nancy and Hasseltine had treated her unkindly and she wanted to keep the paper to show them what she had intended to do if they had treated her properly. According to one of the witnesses she
On the appeal several questions are presented. Recurring to the one last suggested we dispose of it by the simple suggestion that the objection of counsel that the will did not accompany the dedimus was expressly waived. It was declared by stipulation that the will did accompany the dedimus on each occasion and that the witnesses testified with the will before them. While probably this is not literally the fact, the stipulation operates as a waiver of the objection and the copy was probably sent for the purposes of convenience, it being literally an exact copy, and the witnesses were permitted to testify with regard to the copy as though it had been the original document and their evidence is as exact and certain with reference to all disputed questions as though the. will had been exhibited. Regarding, the matter as en
Under all statutes regulating the' revocation of wills by acts other than instruments executed for the purpose with a solemnity equivalent to that required by the law in the execution of the original document, the declarations of the deceased are always admitted on a question of revocation to establish the animo revocandi; in other words, the intent with which the act was done which is relied on to show the revocation is always a proper subject of proof. In many of the cases wherein the question of a revocation was under consideration evidence of this description has been offered and the courts have been frequently called on to decide whether they were admissible for this purpose, and the established rule respecting the matter is that all declarations which accompany the act may be given in evidence. They are received as part of the res gestee, and as tending to show the intent of the act and the purpose for which it was done. Possibly there may be some decisions to the contrary and one or two I have observed which seem to be directly in point, but whether they are directed to the proposition or indirectly sustain the action of the court in rejecting the evidence, it may in each case be said they are opposed to the current of authority and are against the principle on which such declarations are admitted. In the view which we take of the character of this objection and its inconsequence in the determination of the appeal a ‘further discussion of the proposition is wholly unnecessary. Waterman v. Whitney, 11 N. Y. 157; Runklee et al. v. Gates et al., 11 Ind. 95; 1 Redfield on Wills, p. *331. The court undoubtedly erred in admitting the declarations of the testatrix which were made in Boulder long after the will had been revoked, whether the testimony was received in order to support the act as an act of revocation, or for the purpose of supplementing the proof of the intent which was adequately sustained by the evidence of the two Mettlen girls who were present when the act was done. Though this be conceded, we do not conceive the
We are now brought directly to the main proposition whether the act coupled with this proof of intent was an act of revocation within the proper definition of the terms employed in our statute. Of this we have no doubt. There are many cases which at first blush appear to hold a contrary view, but when analyzed and closely examined, it will be discovered the statutes under which they were rendered were wholly different from the original statute of frauds and totally variant from our own. In so far as we have been able to discover cases directly adjudicating the point, we find well considered decisions of very eminent courts in full accord with Our conclusions. We shall cite the various cases to which we have been referred, and which we have found in our own investigation that the opinion may serve to exhibit what we believe are the controlling authorities and are certainly those which have influenced and concluded our judgment. A leading case of a very distinguished tribunal, which we are always glad to follow, contains the opinions of the lord chancellor of England and many of the distinguished jurists who delivered opinions before the house of lords in a case involving the construction of the act of Car. 2 as late as 1878. The only opportunity for debate under this long line of authorities depends on the possibility of giving the words “ cancellation and obliteration ” different and distinct meanings. We are justified in concluding that neither justify nor permit different definitions; bofh in view of what lexicographers have
Since we regard the errors which the court committed in permitting the introduction of testimony immaterial and insufficient to reverse the judgment, and we adjudge that the acts done by Mary Glass in her lifetime in the obliteration of her signature was a revocation of her will under the statute, we conclude the judgment of the court below refusing to probate the will correct, and it will therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.