32 Vt. 62 | Vt. | 1859
This case involves the validity of the execution of the will of Barnard Blanchard, and also a question whether it had been revoked by him. Our statute requires that wills, in order to be effectual to pass any estate, either real or personal, should be in writing, and signed by the testator or some other person in his presence, and by his express direction, and attested and subscribed by three or more credible witnesses, in the presence of the testator and of each other. And they are not to be revoked unless by implication of law, or by some will, codicil or other writing executed in the same manner which is prescribed for the execution of wills, or by burning, cancelling or obliterating,
It was claimed on the trial that the jury must ffnd, not only that all three witnesses to the will and the testator were present in the same room together when the will was signed and witnessed, but all and each one of them must have seen the others write their names, in order to render it a valid will.
But the court, in substance, told the jury that it was not necessary that all the witnesses should in fact have seen the testator put his name to the will, or that each witness should have seen the other witnesses witness it, provided they were all in the same room with the testator and might have seen the testator sign it and each of the other, witnesses attest it.
We apprehend no fault is to be found with the charge. All that the statute requires is, that the will should be in writing and signed by the testator, and attested by three or more credible witnesses in the presence of the testator and of each other. If the situation of the parties were such that the testator might have seen the attestation, and each of the witnesses might have seen the attestation of their associates, it is all that is required. The statute does not require the testator to sign the will in the presence of the witnesses, but the witnesses must attest not only in the presence of the testator, but in presence of one another. And if they were in the same room and might have seen the attestation of one another, that is held to be an attestation in the presence of the testator and of one another. Such has been the repeated adjudication of courts.
It is clear that the facts offered to be proved would not have constituted a revocation of the will. Though the testator might have procured the will for the purpose of revocation, and sent for a magistrate and witnesses to be present at its revocation, yet this does not create a revocation ; and the fact that the will was taken from the testator without his consent, and kept from him, and the revocation by this means prevented, cannot alter the case. Though at common law the mode of proof might, perhaps, be immaterial, if the intention to revoke a will was fully established, and an attempt to cancel a will might have the same effect as an actual cancellation, yet the statute prescribing how a will shall be revoked has changed the rule, and nqw that intention must be
Judgment affirmed.