110 Ga. 5 | Ga. | 1900
Quintus Richards filed a petition before the court of ordinary of Washington county, to probate an alleged nuncupative will of Amos Perry, deceased. To this application a caveat was filed by the heirs of Amos Perry, to wit, Maria Knox, Mitt Birdsong, and Anna Sikes, his sisters. The case came up for trial before the superior court of Washington county, on an appeal by the caveators from the judgment of the-ordinary setting up the will. A verdict was rendered for the propounder; whereupon caveators made a motion for a new trial,, and now except to the judgment of the court below overruling their motion.
There is no clear or positive testimony that Perry said anything at all, or that he was even conscious after Richards had gotten back to his house with the will 'prepared for execution. Richards does say, in one portion of his testimony: “He said at that time that he wanted Mary Lizzie Golden to have all his property.” It is possible, from the connection in which this statement appears in the brief of evidence, that it referred to the time when he came to the room of Perry after he had written
In 16 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. 1015, these principles are announced touching the requisites of a nuncupative will: “A will reduced to writing and signed by the testator, or a memorandum for instructions for making a will, can not be treated as a nuncupative will; nor is a written will, drawn up by an attorney, but not signed, owing to sickness of the testator, to be treated as a nuncupative will.” In Hebden’s case, 20 N. J. Eq. 473, it was held: “A will drawn by -an attorney, a few hours before the testator’s death, pursuant to his instructions, but its execution postponed till he should feel stronger, though he asserted that his will was as it had been drawn, will not be admitted to probate as a nuncupative will. It is essential to a nuncupative will that it be only a verbal declaration of the. testator’s wishes made in the presence of witnesses called upon by him to bear witness that such is his will.” In Dockum v. Robinson, 26 N. H. 372, it was held: “Verbal directions and instructions for drawing up a written will do not constitute a nuncupative will, although spoken in the presence of the proper number of witnesses requested to bear witness thereto, and reduced to writing and offered for probate .according to the statute.” In Lucas v. Goff, 33 Miss. 630, it appears that the deceased was informed by his attending physician of his dangerous condition, and was asked if he had made any disposition of his property; to which he replied, that it was too late, that he was unable to make a written will, but that he desired E. H. to have all of his property, and that he wanted some good person to take charge of it for her, so that she might be benefited by it, but that he was afraid it would not be done, and that his property would fall in the hands of some person who would destroy it. It was held that these words did not constitute a nuncupative will.
Applying the above principles of law to the facts in this case,, we are forced to the conclusion that the evidence failed to make
Reversed.