44 Md. 482 | Md. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from an order of the Orphans’ Court of Washington County, admitting to proba,te the following paper as the last will and testament of Peter Swartzwelder :
“Hagerstown August 11th 1875 — what I oiven is as “ follows:
“Brick house on the publick — with six store-rooms, from “William Householder’s property, on the publick square, “ to Samuel Rouskuep hat store, on West Washington “street
“ Hagerstown Lyceum Stock, Thomas Harbine (Presi- “ dent) 4 Shears $5 $ har.
Hagerstown Lyceum Stock, William M. Marshall (C
20 shears “ Prest.
“ “ “ 20 do “ do
“ do “ ■ “ “ 20 do
“ . do “ “ “ 10 do
“ shears Waynsborro’ Turnpik Company at $25.00 “ shear
“4 shears Hagerstown and Sharpsburg Turnpike at “ $25 shear
*487 “ Northe-n Pacific Railroad bonds ($7000) seven tliou- “ sand dollars
“ First National Bank Stock, Hagerstown Ma-yland 28 “shears.
“ Hardware store No 1 on Corner of the publick Square.
“Hagerstown Gaslight Company 25 shears (I). Artzs, “ Presid-nt) Seventy dollars on each shear has bin paid.
“ To Franklin Swartzwelder Heard two thousand dol- “ lars out of thepr. eeads of the sale of hous- on the pub- “ lick square.
“Sarah Swartzwelder of Cuberlend, Myland, b-other “ Isaac’- widdow one thousand or perhaps tu thousand “ dollars, after the sal- of property on the square
££ House whare I now live on West Washington Street No 82, to be sold.
£ £ My houses to be sold and the proceads paid over to the respective parties named in my will, perhaps J. W. if he qits dukg. ticker.
“I appoint for my administreatirs Harry Swartzwelder “ of Cunbeirtand Mayland, and Franklin A. Heard, of “ Hagerstown Maryland.”
Peter Swartzwelder.”
The case was tried in the Orphans’ Court upon testimony which appears in the record, and their order is before us for review upon facts as well as law. The legal principles which control Courts in the decision of such cases have been so often and so clearly stated by the authorities in our own State, that it is quite unnecessary to reiterate them here. The whole subject has been elaborately discussed in Tilghman vs. Stewart, 4 H. & J., 156; Boofter vs. Rogers, 9 Gill, 44 ; Plater vs. Groome, 3 Md., 134; Barnes vs. Syester, 14 Md., 507; Harris vs. Pue, 39 Md., 535 ; Mason vs. Poulson, 40 Md., 355, and Devecmon vs. Devecmon, 43 Md., 335.
It appears from the proof that the paper before us was written and signed by the deceased and there is nothing
In the absence of proof to the contrary we must assume the paper was written and signed on the day it bears date. The questions then for us to determine are, did he write it animo testandi, that is, did he then intend the paper as it stood, to be his will without alteralion and without looking to anything further to be done in order to perfect it? or did he afterwards recognize and adopt it as his will ? To give a satisfactory answer to these questions we must first look to the paper itself and the intrinsic evidence it furnishes. What is it and what does it profess
In short this case in all its circumstances differs widely from that of Harris vs. Pue, and Devecmon vs. Devecmon, in which the papers were sustained as wills. Here the paper itself and the acts and declarations of the writer concur in disclosing an absence of the animus testandi and of all subsequent recognition or adoption.
But it has been strenuously argued that although the paper may not operate as a will disposing of property, it is yet good as a testamentary appointment of executors, and should therefore be admitted to probate. If the paper contained nothing but the clause relating to such appoint
Order reversed.