130 Mass. 91 | Mass. | 1881
If a will, executed and witnessed as required by statute, incorporates in itself by reference any document or paper not so executed and witnessed, whether the paper referred to be in the form of a will or codicil, or of a deed 01 indenture, or of a mere list or memorandum, the paper so referred to, if it was in existence at the time of the execution of the will, and is identified by clear and satisfactory proof as the paper referred to therein, takes effect as part of the will, and should be admitted to probate as such. Allen v. Maddock, 11 Moore P. C. 427. Singleton v. Tomlinson, 3 App. Cas 404. Jackson v. Babcock, 12 Johns. 389. Tonnele v. Hall, 4 Comst. 140. Chambers v. McDaniel, 6 Ired. 226. Beall v. Cunningham, 3 B. Mon. 390. Harvy v. Chouteau, 14 Misso. 587.
In Loring v. Sumner, 23 Pick. 98, 102, Mr. Justice Morton said, “ There is no doubt that a valid bequest or devise may be made by reference, to objects and documents not incorporated in or annexed to the will.” In that case the will contained this clause: “I have given to my son, Nathaniel Loring, Jr., one thousand dollars by note for his full part of my estate.” It was held that this was a valid legacy of the sum of $1000, although the note had no validity as a note, for want of consideration, and had not been made with any testamentary intent. It is true that the amount of the legacy there appeared on the face of the will. But in Wilbar v. Smith, 5 Allen, 194, this feature was wanting; the testator, having signed and delivered to four of his children respectively promissory notes which were without consideration and ineffectual as gifts mortis causa, on the same day made his will, by which, after various pecuniary legacies to other children and grandchildren, he gave to the four children “ an equal proportion with ” the others, “ each to have in the same proportion as I give in this will, together with the notes of this date to ” the four children; and it was held that the four took specific legacies of the amounts of the notes. And in Thayer v. Wellington, 9 Allen, 283, 292, it was said by the court, “A testator may refer expressly to a paper already executed, and describe it with such particularity as to incorporate it virtually into the will, or he may refer to deeds or other instruments,
In Allen v. Maddock, above cited, a codicil headed, “ This is a codicil to my last will and testament,” was duly executed and attested in 1856; upon search among the papers of the testatrix after her death, there was found, enclosed in a sealed envelope on which were written the words “ Mrs. Ann Foote’s will,” a will executed by her in 1851, but not so attested as to have any validity as a will, and no other testamentary paper of any description was found. Mr. Pemberton Leigh (afterwards Lord Kingsdown) delivered the judgment of himself, Dr. Lushington, Sir Edward Ryan and Sir Cresswell Cresswell, affirming the decree of Sir John Dodson, reported in Deane, 325; and, upon an elaborate review of the authorities, holding that this will was sufficiently identified as the last will referred to by the codicil of 1856, and was incorporated with and made valid by that codicil, and that the 'two should be admitted to probate as together constituting the last will and codicil of the testatrix, although, as - was observe'd in the judgment, since the St. of 7 W. IV. & 1‘ Viet., c. 26, (as under our Gen. Sts. e. 92, § 6,) “ no paper not properly executed and attested can, in strictness, be for any purpose a will or codicil.”
Several decisions of Sir Herbert Jenner Fust since the statute, not referred to in that judgment, are to the like effect. For instance, where a widow made a will devising and bequeathing all her real and personal estate upon the trusts expressed in the will of her late husband, which she described by its date and as having been afterwards revoked, it was held that the revoked will of her husband should be admitted to probate as part of her will. Goods of Durham, 1 Notes of Cases, 365; S. C. 3 Curt. Eccl. 57. So where a testator left property to his eldest son, in trust for himself and the other children as expressed in an indenture of settlement made between him and the testator two years before, it was held that the indenture was part of the will, but that, as the original indenture ought to be retained by the trustee, a notarial copy should form part of the probate. Goods of Dickins, 1 Notes of Cases, 398 ; S. C. 3 Curt. Eccl. 60. And where a testator left a will and codicil, and on the first page of the will referred to “ the paper hereunto annexed, as a further
In Dickinson v. Stidolph, 11 C. B. (N. S.) 341, a testatrix, on August 27, 1819, made a will executed and attested in the manner required to pass both real and personal estate, making specific devises and bequests, containing no residuary devise, appointing an executrix, and “ revoking all former wills, excepting two memorandums dated May 10, 1819, which are to remain in force with this my last will.” After her death, one memorandum only dated May 10, 1819, was found, which was signed by her and attested sufficiently for .a will of personal property, but not for a will of real estate, and which, though not styling itself a will, purported to ^dispose of her property, without mentioning whether it was real or personal. This memorandum was admitted to probate with the will, but by the law of England was not thereby established as to real estate. But, in an action at law to try the title to the real estate, it was held, after advisement, in a judgment delivered by Mr. Justice Williams (the author of the Treatise on Executors, and a master of the law of wills) in behalf of himself and of Chief Justice Erie and Justices Willes and Byles, that the memorandum was incorporated in and republished by the will, and operated on the real estate of the testatrix.
In Quihampton v. Going, 24 Weekly Rep. 917, a testator by his will declared, for the information of his trustees, that the amounts or values entered on a certain page of his ledger, dated fourteen days earlier than the will and signed by him, were the only advancements, either by way of gift or loan, previously made by him to any of his children. Sir George Jessel, M. R., held that the entries so signed on that page of the ledger must be regarded as part of the will, and conclusive for the purposes of the will, although the sums entered therein differed from those in fact received by the children.
It is usual and proper, thoug’h not absolutely necessary, that a paper sufficiently referred to, and in existence at the date of the will, and clearly identified, should be set out in the probate; and this should always be done when the executors desire it, and the paper is in their possession, in order that the entire disposition of the estate may appear upon the record. Sheldon v. Sheldon, 3 Notes of Cases, 250; S. C. 1 Rob. Eccl. 81. Goods of Sibthorp, L. R. 1 P. & D. 106. Bizzey v. Flight, 3 Ch. D. 269. Quihampton v. Going, above cited.
In the present case, the testator by the third codicil expressly revokes that part of the will which gives directions for the payment of legacies, and orders and directs his executors to pay the legacies mentioned in his will and codicils as nearly as may be according to the directions written in a book by Melvin W. Pierce, signed by the testator and witnessed by Pierce. The book admitted to probate contains such directions, so written, signed and witnessed, specifying the property out of which -each legacy is to be paid; and, with the exception of two memoranda in the margin, which were excluded from the probate, is agreed by the parties to have been in its present form at the time of the making of the third codicil. There is no doubt, therefore, of the identity of the document referred to, nor of its existence at the date of the execution of the testamentary instrument which refers to it.
The fact that the book was in the possession and control of the testator might require a close scrutiny of the evidence that it remained in the same condition as at the time of the execution of the codicil, if there were any controversy upon that point, but is otherwise immaterial. It is not necessary that every portion of a will should be verified by the signature of the testator and the attestation of the witnesses; it is sufficient that the different sheets or papers should clearly appear upon their face, or by extrinsic evidence, to have formed part of the will at the time
The document in question, which was in law part of the will, having by mistake not been presented for probate with the will, the Probate Court had, and rightly exercised, the power to admit it to probate afterwards. Waters v. Stickney, 12 Allen, 1. Musser v. Curry, 3 Wash. C. C. 481.
Decree affirmed.