92 Mass. 155 | Mass. | 1865
The provisions of Gen. Sts. c. 131, §§ 13,14, abolishing the disqualification of witnesses on the ground of infamy and interest, and permitting parties to the record in all civil actions and proceedings to testify, do not apply to attesting witnesses to wills or codicils. By § 15 these are specially excepted from the operation of the two preceding sections. We must therefore have recourse to the well settled rules of the common law, as they existed prior to the enactment of the above cited provisions, in order to determine whether a witness to a will is competent as a subscribing witness at the time of the attestation of the instrument and its execution by the testator. It is to be borne in mind that the question to be determined in this case is not whether the witness objected to at the trial was competent to give evidence in the case, but whether he was competent according to the rules of the common law to act as a subscribing witness. If he was, then the will was duly attested; but if he was not, then the will cannot be admitted to probate, because it was not subscribed in the presence of the testator by three competent witnesses.
The much vexed question as to the true construction of the words “ credible witnesses ” in the English statute of wills was early settled by this court, in Amory v. Fellowes, 5 Mass. 219, 229, in which it was held that the word “ credible ” was used as equivalent to “ competent,” and that a witness was admissible to prove the execution of a will “ whom the law will trust to testify to a jury.” This construction was confirmed by severa, subsequent decisions; Sears v. Dillingham, 12 Mass. 358, 361, Hawes v. Humphrey, 9 Pick. 350, 356; Haven v. Hilliard, 23 Pick. 10, 17 ; and was incorporated into Rev. Sts. c. 62, § 6, by changing the phrase “ credible witnesses ” into “ competent witnesses.” Rep. of Com. on Rev. Sts. c. 62, § 4. The sam phraseology is contained in Gen. Sts. c. 92, § 6.
There can be no doubt that these words have a “ peculiar and appropriate meaning in the law,” and that in interpreting them
Applying this rule to the facts agreed in the present case concerning the situation and relation of the attesting witness, we are unable to see any valid ground of objection to his competency. It is conceded that he was one of the heirs at law of the testatrix, and, if she had died intestate, he would have been entitled to one fourth part of her estate. It is also agreed that by her last will the testatrix devised and bequeathed the larger part of her estate to the son of the attesting witness, and made no devise or oequest whatever to the latter. It is very clear, therefore, that the pecuniary interest of the witness would be
Nor can we see any greater difficulty in applying the ordinary rule of exclusion on the ground of interest to an attesting witness to a will than to one who is called to testify in the trial of an action at law. In the latter case the test of competency is, whether the witness will gain by a decision of the case in favor of the party who offers him as a witness. It does not depend on the nature of his evidence or the facts to which he is expected to be a witness. The question is not whether he shall be permitted to give a certain kind of evidence, or to testify to particular facts and not to others, but whether he can be admitted to testify at all. So in case of the attestation of a will. The competency of the witness is to be settled by his situation at the time of attestation, with respect to the subject matter and the contents of the will. The question is not whether he will testify in support of or adversely to the establishment of the will, but whether his situation and relation to the testator or testatrix, and the disposition of the property by the will, were such, when the will was made, that he can be admitted to testify at all. Nor is it at all material to the question of competency that the contents of the will were unknown to the witness at the time of attestation. The law does not look to the consciousness or knowledge of a party to ascertain whether he is competent to testify. It is the fact of a present existing interest which disqualifies. If this exists, the witness is incompetent; if no interest is shown, then he is competent, irrespective of his knowledge of an absence of interest in the subject matter in controversy, [f, by the terms of the will, its admission to probate would operate favorably to his interests, he is incompetent to attest the execution of the instrument. He then has a direct pecuniary interest in the proof of the fact to which he is called to bear witness.
Case to stand for trial.