104 So. 500 | Ala. | 1925
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *186 This is a contest of an application to probate an instrument as the last will and testament of R. N. Ervin, who died on March 27, 1924, an inhabitant of Hale county, Ala. He had about reached in age the three score years and ten. Pearl Howard, his cousin, named as executrix and as a devisee in the instrument, makes this application to have it probated. Elizabeth Stuck and others, next of kin of decedent, instituted this contest. The grounds of contest were: The proposed instrument is not the will of R. N. Ervin; it was not executed by R. N. Ervin as provided by law; it was not attested; it was not signed by R. N. Ervin and his signature attested by two witnesses, as required by law.
The issue was tried in the probate court by a jury. They returned a verdict in favor of the proponent; and, from a judgment thereon by the court, this appeal is prosecuted by the contestants.
That part of our statute (section 6172, Code 1907, and section 10598, Code 1923), applicable to the different phases of the testimony introduced on the issues in this contest, reads as follows:
"No will is effectual to pass real or personal property * * * unless the same is in writing, signed by the testator * * * and attested by at least two witnesses, who must subscribe their names thereto in the presence of the testator." *187
This instrument, offered for probate as a will, to be effectual to pass real or personal property must comply with this statute, and, in order to do so, it must be (1) in writing; (2) signed by the testator, R. N. Ervin; (3) at least two witnesses must subscribe their names thereto in the presence of the testator; and (4) each of these subscribing witnesses must attest the signing of the instrument by the testator.
Is this will in writing? Writing includes printing on paper; and writing includes part writing and part printing or part typewritten and part written. Section 1, Code 1907; Johnson v. State,
Was this written instrument signed by R. N. Ervin, the testator? Did he write his name on it? This is the second requisite of the statute as applicable to this contest. This same witness (Johnson) was allowed, without error, by the court to testify that, after he inserted the figures and letters "30th" in the instrument, "Mr. Ervin [the testator] took my fountain pen and signed his name thereto [meaning this instrument]. Yes, sir; he signed his name. I saw him sign his name." Johnson was an attesting, but not a subscribing, witness to the signing of the will by the testator. He saw R. N. Ervin write his name to the instrument, but he did not subscribe his name to the instrument as a witness. The court without error permitted the proponent to show by other witnesses that they knew the handwriting and signature of R. N. Ervin, and that his name appearing on this instrument was in his genuine handwriting and signature. The names of F. L. Allen, and B. L. Allen, Jr., appear on the instrument as subscribing witnesses. They had each previously testified their names were written by them, respectively, on this instrument, and each also testified that he did not see R. N. Ervin sign his name to it, and did not see his name on it, and Ervin did not acknowledge to them that he had signed his name on it. This testimony of these two witnesses made it clearly competent and relevant, and probably necessary for the proponent to prove by Johnson that he saw the testator sign this instrument, and by others that his name as written thereon was his genuine signature in his handwriting. The signing of the will by the testator may be proven by facts and circumstances other than the testimony of the two witnesses who sign their names to it as witnesses. Allen v. Scruggs,
Was there proof to sustain the third requisite of the statute? To do so, there must be at least two witnesses, who must subscribe their names to the will in the presence of the testator. Did two witnesses write their names — subscribe their names — to this will in the presence of the testator? There are two names, F. L. Allen and B. L. Allen, Jr., written on the will. Each of these men was examined, and each admitted, testified, that he subscribed his name on this instrument. Each did it at the request of the testator, and each signed his name on it in the presence of the testator. Their names were written by them respectively on this instrument underneath the following typewritten words: "Executed in the presence of." Each wrote his name there on the dotted line in the presence of the testator. Yet they testified they did not see these words or any words or writing on it. No testimony indicates they could not see. It does not appear that either was blind. The name of each was written underneath those words, and each wrote his own name. One name appears less than one-eighth of an inch, and the other less than three-fourths of an inch from those words. The jury, from the evidence and the instrument, the will, could reasonably infer and conclude that there was a compliance with this third requisite of the statute that the two witnesses (F. L. Allen and B. L. Allen, Jr.) subscribed their names to this instrument as witnesses in the presence of the testator. Barnewall v. Murrell,
Did the proponent meet by proof the fourth requisite of the statute? Did each of these subscribing witnesses to the will attest the signing of the will by the testator? As heretofore shown, there was evidence indicating that these two persons were each subscribing witnesses to the will; each signed his name to it in the presence of the testator; but was each of them an attesting witness to the signing of the will by the testator? This is the fourth requisite of the statute. In order for each of these witnesses to attest the signing of this will by the testator, each must see the testator sign his name on it, or each must see the testator's name on it, and have his acknowledgment that he signed it before or at the time the witnesses subscribed their names to it. Elston v. Price,
It is clear, from the evidence heretofore shown, that the testator signed the instrument at his home before going to see the two witnesses. Did these two witnesses each see his name to the will, and have his acknowledgment that he signed it before or at the time it was subscribed to by each of them? This proof was necessary, as they did not see the testator sign it. Proof of acknowledgment by the testator to the subscribing witnesses of his signing the instrument may be made and shown by, or inferred from, his words to them, his acts, his conduct, and the circumstances surrounding them and him at the time of the subscribing. No formal words or acts are necessary. The testator must make known in some manner to them that it was signed by him — that his name appearing on it was signed by him. Elston v. Price,
If these two subscribing witnesses were dead, then this will could be proved "by the proof of the handwriting of the testator, and that of at least one of the witnesses to the will." Sections 6185 and 6186, Code 1907; Riley v. Riley,
The testator was at his home when he signed his name to this instrument in the presence of Johnson. The two witnesses to the will lived some distance from him. He went from his home, after signing the instrument, to their father's home. In the light of the testimony of the witnesses to the will the court did not err in allowing Johnson to testify that, after the testator signed the will, and just before leaving for home of the witnesses to the will, R. N. Ervin "told me [Johnson] that he wanted Bryant Allen, Sr., and myself to sign it as witnesses, but that I was looking badly at that time, and that Mr. Allen was older than he was, and he was afraid that we would die, and for that reason he was going over and get Bunk Allen and Frank Allen to sign as witnesses." This testimony was clearly competent. It throws light on the purpose and intent of the testator in signing the instrument and in having F. L. Allen and B. L. Allen, Jr., to subscribe their names where they appear on the will; that he intended for them to sign it as witnesses. C. P. Johnson also testified as follows:
"Now when Mr. Ervin left the house and stated that he was going over to the Allens to get Frank Allen and Bunk Allen to witness it, their names were not on it. I saw the paper afterwards. That same evening I returned to his home where I was stopping, and Mr. Ervin told me that he had the will signed, and he showed it to me, and the names of F. L. Allen and B. L. Allen, Jr., were there. Their names were to it. This part here was just as I left it when Mr. Ervin went over to the Allen's house. The only difference in the paper was that B. L. Allen, Jr.'s, and F. L. Allen's names were signed to it as witnesses."
Several days after the will was signed by the testator, and after the two persons had subscribed their names to it under the words, "executed in the presence of," the testator took the instrument to his attorney and showed it to him, and said, "Is this all right?" or, "Is it all right?" The attorney examined it and told the testator "that is a proper execution in due form." This testimony evidences an intention of the testator to have the will properly signed, witnessed, and attested. The instrument on its face appears as a will executed, attested, and subscribed in legal form.
When there is testimony, as in this case, that the will is in writing, that the name of the testator in his handwriting is at the bottom at the usual place of signing such instruments, that the names of two persons are subscribed in their respective handwritings on it under the words "executed in the presence of," and each witness signed his name on it in the presence of the testator, then the court or jury trying the issue, from this proof, may with reason infer that each of the two persons was a subscribing witness to the will, that each of them saw the testator sign his name to the will, or that each of them saw his name on the will, and that the testator acknowledged to them that it was signed by him before or at the time they subscribed their names to it. When a person *189
writes his name to an instrument at the request of the testator, and in his presence, under the words "executed in the presence of" or other equivalent phrase, as here shown, "he impliedly certifies thereby that he saw the testator sign his name to the instrument, or that he saw the name of the testator on it and the testator acknowledged that it was his signature." The subscribing witnesses can testify to the contrary, but their oral evidence in court after the death of the testator contradicts the written evidence given by their signatures during the life of, and in the presence of, the testator on the instrument, and it reflects on the credibility of the witnesses. Wright v. Sanderson, 9 L. R. P. D., 149; Elston v. Price,
It results that we must and do hold that there is evidence from which the jury could reasonably infer and conclude that each of the subscribing witnesses attested the signing of the instrument by the testator, which shows a compliance with the fourth requirement of the statute — if that evidence was believed by the jury.
It is possible that the testator could fold this instrument so no written or printed word or typewritten word could be seen by the subscribing witnesses; it is possible that this testator, an old man, would go from home to the home of these young men to secure their names as subscribing witnesses to his signing his last will and testament, and not tell them the purpose of their signatures, or his intent and purpose in looking for them, and in securing their signatures; and it is possible that these witnesses could write their names on dotted lines immediately under the words "executed in the presence of" and not see them and not see the name of the testator nearby — but these matters do not appear reasonable and probable from the original instrument, and from the circumstances surrounding him and them at the time they subscribed their names to the will.
The court did not err in admitting in evidence the will. It was proper under the evidence for it to be seen by the jury and considered by them, in connection with all of the other evidence, to see if it was in writing, if it was signed by the testator, and if it was attested by at least two witnesses, and if they subscribed their names to it in the presence of the testator. Massey v. Reynolds,
The court gave charge No. 1, which is the general affirmative charge with hypothesis, in favor of proponent, which she requested in writing. This was error. The court refused to give written charges numbered 2, 3, 4, and 5, requested by contestants in writing. They were general affirmative charges in different words in favor of contestants. In this there was no error. The evidence was in clear conflict as to whether or not the two persons who signed their names on the will, under the words "executed in the presence of," each saw the name of the testator on the will, and had an acknowledgment from the testator that he signed it before or at the time each witness signed his name to it. Under the conflicting evidence and its reasonable tendencies on this issue, neither the proponent nor the contestants were entitled to the general affirmative charge. It was a question for the jury to decide. In considering and deciding this issue from the conflicting evidence and its tendencies, the jury should be instructed by the court to remember and follow the rule as stated in Woodroof v. Hundley,
"If any theory consistent with the validity of the will can be suggested, which appears to the court [or jury trying the issue] to be as probable as the theory, on which the argument for the invalidity is based, the will as found must be maintained."
A testator must be protected and safeguarded in the due execution of his will by the courts and juries, as far as the statute (section 6172, Code 1907) will permit, from forgetful or corrupt or false attesting and subscribing witnesses. Elston v. Price,
The contestants requested the court to give to the jury the following written charge numbered 1:
"I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, that, if you believe from the evidence in this case that R. N. Ervin did not sign the alleged will in the presence of the subscribing witnesses and did not acknowledge his signature to them, then you must find the issue in favor of the contestants."
This charge states a correct principle of law applicable to this case as shown by this opinion, and it should have been given by the court. The two subscribing witnesses must see the testator sign his name to the instrument — this they did not do in this case, as the evidence without conflict shows; or there must be proof that each of the two subscribing witnesses saw his name on the instrument and had an acknowledgment from the testator that it was his signature. If the jury did not believe from the evidence that the testator acknowledged to the two subscribing witnesses that his name to the instrument was signed by him, then the statute was not complied with, and the issue should have been found by the jury in favor of the contestants, as this charge shows.
For the error in giving the general affirmative charge in favor of the proponent, and *190 for the error in refusing the foregoing written charge numbered 1, requested by contestants, the decree will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE, and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.