7 Mo. 589 | Mo. | 1842
Opinion of the Court, delivered by
Thomas Withinton and others, defendants in error, filed their petition in the circuit court of St. Louis county, stating that Thomas Withinton, senior, sometime in the month of March, 1838, died, as they believed, intestate; and that at the August term of the county court next succeeding, viz: in August, 1838, Emilie Withinton, widow of William Withinton deceased, appeared before the said
Joseph Walton, the subscribing witness, being called, stated that he was present in the house of the said Thomas Withinton, senior, when the said instrument of writing was written by Fergus Ferguson, since deceased, and when the acknowledgment of the same was taken and written by the said. Ferguson : that he signed his name
The plaintiffs below, defendants in error, prayed the court to instruct the jury, that the instrument of writing produced as the will of Thomas Withinton, senior, deceased, is not duly attested as a will according to the laws of the State. This instruction the court gave, and the plaintiff in error excepted. The plaintiff in error prayed the court to instruct the jury to this purpose: 1st. That the certificate of acknowledgment before the justice of the peace, is equivalent to the signature of a witness : and 2nd., That the intention of the testator to make a deed when lie signed said instrument, does not prevent said instrument from being and operating as a will. To pass over the last question raised by the defendant below, whether a deed in form made to take effect, as in this case, after the death of the maker, is a will, I will enquire whether this instrument is attested as required by the statute. The fourth section of the act