The difficulties in the way of maintaining an action upon the instrument, of which a copy is annexed to the declaration, are insuperable. It is not in terms, nor is it claimed to be in fact, a testamentary disposition, either as a donatio causa mortis, or otherwise, of any part of the estate of the person by whom it was executed. But if, because it is under seal, a consideration is necessarily and conclusively implied, and, therefore, the party to whose use and for whose benefit the sum of money referred to is directed to be paid may recover such sum in a civil action, there is a method by which the provisions of the statute regulating the manner in which wills, to be valid, shall be executed, may be effectually evaded. No one will contend that this can be done. If a will be not executed in conformity to the requirements of the statute, it has no force or effect, and the whole estate of the deceased descends to the heirs at law, and is to be distributed accordingly.
The instrument signed by the defendant’s intestate certainly is not a contract; it does not even purport to be so. She is the only party to it. It is a mere attempt to make a gift after her decease out of her estate to a third person. The paper not only does not appear upon its face, or in its contents, to be the result of a previous negotiation between herself and any one else, but the implication from it is very strong that there was none, and that the instrument was made and executed not as evidence, or as a specification of the terms, of any bargain or contract between two persons, but solely as a declaration of her own will and purpose. It is very plain that there was no consideration to support any promise to the plaintiff. She had rendered no service, incurred no expense, foregone no advantage and suffered no loss in consequence of the making, execution or delivery of the instrument. But the consideration is in the paper itself declared to have arisen from a different source, and
