Albright v. North

80 P. 700, 146 Cal. 455, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 548
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1905
DocketSac. No. 1302.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 80 P. 700 (Albright v. North) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albright v. North, 80 P. 700, 146 Cal. 455, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 548 (Cal. 1905).

Opinions

THE COURT.

A document purporting to be the last will and testament of Henry Seaman, deceased, was presented to the superior court, and an application for its probate was denied upon the ground that it had not been properly executed, in that the name of the testator was not subscribed at the end thereof. From the judgment thus entered the present appeal has been taken.

The instrument was written upon a printed form or blank consisting of four pages folded in the middle like ordinary legal cap. Upon the upper portion of the first page was a *459 printed heading and introduction, occupying about one fourth of the page; in the printed form the remainder of that page and the .entire second page were left blank. The dispositive parts of the will were written upon the blank portion of the first page and about one fourth of the blank portion of the second page, and at the close thereof a line was drawn in red ink transversely to the bottom of the second page. At the top of the third page there was printed a form for the appointment of an executor,, and a clause revoking all former wills, and immediately after this a testimonium clause, underneath which, and extending to a little below the middle of the page, was printed an attestation clause. The blanks left for the name of an executor and for the attestation of the will were left unfilled. The remainder of the third page and the first or upper half of the fourth page are blank. The printed form was prepared to be twice folded from the bottom to the top, and across the face of the paper as thus folded, and at the top thereof, were the printed words: “The Last Will And Testament of,” under which the scrivener had written “Henry Seaman.” Blank forms for a date and for filing the instrument with the clerk were printed underneath this—the whole occupying the upper half of this outside face of the paper when folded. Underneath this printed matter was written “Henry Seaman,” and underneath his name the word “witness” and underneath that the names “M. O. Wyatt, J. H. Wright.” The remainder of the fourth page was blank.

It was shown at the hearing that the decedent had written his name at that place in intended execution of his will, and that at his request Messrs. Wyatt and Wright had signed their names as witnesses thereto. It was also shown that, with the exception of these signatures, the instrument is in the same condition as it was when the decedent signed his name thereto.

The right to make a testamentary disposition of one’s property is purely of statutory creation, and is available only upon a compliance with the requirements of the statute. The formalities which the legislature has prescribed for the execution of a will are essential to its validity, and cannot be disregarded. The mode so prescribed is the measure for the exercise of the right, and the heir can be deprived of his *460 inheritance only by a compliance with this mode. For the purpose of determining whether a will has been properly executed, the intention of this testator in executing it is entitled to no consideration. For that purpose the court can consider only the intention of the legislature, as expressed in the language of the statute, and whether the will as presented shows a compliance with the statute. (Estate of Walker, 110 Cal. 387. 1 )

Section 1276 of the Civil Code requires every will other than nuncupative or holographic to be “subscribed at the end thereof,” by the testator in the presence of two attesting witnesses, each of whom must in his presence and at his request sign his name as a witness “at the end of the will.” This section is from the revised statutes of New York, adopted by that state in 1830. These provisions were incorporated into the Civil Code prepared for adoption by that state by David Dudley Field, and in their report of a Civil Code to the legislature of 1871, the code commissioners of this state refer to this code as the source of the section. In considering the section the decisions of that state upon the same question are therefore entitled to great consideration. A similar statute was enacted in England in 1837 (Stats. 1 Vict. c. 26), but the decisions under that statute as to what constitutes the “end” of a will are inconsistent and contradictory. In the earlier eases the statute received a very liberal construction in reference to the amount or extent of blank space that might be left between the termination of the will and the signature of the testator, but afterwards the same judge who gave this construction (as did also the privy council in affirming his judgment) stated that he felt it necessary to construe the act more strictly, on the ground that the provision was intended to prevent any addition being made to the will after the deceased had executed it (Smee v. Bryer, 1 Rob. Ecc. 616; Williams on Executors, *67); and the statute was therefore construed as requiring the name to be written immediately after the termination of the testamentary provisions, without any space whatever between them. It was in view of these different constructions of the statute that, in 1852, Parliament passed an explanatory act (Stats. 15 Vict. c. 24) known as “Lord St. Leonard’s Act,” which provided that the will *461 should be valid “if the signature be so placed at or after or following or under or beside or opposite to the end of the will, that it should be apparent on the face of the will that the testator intended to give effect by such his signature to the writing signed as his will,” and that no such will should be affected by the circumstance that “a blank space shall intervene between the concluding end of the will and the signature,” etc.; thus permitting an inquiry into the intention of the testator, contrary to the rule on that subject in this state. The provisions of this act are so directly opposed to section 1276 of the Civil Code, that the decisions thereunder are not entitled to any consideration in interpreting the section. (Estate of Walker, 110 Cal. 387. 1 See, also, Matter of Conway’s Will, 124 N. Y. 455.)

The provision that the will must be subscribed at the end thereof requires the testator’s name to be written at the termination of the testamentary provisions which he makes in the instrument. The “will” at whose end the name is to be subscribed is not the sheet of paper or other material upon which these testamentary provisions are written, but it is the declaration which the testator has written thereon for such testamentary disposition, and the “end thereof” is not the foot or physical end of the sheet of paper upon which the “will” is written, but is the physical termination of the testamentary provisions which constitute the will. ‘ ‘ The act of authentication must take place at the termination of the testamentary disposition.” (McGuire v. Kerr, 2 Bradf. 244.) “To say that where the name is there is the end of the will is not to observe the statute. That requires that where the end of the will is there shall be the name. It is to make a new law to say that when we find the name there is the end of the will. The instrument offered is to be scanned to learn where is the end of it as a completed whole, and at the end thus found must the name of the testator be subscribed.” (Sisters of Charity v.

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Bluebook (online)
80 P. 700, 146 Cal. 455, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albright-v-north-cal-1905.