Bates v. Hacking

68 A. 719, 29 R.I. 1, 1908 R.I. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 28, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 68 A. 719 (Bates v. Hacking) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bates v. Hacking, 68 A. 719, 29 R.I. 1, 1908 R.I. LEXIS 1 (R.I. 1908).

Opinion

Dubois, J.

After the rendition of our opinion in this case, 28 R. 1. 523, the appellant filed a “motion for re-argument ” and afterwards “additional grounds for re-argument,” which, in fact, constituted a re-argument of the case in writing; whereupon the court made an exhaustive examination of the authorities governing the subject, and is thereby convinced that its former conclusions are supported by the weight of authority.

*2 It is proper, therefore, in the circumstances, to treat the matter more fully than was deemed to be necessary in our former opinion.

The authority to make a will is purely statutory.

The Statute of wills, 32 Hen. VIII, cap. 1, § 2, contained no provisions on the subject of revocation. In the absence of such provision the courts evolved a set of rules to govern the subject, founded upon the theory that the testator’s intention to revoke, whether express or implied, should control. Naturally, in these circumstances, implied revocations became common, and interested parties were sometimes unable to resist the temptation to fabricate evidence of the declarations of the testator for the purpose of defeating his will.

Finally, the injustice of permitting written instruments to be destroyed by oral evidence became so apparent that parliament enacted the statute of frauds; 29 Car. II, cap. 3, whereof sections 6 and 22 related to the revocation of wills and testaments, and our statute referred to in the former opinion is a substantial re-enactment of the essential portions of those sections of the statute of frauds.

It is objected that the remarks of Chief Justice Brayton in Reese v. Court of Probate, 9 R. I. 435 (1870), relating to the extent to which the cases go, and quoted in our former opinion, are obiter dicta, as unnecessary for the determination of the issue before the court, and therefore are of no binding force upon us as a precedent. Admitting the force of the objection, we can not close our understandings to the logical and cogent reasoning employed by the learned chief justice.

The confusion concerning revocation and revival of wills, that is to be found in. the decided .cases, has arisen from a misconception of the subject. The statute of frauds relating to revocation of wills was passed to maintain wills and to prevent their revocation except as therein provided. But even after its passage the courts, ecclesiastical and of common law, did not agree in their interpretations, and the question of the revival of revoked wills was raised and became a potent factor in the confusion; this state of affairs continued in England until the Statute I. Viet. cap. 26, § 22, was passed, which *3 provided for the revival and republication of revoked wills. Neither the Statute of Victoria nor the civil law which governed the ecclesiastical courts has ever been adopted in, Rhode Island.

“A will is an instrument by which a person makes a disposition of his property to take effect after his decease, and which is in its own nature ambulatory, and revocable during his life. It is this ambulatory quality which forms the characteristics of wills.” I Jarman on Wills, cap, 2.

“So essential a feature of a will i's revoeability that the insertion, in an instrument which is clearly a will, of a clause providing that it is not to be revoked has no effect whatever in preventing revocation. This quality of the will is what is meant when it is said that the will is ambulatory.” Page on Wills, § 50.

As a will must of necessity be ambulatory, it follows that all attempts to restrain its ambulatory quality must fail, for a successful attempt would destroy it. A will must be perfectly free in that regard or it ceases to be a will. It can not be ambulatory in part. It can not be both bond and free. Every provision contained in a will, including revoking clauses, must partake of .the ambulatory character of the instrument; hence it is an unsuitable and improper vehicle for the conveyance of “a verbal act done solemnly and deliberately for present effect.” See Scott v. Fink, 45 Mich. 246.

If, therefore, a testator chooses to insert a revoking clause in a will it can not take effect in his lifetime, no matter what his intentions may be. The statute gives him the choice of several ways of revocation, and he is bound by his selection. After he has made his will the statute upholds the same until revoked in the statutory manner. It has sufficient vitality to exist without further assistance. An unrevolced will needs no revival. Any number of unrevoked wills of a testator may exist at the same time without detriment during his lifetime, and without raising any question of revival. After the death of the testator the question of survival of' a will would immediately arise. The misuse of the word “revival” concerning wills is responsible for much of the misunderstanding on the *4 subject. We are aware that the decisions are discordant, but the better reasoned cases are in line with these views upon the subject.

The question is well stated by Burks, J., in Rudisill’s Ex’or. v. Rodes, 29 Gratt. 147 (1877):

“Previous to the act I Vic. ch. 26, it was a vexed question in the English courts, whether by the destruction, animo 'revocandi, of a will containing a revocatory clause, a former will preserved uncancelled,, was thereby revived.
“It seems to have been held generally by the common law courts, that in such a case it was a necessary conclusion of law, admitting of no proof to the contrary, that the former will was revived. This rule was deduced from the nature of the revoking instrument, which is itself revocable and never becomes final and absolute until the death of the testator; and it was considered that the effectual revocation of such instrument, restored the former will and left it to operate in like manner and with like effect as if the revoking will had never been executed. Goodright v. Glazier, 4 Burr. R. 2512; Burtenshaw v. Gilbert, 1 Cowp. R. 49; Bates v. Holman, 3 H. & M. 503, 525, 542; I Jarman on Wills, 123; 4 Kent’s Com’rs., 531; I Redfield on Wills, 374, 375; Tuck Bl. Comm. (Book 2) 294; 2 Minor’s Ins. 931, 932.
“ On the other hand, in the ecclesiastical courts, the revival or restoration of the former will was made to depend on the intention of the testator, to be gathered from the facts -and circumstances of each particular case, and parol evidence was admissible to show the intention. I Jarman on Wills, supra, and cases cited in notes on Lawson v. Morrison, 2 Amer. Lead Cas. (5th ed), 482, 518 to 523.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A. 719, 29 R.I. 1, 1908 R.I. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-hacking-ri-1908.