Blount v. . Patton

9 N.C. 237
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 N.C. 237 (Blount v. . Patton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blount v. . Patton, 9 N.C. 237 (N.C. 1822).

Opinion

Taylor, Chief-Justice.

Whether the probate offered in this case is admissible evidence, depends on the construction of several acts of Assembly passed on the subject, and the just application of some legal principles, the observance of which in important to the security of properly.

A comparison of the I lift see. of the ad of 1184, chap, 204, with the 5th sec. of the 29 Gar. 2, duty. 3, will shew beyond controversy that our Legislature had that in yiew ; and that, with the exception of the, number1 of wit-stesses, the omission of the word si attested,” and the *240 adoption of that part of the slat. 23 6reo. 2, which renders void a devise to a witness, it was their design to ava^ themselves of so much of the said statute as prescribes the essentials in executing a will.

Wherever title to land is claimed, under a devise by that statute, the devisee must produce the original will in Court, and establish its execution by proof, in the manner required by law. But in this State probates arc received in evidence, and attested copies of wills are made testimony except where fraud or irregularity is suggested; and in such cases the original will must be exhibited. As the probate of a will upon the trial of an ejectment can be admissible evidence solely upon the ground that the County Court receiving it, admitted the will to record upon proper proof of its execution according to the act, it follows that the cases decided upon the 29ih Oar. relative to the execution of wills, must furnish criteria by which to ascertain, whether a probate in this State has been properly received. There is no other sure way of enforcing the statute, since if every probate were admissible, the effect would be to repeal it, and thereby to leave to the County Courts to pronounce on the manner in winch a will shall be proved, whcdier by a witness or by evidence of the hand-writing.

The effect of the act of 1784 is, to prevent the Court from seeing the intention of the testator to dispose of his real estate, if in truth he has not done it with the solemnities enjoined by the statute. It is true that the Court cannot read a will without the words iS real estate5’ in it, but the act of 1784 binds them to sáy, that if a man by a will nnattested by two witnesses, gives his real estate, he did not mean to give it at all. — -(2 Ves.jr. 652.)

Where a will is not contested, one of the subscribing witnesses is sufficient to have it recorded ; and so upon the proof of a will, upon a trial at law, one of the witnesses is sufficient to establish it. — (1789, ch. SO.)

*241 .'By ascertaining what facts and circumstances such witness is required to prove for that purpose, it will be readily seen what proof is necessary to admit the will ,o record. Besides the sanity of the testator and his signing or acknowledgment, both of which are shewn in this case, it is also necessary to prove the subscription of the witnesses in the testator’s presence.

But although one witness is sufficient to prove the will, yet it is necessary for that one to prove all that is necessary to establish its validity — (iZoií’s Hep. 744.) And if the other witnesses even refused to verify their attestation, the proof of their hand-writing is sufficient, if only one witness proved the other circumstances of the execution. Lord Camden, speaking of the method of proof in a Court of Common Law, says, " One witness is sufficient to prove what all three have attested ; and though that witness must, he a subscriber, yet that is. owing to the general Common Law rule, that where a witness has subscribed an instrument, he must always he produced, because ho in the best evidence. This we sec in common experience, for after the first witness has been examined the will is always read.”

The objection, that no notice is taken in the subscription, of the fact of its having been done in the presence of the testator, is not valid: for that ceremony is not required by the act of 1784, and whether it were so expressed or not, it must be proved to have been so done to the jury, under the 28ZÁ Car. 2, and now by analogy to the County Court. This point has been directly de» cided — {Cornyn’s Jlep. 531 — 2 Slrartge i 109.)

Jt then appears from the probate, that a will of real property has been proved only by one, witness; and there is no ground to presume either that proof of bis subscription in the presence of the testator, or of any subscription by the other witness, was made to the Court directing the probate, which if so made in this State, would b<> clearly inadmissible in evidence, For the act *242 requires the subscription of the witnesses to be made in presence of the testator, for the purpose of guarding against fraud, and to prevent the substitution of a false wj¡j jn p]acc 0f tfie true one.

I think it by no means probable that a probate of this kind would be deemed admissible in Tennessee, where the act'of 1784 has been in force. But even if the law be altered, and a will of land attested by only one witness is sufficient to pass the title to land there, it can have no effect upon a title to land in this State. For it is a principle founded in reason, and confirmed by an uniform current of authorities, that a title to land can be acquired and lost only in the manner prescribed by the law of the place where such land is situate. Every person, says Lord Kenyon, haying property in a foreign country, may dispose of it in this, though indeed, if there be a law in that country directing a particular mode of conveyance, that must be adopted — (4 Term Rep. 492.) And the devise of land must necessarily depend upon the law of the country, for where an Englishman, being beyond sea, made a will disposing of land in England, it ivas held void, because it had but two witnesses. — (2 P, Wins. 290.) A writer on the Civil Law, whose decision on this subject is often quoted with approbation, maintains that a state affixes certain rights to the dominion of real property, and is therefore interested in its disposal, and could not, without great inconvenience, suffer it to be conveyed with its incidental rights, by the laws of another and contrary to its own laws — (2 Huleras, 13— 1 Tit. 3.)

In opposition to these principles and authorities, it would be giving a loose and mischievous construction to the act of 1802, chap. 23, to consider it as giving validity to deeds and wills executed in other States for land in this $ and thereby to repeal all our acts, which so anxiously prescribe the modes of transfer, in all cases *243 where they happen to conflict with the laws of other States.

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Related

Watson v. . Hinson
77 S.E. 1089 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1913)
University v. . Blount
4 N.C. 455 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1816)

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.C. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blount-v-patton-nc-1822.