Casey v. Hanley

183 P. 794, 181 Cal. 106, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 326
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 25, 1919
DocketS. F. No. 9122.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 183 P. 794 (Casey v. Hanley) 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
Casey v. Hanley, 183 P. 794, 181 Cal. 106, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 326 (Cal. 1919).

Opinions

WILBUR, J.

This is a contest over the will of the deceased, on the ground that the same was not executed as required by law. The will having been admitted to probate, contestants appeal, basing their appeal upon three grounds: (1) That the subscribing witnesses did not sign the attesting clause to said will in the presence of each other; (2) That the finding of the trial court that the subscribing witness, Jennie Kinsman, signed the attesting clause while in the presence of the testatrix is not supported by the evidence; (3) That the finding that the subscribing witnesses signed at the request of the testatrix is not sufficiently supported by the evidence.

[1] With reference to the first contention, it is sufficient to say that section 1276 of the Civil Code does not require that the subscribing witnesses shall sign in the presence of each other. The requirement in that regard is: “There must be two attesting witnesses, each of whom must sign the same as a witness, at the end of the will, at the testator’s request and in his presence.” The supreme courts of New York and Connecticut, under similar statutes, have held that it is not required that the witnesses sign in the presence of each other. (Hoysradt v. Kingman, 22 N. Y. 372; Gaylor's Appeals, 43 Conn. 82; 1 Williams on Executors, 93; 6 Surg. Real Property, St. 342; 1 Jarman on Wills, 85.) There is nothing in Estate of Toomes, 54 Cal. 509, [35 Am. Rep. 83], and Estate of Cartery, 56 Cal. 470, in conflict with this view. The question was not there involved.

The evidence was sufficient to sustain the finding that the witnesses were requested by the testatrix to sign the same as subscribing witnesses. One of the witnesses, Belle Brush, testified: “At the time she signed this document she said it was her will. Mrs. Dow requested me and the other witness to sign her will as a witness and I signed my name as a witness.” On cross-examination, in detailing the circumstances, she *108 said: “I went in the room and she asked me if I would sign her will. ... I think Mrs. Dow was the first one to speak when I went in that room. She asked me if I would sign her will.....When she asked me that I said. ‘Certainly.’ Then I went over to the stand in the front window, the bay-, window, and signed it. . . . Mrs. Dow had just simply asked me if I would sign her will. She asked me if I would sign her will before she signed it. She said, ‘Belle,’ that is the name she always called me,' ‘Would you sign my will?’ I said, ‘ Certainly. ’ ” In response to a question of the court she repeated: “. . . The only thing she said was, will I sign the will, her-will.

“Q. She didn’t declare it to be her will in so many words? A. Didn’t declare that it was. When she said, ‘Will you sign my will?’ I didn’t see it just then. I saw it about a minute after. ... I don’t know where the document was at the time Mrs. Dow asked me if I would sign her will. She signed the document after she said to me, ‘Will you sign my will?’ Mrs. Dow signed the will, then a very short time after she said to me, ‘Will you sign my will?’ ” When recalled by the proponents she testified as follows: “The Court: Mrs. Brush, are you quite positive that Mrs. Dow said to you, at the time or about the time she signed the will, ‘Will you sign this will ? ’ A. I didn’t say at that time. This might have been a week before. I could not say just when. She said, if she made a will would I be a witness. I said ‘Certainly.’ I didn’t say at that time. That was about a week before. Neither at the time it was signed nor before nor after it was signed by Mrs. Dow, did she ask me to sign it as a witness. No, sir, not at that time. She didn’t ask me to sign her will at that time. She didn’t say anything about its being her will at that time. Q. Did she ask Mrs. Kinsman to sign it? A. Mrs. Kinsman, I believe, brought the will in. I am not sure. Mrs. Kinsman asked her, said her brother had given her that paper and said it was a will, and asked if she could read the will, if she knew what it was, and she said ‘Yes.’ She asked her if she wanted to sign it. Mrs. Dow said, ‘Yes. ’ That was about all I can remember that was said. Q. You are quite sure Mrs. Dow didn’t ask you to sign the will? A. Not at that time; no, sir, not at that time' And she didn’t ask Mrs. Kinsman to sign the will, I don’t think so. That is my best recollection. She didn’t ask me just before *109 she signed the will, ‘Will you sign my will?’ Not at that time; no, sir. You misunderstood me if you think I said at that time. ’ ’

It should he stated that at the time that the will was executed the testatrix was very ill; that Mrs. Kinsman, one of the subscribing witnesses, had been called as a nurse; that Mrs. Brush had been specially called for the purpose of witnessing the will. The will had been prepared during the morning at the request of the testatrix and had been read to her by her brother, and had then been typewritten, and was returned in the afternoon by the brother, who handed it to Mrs. Kinsman, the nurse, with the request that she have the will signed and that she witness the will. The will was then taken into the sick-room, the only persons present being the testatrix and the two subscribing witnesses. They were together in the room only about five minutes. The testimony of the brother, if accepted by the trial court, would justify the conclusion that both witnesses signed at that time in the presence of the testatrix. His testimony is to the effect that he looked into the room and saw Mrs. Kinsman sitting over a desk as though writing, and that the will was handed to him immediately upon being brought into the sick-room and was at that time in the same condition that it was when presented in court, i. e., signed by the two subscribing witnesses. The court, however, found that it was not signed by the witnesses in the presence of each other. Mrs. Kinsman testified that after Mrs. Brush, the other subscribing witness, had left the room, she remained in attendance upon the testatrix until about fifteen minutes had elapsed from the time she first entered the room; that she at that time took the will to Mr. Hanley, the brother of the testatrix, who had handed it to her and asked her to have it executed, and that he observed that she had not signed it, and requested her to sign it; that she re-entered the sick-room, sat down at a table within four or five feet of the testatrix, and signed the will and returned it to Mr. Hanley. The only question raised by the contestants with reference to this signing being in the presence of the testatrix grows out of the testimony of Mrs. Kinsman. At the time she re-entered the sick-room the testatrix was lying in bed with her eyes closed and she did not know whether or not the testatrix observed or had knowledge of the fact tha't she was signing the will as a subscribing witness. The atti *110 tude of this witness was somewhat peculiar in connection with her signing the will. She testified that the first time she saw the will it was handed to her by George Hanley, the proponent. “He said, ‘Mrs. Kinsman, it is a will of my sister’s,’ or ‘that my sister has made,,’ or something to that effect, but anyway this was a will of hers. ‘I have read it to her. She knows what it is. It is all right, but she has not signed it yet. Will you have her sign it?’ And then he says, ‘Mrs. Brush will be a witness.’ I said, ‘Very well,’ and went and took it in to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P. 794, 181 Cal. 106, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casey-v-hanley-cal-1919.