Clark v. Morton

5 Rawle 235, 1835 Pa. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 16, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 Rawle 235 (Clark v. Morton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Morton, 5 Rawle 235, 1835 Pa. LEXIS 38 (Pa. 1835).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

The main question to be resolved in this case is, whether the making of a will in writing and its contents can be established by parol evidence of the verbal declarations of the deceased, going to show that he had made a will in writing, and how he had disposed of his estate by it.

By our act of assembly of 1705, a will made in order to convey lands, must be in writing and proved by two or more credible witnesses. Now it is perfectly obvious that the proof required to be made of a will for such purpose, necessarily involves the proof of its actual existence. But can this, according to the true meaning of [241]*241the act of asssembly, be done, by giving parol evidence of the verbal declarations of the party alleged to be the .testator, without producing the will itself; or proof being made that it had been seen, or that the party claiming in opposition to it, had admitted its existence? The design of the act in requiring the will to be in writing, and proved by two or more witnesses, was, as I conceive, first, to prevent hasty, inconsiderate declarations of the deceased from being set up for his last will: second, to secure certainty, and to provide against mistake or misapprehension of his intention; and, third, to protect all concerned against the establishment of wills by means of fraud and perjury; which would be effected with much greater facility, if writing and the production of it, were to be dispensed with. The circumstance of the will being written, and produced'to speak for itself, furnishes strong evidence of deliberation on the part of the testator, and of a settled purpose to make the disposition of his estate therein contained, while it affords at the same time the best security that can be had, either against mistake, fraud or perjury; which otherwise might frequently prevent those taking to whom the law by its operation when left to itself, would have given the estate.'

If however the verbal declarations made by a person before his death, stating that he had made his will in writing, and that he had thereby disposed of his estate in the manner then mentioned by him, are, after his death, upon proof being made by two credible witnesses of their having been uttered by him, to be taken for his will, without any proof of such writing having ever been seen, the great objects of the act of assembly will be defeated, and the actual writing of wills for the purpose of passing lands, as required by it, dispensed with. Because it is easy to perceive that a will disposing of the land of the deceased may be established by this means without a word, or even a syllable having been written for the. purpose. It would be sufficient after his death to prove by two witnesses that they had heard him say before his death that he had made his will in writing and disposed of all his estate in a particular way, then mentioning how it was. In such case, if no written will in fact was ever made, it would of course be impossible to produce it; and then according to the doctrine contended for by the counsel for the defendants in error, the declarations of the deceased ought to be received, as the best evidence that could be had of the making of it, seeing none could be found. Now although we might, without knowing that the person making such declarations had, as many often have had, certain reasons for concealing, or perhaps for misleading those around them, in regard to the disposition that he wished to have made of his estate after his death, be inclined to think that his declarations in this behalf afforded some presumption of his having made a will in writing; yet as soon as it is ascertained that no such will can be found, this presumption I think entirely vanishes. Hence it appears to me then, that in the absence of the corpus of such will, and of all [242]*242evidence that it had ever been seen by a witness, the declarations of the deceased ought not to be admitted in evidence for the purpose of establishing it.

But the counsel for the defendants in error, in order to avoid this conclusion seem, in the first place, to consider the declarations of the deceased measurably in the light of admissions made by a party against his interest, which are always presumed to be true upon the ground that no man will say any thing in prejudice of his rights, unless it really be so; and therefore whatever he may say to that effect will be considered admissible evidence not only against himself, but likewise against all those claiming under him. In this however, I think there is a misapprehension, for whatever a man may say about his having or not having made his will, and the disposition that he wishes to be made of his estate after his death, it cannot in the least affect his right to it. He knows that if he has made his will it is ambulatory, and can have no efficacy in his lifetime ; and that he has full power to revoke, alter or destroy it at any moment he pleases; and that if no will shall be found after his death, the presumption of law will be that, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, he destroyed it, after resolving to die intestate and to leave his estate to be disposed of by the operation of the law. Seeing then that the presumption of law will be that he has died intestate unless a will be produced after his death, he may be indifferent as to what he says in respect to it. He also knows, that although he may say that he has made no will, and that he is resolved to make none, yet if he has made one, or has not, that he has it in his power still to do so, and that upon its being produced and proved by two credible witnesses after his death, to have been duly executed by him in his lifetime, that his estate will pass and be disposed of according to it, notwithstanding all that he has said to the contrary. And hence Lord Ersicine says, in Pemberton v. Pemberton, 13 Ves. 313, “ loose declarations of a testator under circumstances imposing upon him no obligation of veracity, are nothing.” Besides men are often unwilling for various reasons to have it known during their lives, how they wish and intend to have their estates disposed of after their deaths, and therefore with a view of concealing their real design in regard to it, declare sometimes differently from what they intend it shall be : so if a person has made a will, though he may say he has made none, he relies on the will being produced after his death to speak for itself; and after being proved by two credible witnesses, to testify what his real design was, and the disposition he wished to have made of his estate; or if on the other hand, he has made no will, when he declares otherwise, he knows that none can be produced after his death, and that without it, the law will presume that he made none and therefore dispose of his estate as he intended it should be. Since then the declarations of a person in regard to his having made his will and disposed of his estate in a [243]*243particular way, or of his determination not to make a will can have no effect whatever upon his right to it, the reason which renders the admissions of a party admissible evidence against him and those claiming under him does not apply to this casé; and as the deceased here was under no obligation to speak the truth when he made such loose declarations on the subject, I can perceive no principle of law that will make them evidence to supply the proof required by our act of assembly in order to establish the making of his will.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Rawle 235, 1835 Pa. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-morton-pa-1835.