Estate of Price

112 P. 482, 14 Cal. App. 462, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 83
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 7, 1910
DocketCiv. No. 724.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 112 P. 482 (Estate of Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Price, 112 P. 482, 14 Cal. App. 462, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 83 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying probate of an instrument purporting to be the last will and testament of Elizabeth Price, deceased, as holographic.

The appeal is by one Judd Allen Page, who is named in said purported will as the executor thereof, and who was the petitioner for the probate of the same.

The instrument was denied probate upon the ground that it was not “dated” by the deceased within the meaning of section 1277 of the Civil Code, defining a holographic will.

The instrument was written by and in the handwriting of the deceased, but the purported date of its execution reads: “Dated this- day of-, 1906.” Thus it will be noticed that there is nothing definite about the “date” except the year, the day and month being omitted. Therefore, the only question submitted for solution here is whether the numerals combined together as representing the year— “1906”—constitute a “date” within the meaning or contemplation of the section of the Civil Code referred to.

Said section reads: “A holographic will is one that is entirely written, dated, and signed by the hand of the testator himself. It is subject to no other form, and may be made in or out of this state, and need not be witnessed.”

We are of the opinion that the instrument, by reason of the incompleteness of the date as noted, does not meet the requirements of the statute prescribing the requisites of a holographic will and that the court below properly denied the petition for its probate.

Last wills and testaments are entirely creatures of the legislature, and, while some of the formalities with which they are required to be executed may appear to be immaterial and unnecessary, yet the right to thus dispose of one’s estate being purely statutory, the manner of such disposal as prescribed by the statute must be observed with at least substantial strictness. If, therefore, there be a substantial departure from such formalities in an attempted testamentary disposal of one’s property, there is no last will in law, and the decedent’s estate must go to the administrator.

The term “date,” in its common and accepted signification, means the “day, month and year” (see Century Dictionary, *464 the Encyclopedic Dictionary and Bouvier’s Law Dictionary), and we can perceive no sound:. reason that would or could prompt the legislature in using the term in any other sense when making it one of the essentials of a legal instrument in writing of any character. If the “year” alone shall be held to be sufficient to satisfy the statute as to the date of a holographic will, we can see no good reason why the “day” or the “month” only would not likewise be sufficient to meet the requirements of the statute in respect of the date, between which and the other requisites of such a testament we can discover no difference in importance.

In the case of Estate of Martin, 58 Cal. 531, an instrument purporting to be a holographic will, while entirely written and signed by the deceased, bore no date. It was there contended that the dating of a will “is a mere formal matter, not absolutely necessary.” The supreme court, denying the soundness of this contention, said: “The legislature has seen fit to require three things to concur for the execution of a holographic will, viz., that it be written, dated, and signed by the hand of the testator. We are not at liberty to hold that the legislature intended any one of these requirements to be of greater or less importance than the others. If we may omit one, why not either of the others 1 ‘It is subject to no other form.’ It is subject to the form prescribed.”

Professor Page, in his work on “Wills,” says: “It is generally provided that a holographic will must be dated. The date must show the year, month and day in order to make the will valid.”

“The date is an important part of every holographic will and consists of the year, month, and day, the omission of any of which is fatal.” (30 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 583; Fuentes v. Gaines, 25 La. Ann. 85; Heffner v. Heffner, 48 La. Ann. 1088, [20 South. 281]; Robertson’s Succession, 49 La. Ann. 868, [62 Am. St. Rep. 672, 21 South. 586].)

The Louisiana statute defining and prescribing the requisites of a holographic will is substantially in the same language as is found in our own. In the case of Fuentes v. Gaines, 25 La. Ann. 85, an attempt was made to establish by parol the contents of a lost holographic will. Some of the witnesses testified that the alleged will was dated “A. D. 1813,” and others that it was dated “July A. D. 1813.” The *465 supreme court of Louisiana declared that the proof failed to disclose all the essentials of a holographic will. It said: “Is a testament, which is dated A. D. 1813, or July A. D. 1813, to be deemed dated in the sense of the law ? Certainly not, if the term ‘dated’ is to be understood in its ‘common and usual signification.’ Webster defines the word ‘date’ thus: ‘That addition to a writing which specifies the year, month and day when it was given or exercised.’ ... It is essential, therefore, to specify the day, month and year to give a date to a testament in the sense of article 1588 of the Civil Code.”

In the case of Heffner v. Heffner, 48 La. Ann. 1089, [20 South. 1081], the trial court rendered judgment annulling the will, holographic in form, of William Heffner, deceased, on the ground that it was not dated. Upholding the judgment, the Louisiana supreme court said: “The code defines the holographic will to be that written, dated and signed by the testator himself. The date, signature and the entirety of the will in the handwriting of the testator are the essentials. . . . The policy of the law to secure the true representation of the testator’s wishes and guard against fraudulent wills is marked in the requisite of the testator’s handwriting, including the expression of the date when he writes the paper and affixes the signature it bears. The date in the testator’s handwriting is part of the evidence the law requires of the verity of the instrument. If the paper is forged, the date it must bear may furnish the means of detection. On any issue of the sanity of the testator the dates indicate and restrict the period of inquiry. . . . The date in its ordinary sense imports the day of the month, the month and the year. That is also the legal significance of the date. The day of the month is quite as much a part of the date as the month or the year. If the law requires the holographic will to be dated, the exaction extends to every part of the date. . . . The hardship of the case has prompted us, in the absence of any direct adjudication of our own courts on the point, to examine the views of the French commentators, dealing with the corresponding article of the Napoleon Code. They disclose the reason of the law in exacting the date, and maintain the day of the month to be essential. We find the distinction drawn by them between a wrong date, which it seems has *466 been held will not vitiate, and no date or a deficient date, which will avoid the will.

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Bluebook (online)
112 P. 482, 14 Cal. App. 462, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-price-calctapp-1910.