OPINION
STOWERS, Chief Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
Alaska Statute 13.12.502(b) provides that a testamentary instrument will be “valid as a holographic will, whether or not witnessed, if the 'signature and material portions of the document are in the testator’s handwriting.” Before us is a purported holographic will,
written totally in the decedent’s handwriting, with instructions to distribute the decedent’s estate at death. The sole question on appeal is whether the decedent’s handwritten name at the beginning of the document is a “signature” as contemplated by AS 13.12.602(b). This is an issue of first impression m our state, and we agree with the superior court’s conclusion that, a testator’s handwritten name in the exordium clause
of a purported holographic will is sufficient to satisfy the signature requirement in AS 13.12.602(b) unless the instrument is otherwise incomplete.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In January 2010 Alva Marie Baker hand-wrote a purported will. The instrument, as closely as possible, is reproduced below [sic throughout]:
Jan 10/2010
Jan 10 / 2010
My name is Alva Marie Baker—
My “will” when I pass on is to go as follows!
(1) My home goes to my daughter Connie Marie Sumrall
(2) Any vehicles or vehicle! I own upon death goes to Connie Sumrall
(3) All “tools” and “furniture” of any kind goes to Connie Sumrall
(4) All funds held in a checking account .goes to Connie Sumrall
at Northrim Bank[
]
(6)All funds in saving accounts goes to Connie Sumrall
(6) Any Insurance I may have goes to Connie Sumrall
(7) Any Jewerly I may have upon death goes to my daughter.Connie Sumrall
(8) All pictures I have upon my death given to me by “Connie or my grandchildren gave me, can go back to the “giver ! ! “I can not take them with me !!
(9) All “old” furniture can go tó Connie, if she wants them if not, let the grand children “pick” some—please do not fight over anything!
(10)Money I have at “Key Bank Eagle River, AK)
Equal divided
Will be divided to (Equal) my 7 grand kids—
The grand kids that have passed away, if they have a child it will go to (there child or divided between their kids)
Baker died in November 2013. In February 2014 Baker’s daughter, Connie Marie Sumrall, filed a petition for adjudication of testacy and formal probate of the instrument. That petition was opposed by Seth Whaley and Jessica Milwiez, two of Baker’s grandchildren.
Sumrall moved for partial summary judgment, arguing that the document was a valid holographic will per AS 13.12.602(b) because it was written in Baker’s hand and signed by Baker. Whaley and Milwiez opposed that motion arguing that there were genuine issues of material fact as . to, among other things, whether the handwriting on the ‘will was Baker’s, whether there was testamentary intent, and whether there were issues of incapacity or undue influence. The superior court denied Sumrall’s motion for partial summary judgment, ruling that an evidentiary hearing would be necessary “to determine ... whether the identification of Ms. Baker constitutes a. signature as contemplated by [the holographic will statute].”
Prior to the hearing, Whaley and Milwiez stipulated that the handwriting on the contested will was entirely Baker’s. And all parties stipulated that whether Baker’s handwritten name in the first sentence of the contested will “complie[d] with the signature requirement of AS 13.12.602” was “an issue of law for determination by the court,” and that Sumrall “[was] not precluded from offering extrinsic evidence in support of her opposition to [Whaley and Milwicz’s] motion for
summary judgment.” The superior court issued orders, accepting both stipulations. .
Whaley and Milwicz then filed a motion for partial summary judgment seeking a determination that Baker’s handwritten name at the top of the document was not a signature as contemplated by AS 13.12.502(b), and that Baker therefore died intestate. Sumrall opposed that motion and filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment arguing that Baker’s handwritten name was a signature as contemplated by AS 13.12.502(b) and that the document was a valid holographic will.
In March 2015 the superior court denied Whaley and Milwicz’s motion for partial summary judgment. The order related exclusively to the question “whether the purported execution of the will—a signature contained in the introductory clause—can satisfy [AS] 13.12.502(b), governing holographic wills.” Alaska Statute 13.12.502(b) provides that a testamentary instrument may be “valid as a holographic will, whether or not witnessed, if the signature and material portions of the document are in the testator’s handwriting.” The court concluded that, although there “is limited Alaska precedent” interpreting that statute, Alaska law does not require a terminal signature in order for a holographic will to be valid.
The court reasoned that “Alaska follows a holographic will statute nearly identical to that in California,”
and California courts have determined that when faced with a purported will in which the signature does not appear at the end, “the court must determine from an inspection of the instrument’s language, form[,] and the relative position of'its parts whether or not there is a positive and satisfactory inference that the decedent’s name was placed in that location with the intention of executing the instrument.”
Applying the .California rule to. this case, the superior court determined that there was a satisfactory inference” that Baker placed her name in the introductory clause “with the intention of executing the instrument”, and that the instrument therefore “as a matter of law ... meets the requirements of-. AS § 13.12.502(b).”
Whaley and Milwicz filed a motion for reconsideration and the superior court denied the motion. Whaley and Milwicz then notified the court that they wished to dismiss their “claims concerning decedent’s competence, undue influence[,] and insane delusion”; the court issued an order dismissing those claims with prejudice. Whaley and Milwicz sought our review of the superior court’s ruling that the document was a valid holographic will. We denied their petition for review without prejudice because it was not a direct appeal from the superior court’s entry of a formal testacy order.
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OPINION
STOWERS, Chief Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
Alaska Statute 13.12.502(b) provides that a testamentary instrument will be “valid as a holographic will, whether or not witnessed, if the 'signature and material portions of the document are in the testator’s handwriting.” Before us is a purported holographic will,
written totally in the decedent’s handwriting, with instructions to distribute the decedent’s estate at death. The sole question on appeal is whether the decedent’s handwritten name at the beginning of the document is a “signature” as contemplated by AS 13.12.602(b). This is an issue of first impression m our state, and we agree with the superior court’s conclusion that, a testator’s handwritten name in the exordium clause
of a purported holographic will is sufficient to satisfy the signature requirement in AS 13.12.602(b) unless the instrument is otherwise incomplete.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In January 2010 Alva Marie Baker hand-wrote a purported will. The instrument, as closely as possible, is reproduced below [sic throughout]:
Jan 10/2010
Jan 10 / 2010
My name is Alva Marie Baker—
My “will” when I pass on is to go as follows!
(1) My home goes to my daughter Connie Marie Sumrall
(2) Any vehicles or vehicle! I own upon death goes to Connie Sumrall
(3) All “tools” and “furniture” of any kind goes to Connie Sumrall
(4) All funds held in a checking account .goes to Connie Sumrall
at Northrim Bank[
]
(6)All funds in saving accounts goes to Connie Sumrall
(6) Any Insurance I may have goes to Connie Sumrall
(7) Any Jewerly I may have upon death goes to my daughter.Connie Sumrall
(8) All pictures I have upon my death given to me by “Connie or my grandchildren gave me, can go back to the “giver ! ! “I can not take them with me !!
(9) All “old” furniture can go tó Connie, if she wants them if not, let the grand children “pick” some—please do not fight over anything!
(10)Money I have at “Key Bank Eagle River, AK)
Equal divided
Will be divided to (Equal) my 7 grand kids—
The grand kids that have passed away, if they have a child it will go to (there child or divided between their kids)
Baker died in November 2013. In February 2014 Baker’s daughter, Connie Marie Sumrall, filed a petition for adjudication of testacy and formal probate of the instrument. That petition was opposed by Seth Whaley and Jessica Milwiez, two of Baker’s grandchildren.
Sumrall moved for partial summary judgment, arguing that the document was a valid holographic will per AS 13.12.602(b) because it was written in Baker’s hand and signed by Baker. Whaley and Milwiez opposed that motion arguing that there were genuine issues of material fact as . to, among other things, whether the handwriting on the ‘will was Baker’s, whether there was testamentary intent, and whether there were issues of incapacity or undue influence. The superior court denied Sumrall’s motion for partial summary judgment, ruling that an evidentiary hearing would be necessary “to determine ... whether the identification of Ms. Baker constitutes a. signature as contemplated by [the holographic will statute].”
Prior to the hearing, Whaley and Milwiez stipulated that the handwriting on the contested will was entirely Baker’s. And all parties stipulated that whether Baker’s handwritten name in the first sentence of the contested will “complie[d] with the signature requirement of AS 13.12.602” was “an issue of law for determination by the court,” and that Sumrall “[was] not precluded from offering extrinsic evidence in support of her opposition to [Whaley and Milwicz’s] motion for
summary judgment.” The superior court issued orders, accepting both stipulations. .
Whaley and Milwicz then filed a motion for partial summary judgment seeking a determination that Baker’s handwritten name at the top of the document was not a signature as contemplated by AS 13.12.502(b), and that Baker therefore died intestate. Sumrall opposed that motion and filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment arguing that Baker’s handwritten name was a signature as contemplated by AS 13.12.502(b) and that the document was a valid holographic will.
In March 2015 the superior court denied Whaley and Milwicz’s motion for partial summary judgment. The order related exclusively to the question “whether the purported execution of the will—a signature contained in the introductory clause—can satisfy [AS] 13.12.502(b), governing holographic wills.” Alaska Statute 13.12.502(b) provides that a testamentary instrument may be “valid as a holographic will, whether or not witnessed, if the signature and material portions of the document are in the testator’s handwriting.” The court concluded that, although there “is limited Alaska precedent” interpreting that statute, Alaska law does not require a terminal signature in order for a holographic will to be valid.
The court reasoned that “Alaska follows a holographic will statute nearly identical to that in California,”
and California courts have determined that when faced with a purported will in which the signature does not appear at the end, “the court must determine from an inspection of the instrument’s language, form[,] and the relative position of'its parts whether or not there is a positive and satisfactory inference that the decedent’s name was placed in that location with the intention of executing the instrument.”
Applying the .California rule to. this case, the superior court determined that there was a satisfactory inference” that Baker placed her name in the introductory clause “with the intention of executing the instrument”, and that the instrument therefore “as a matter of law ... meets the requirements of-. AS § 13.12.502(b).”
Whaley and Milwicz filed a motion for reconsideration and the superior court denied the motion. Whaley and Milwicz then notified the court that they wished to dismiss their “claims concerning decedent’s competence, undue influence[,] and insane delusion”; the court issued an order dismissing those claims with prejudice. Whaley and Milwicz sought our review of the superior court’s ruling that the document was a valid holographic will. We denied their petition for review without prejudice because it was not a direct appeal from the superior court’s entry of a formal testacy order.
The parties then stipulated that there were no more disputed issues. The superior court entered the stipulation “[b]ased on contestants’ notice of dismissal with prejudice as to their other objections and their request that the evidentiary [hearing] to address other objections be vacated.” The will subsequently entered formal probate, and Sumrall was appointed personal representative of the estate.
Whaley and Milwicz now appeal the entry of the final testacy order.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The interpretation of a statute is a legal question which we review de novo.
‘We interpret ... Alaska law according to reason, practicality, and common sense, taking into account the plain meaning and purpose of the law as well as the intent of the drafters.”
In interpreting statutes, we take “a ‘sliding scale’ approach ... ; ‘the plainer the language of the statute, the more convincing any contrary legislative history must be.’ ”
IV. DISCUSSION
Alaska Statute 13.12.502(b) recognizes the validity of holographic wills provided that “the signature and material portions of the document are in the testator’s handwriting.”
The question presented by this case is whether a testator’s handwritten name in the exordium clause at the top of a handwritten will is sufficient to satisfy the statute’s signature requirement. Because we agree with the superior court that there is a “satisfactory inference that the decedent’s name was placed [in the introductory clause] with the intention of executing the instrument,”
we hold that the instrument meets the requirements of AS 13.12.502(b) and is valid for probate.
A. AS 13.12.502(b) Does Not Require A Terminal Signature.
Every American holographic will statute requires the testator to sign the will.
Some holographic will statutes specifically require the testator’s signature to appeal’ at the end of the document.
The parties agree that the text of AS 13.12.502(b) does not require a terminal signature. But in states with statutes that, like AS 13.12.502(b), do not specify the location of the signature, courts nearly unanimously have declined to read the signature requirement as implicitly requiring a terminal signature.
Yet a handful of other jurisdictions—namely, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Puerto Rico—have determined that even when the holographic will statute is silent as to the location of the signature, a signature will be valid only if located at the -end of the document.
In
Baker v. Baker’s Estate
the Mississippi Supreme Court determined that a handwritten caption reading “Metta G. Baker writing this” was insufficient to satisfy the statutory requirement that a holographic will be “wholly written and
subscribed
by” the testator.
It reached its conclusion in part through reference to the Black’s Law Dictionary definition of “subscribe”: “to write under; to write the name under; to write the name at the bottom or end of a writing.”
The court reasoned that the subscription requirement implies a terminal location—as opposed to a signature requirement, which would imply no such locational constraints.
Other jurisdictions, though, have determined that “where the statute requires only that the instrument be ‘signed,’ such provision contemplates that the instrument must be signed at the end.”
For instance, the Supreme Court of Louisiana followed the
doctrine in French law that a signature must appear at the end of an instrument in
In re Armant’s Will.
The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico also concluded that “the introductory words: T, Adele Bandler Castafier did not constitute a signature.
The court reasoned, based on Spanish law, that “[e]very holographic will needs to be ‘signed by the testator’ and the signature can be no other than that which shows a last subscription of the testamentary will, after the whole text preceding the signature is known and considered.”
The law of each of these jurisdictions features an idiosyncrasy that Alaska law does not share—in Mississippi’s case, requiring “subscription” instead of a “signature,” and in Louisiana’s and Puerto Rico’s cases, relying on French and Spanish law. We therefore join the overwhelming consensus of American courts and hold that Alaska law does not require a terminal signature for valid probate of a holographic will.
B. Baker’s Handwritten Name Satisfies The Signature Requirement Of AS 13.12.502(b).
Neither AS 13.12.502(b) nor Title 13 defines “signature.” The relevant statutory text provides that a will is “valid as a holographic will ... if the signature and material portions of the document are in the testator’s handwriting.”
The superior court concluded that whether a handwritten name is a signature depends on the intent of the testator: “if the context of a signature found in an introductory clause shows
intent
to create a valid will and there is no wont for a further mark of execution then the will is valid.” (Emphasis in original.) Whaley and Milwicz argue that the court’s conclusion defies the statutory command of AS 13.12.502(b) “by rendering the signature requirement nugatory.”
Alva Marie Baker’s name in the exordium clause, they argue, functions as an “[i]dentifi-cation of the testatrix,” and is therefore “presumably a ‘material portion’ of the holographic will which must be in her handwriting.” Since identification of the testator is a material portion of the will, the argument goes, it cannot also function as a signature. Whaley and Milwicz’s analysis of AS 13.12.502(b) is incorrect.
The statute makes no such requirements of a holographic will. First, the statutory text neither indicates that the handwritten signature and handwritten material portions requirements are mutually exclusive, nor that a handwritten name cannot function as both identification of the testatrix and signature. The statute contains no requirement that a testatrix identify herself in addition to signing the document. Taken to its logical conclusion, this argument would mean that holographic wills with valid terminal signatures, that also identify the testatrix—e.g., “The preceding will disposes of the entire estate of [signature]”—would be excluded from probate, an outcome the legislature almost certainly did not intend.
Second, AS 13.12.502(b) was added to the Alaska statutes in 1972 when Alaska adopted the Uniform Probate Code (UPC) in near-entirety.
Commentary from the UPC is thus instructive in interpreting the Alaska probate statutes.
And commentary accompanying the holograph provision of the UPC reveals that the “material portion” language
was included in the UPC not to distinguish “material” portions from the signature portion, as Whaley and Milwicz argue, but instead to avoid-disqualifying wills containing non-material printed language: - :
By requiring only the “material portions of the document” to be in the testator’s handwriting (rather than requiring, as some existing statutes do, that the will be “entirely” in the decedent’s handwriting), a holograph may be valid even though immaterial parts such as date or introductory wording are printed, typed, or stamped, A valid holograph can also be executed on a printed will form if the material portions of the document are handwritten. The fact, for example, that the will form contains printed language such as “I give, devise, and bequeath to_” does not disqualify the document as a holographic.will, as long as the testator fills out the remaining portion of the dispositive provision in his or her own hand.[
]
Additionally, members of the Alaska House Judiciary Committee found Richard Well-man’s waitings on the Uniform Probate Code to be helpful in clarifying the concepts undei’-lying the code.
And the practice manual Wellman would later edit explains that “[t]he test under the [Uniform Probate] Code is much more liberal” than under “present statutes authorizing holographic wills.”
Thus, neither statutory text nor legislative history suggests that Alaska law prohibits a court from considering- whether a handwritten identification of the testatrix is. also a signature under AS 13.12.502.
The next question, then, is under what circumstances Alaska law
permits
a court to interpret a handwritten name in the exordium clause as a signature. States with holographic will statutes that, like Alaska’s, make no mention of any location where the testator’s signature must be placed have taken one of two approaches. The first, as discussed above, is to judicially construe the signature requirement to. require a signing at the end of the instrument.
But the majority of states follow a second approach, articulated by the Restatement (Third) of Property:
The testator’s handwritten name in freestanding form at the end of the document unquestionably satisfies the signature requirement. The testator’s handwritten name in freestanding form at any other place on the document raises an inference that the testator “signed” the document.
A person’s name written in his or her own handwriting is not necessarily a signature, If the testator’s name is not written in freestanding form, then there should be other evidence that the testator adopted the document as his or her will in order to count the handwritten name as a signature.[
]
American courts have repeatedly adopted versions of this approach when faced with a holographic will statute which merely requires a signature.
Noting the similarity of Alaska’s holograph statute to California’s,
the superior court used California’s case law as an example of this approach. The court interpreted California Supreme Court cases
In re Bloch’s
Estate
and’
In re Morgan’s
Estate
to stand for the proposition that a handwritten name in the exordium clause “is a valid execution ,.. [unless] the instrument is otherwise incomplete or suggests that some further act of execution was contemplated or required.” The California approach is followed in virtually every other jurisdiction to have considered this question,
including in states that, like Alaska, have adopted the holographic will provision of the UPC.
Indeed, sufficiency of a handwritten name in the exordium clause to satisfy a signature requirement is a bedrock principle of probate law dating back to . 1681.
We conclude that Alaska law permits courts to determine “from an inspection of the instrument’s language, form[,] and the relative position of its parts whether or not there is a positive and satisfactory inference that the decedent’s name was placed in that location with the intention of executing the instru
ment.”
Having settled that handwritten names in the exordium clause are at least
possibly
sufficient to satisfy the signature requirement, the next question is whether the superior court erred in granting summary judgment on the basis that Baker’s handwritten name, specifically, evinces signatory intent. As the Utah Supreme Court recognized, “[i]f the signature appears at the end of an instrument, ... signatory intent clearly may be inferred. ... The problem of proof of signatory intent is more difficult where ... the signature appears somewhere other than at the end of an instrument.”
The Arkansas Supreme Court identified two evidentiary sources to determine whether there is sufficient proof of signatory intent:
When the name is used to identify the decedent as the author of the alleged will as in
Estate of Kinney,
(T Anna Leona Graves Kinney, do bequeath all my possessions to my four sisters’) ... and in addition the instrument appears to be a complete testamentary document, it may reasonably be inferred that the name was placed where it was with the intention of executing the instrument. In such cases the name is linked to the alleged testamentary act and the probabilities that it was intended as a signature are strong,[
]
Here, the handwritten name is used to identify the decedent and that the instrument is a complete testamentary document. It therefore may be reasonably inferred that Baker’s name was so placed with the intention of executing the instrument.
The first indication that the exordium clause is intended as a signature is that it identifies the decedent as the author of the alleged will. To determine whether a handwritten name is a signature or simply part of the text of the will, “it is necessary to consider the functions of the signature. A signature on a will accomplishes two functions: [f]irst, it identifies the writing as being that of the signator; second, and more importantly, the signature evidences finality.”
Here, the first two lines of Baker’s will read: “My name is Alva Marie Baker—My ‘will’ when I pass on is to go as follows!” That text both identifies the testatrix and indicates that she describes the document as a final expression of her testamentary intent; courts have generally deemed such an expression to be sufficient as a signature when a holographic will otherwise evinces completeness.
Whaley and Milwicz briefly argue that Baker’s handwritten name is not a signature because she typically signed documents using only her middle initial in place of her middle name, i.e. “Alva M. Baker.”
This argument is only briefed in passing, so we consider it waived.
The second evidentiary question is whether the document as a whole appears to be a complete testamentary document. “If it is complete, a handwritten name in an exor-dium or elsewhere in the will may be eonsid-
ered a signature.”
On the other hand, “[i]f the instrument propounded as a will appear from its contents and form to be unfinished and incomplete, a presumption arises that the writer, did not intend the paper in that condition to operate as his will.”
Other courts have concluded that an instrument has sufficient indicia of completeness when the document was written “with studied care,”
where the document “reasonably supported] the conclusion that ‘the writer
had done everything
that he intended to do,’ ”
where the document “contains no blanks or anything that would indicate that it was not [a] last will and testament,”
and where the document indicated in the text that it was a will.
The superior court’s analysis aligns with these types of indicia. And the Baker will is unlike other purported wills courts have rejected based on perceived incompleteness. In
In re Estate of Erickson,
for instance, the Utah Supreme Court determined that an instrument was incomplete because it was written on several noteeards and there was nothing to “indicate[ ] that the instrument actually end[ed] at the bottom of the third card.”
Other courts have determined that an' instrument is incomplete where the will terminated abruptly, or where text at the end of the document suggested that the document would be incomplete without a terminal signature.
Unlike these eases, nothing about the form or content of the Baker will reflects that Baker did not conceive of the document as a final disposition of her property or that she wished to execute the document at a later date.
The superior court determined that the will was complete. In doing so, it considered that (1) “[t]he instrument is hand written on two pages of decorative station[e]ry”; (2) “[t]he property division appears to follow an order of material importance”; (3) “[t]he writing becomes progressively smaller as the document continues and ends at.the bottom of the second page ... suggesting] that Ms. Baker tried to squeeze the last provisions onto the second page”; (4) “the document ends with more general property and includes potential (rather than specific) heirs— a reasonable point of conclusion”; (5) “[t]here is no room below the final numbered paragraph for any other writing”; and (6) “there are no lines or textual indications in text that otherwise suggest the will required an execution beyond the initial declaration of testamentary intent.” This" characterization of the document is not in dispute. The question is whether this, as a matter of law, is sufficient to show completeness. We agree with the superior court that it is.
Whaley and Milwiez do not purport to appeal the superior court’s determination that the form and content of the document indicate that the document is complete and appeal only the superior court’s “determination that the identification was a signature.” But Whaley and Milwiez do make two arguments that the will is incomplete. The first is that some of Baker’s assets—a parcel
of land on the Kenai Peninsula and a deed of trust and promissory note—were not disposed of in the will. But the fact that the distribution is not totally complete is. irrelevant: the inquiry is not whether a decedent completely distributed all of her property, but whether the instrument is itself a completed instrument.
The second is that Baker had three years between penning the document and passing away in which to petition the court for a determination that the purported will was a valid will, and the fact that she -did not do so “speaks volumes about [her] intention[ ] as to whether the purported holographic will was valid.” But Alaska law does not
require
a testator to petition a court to validate her will; it merely provides that “an interested party
may
petition the court to determine before the testator’s death that the will is a valid will.”
This argument is therefore unavailing. Baker’s will is complete as a matter of law.
V. CONCLUSION
The superior court correctly concluded that a testator’s handwritten name in the exordium clause of a purported holographic will is sufficient to satisfy the signature requirement in AS 13.12.502(b) unless the instrument is otherwise incomplete. It also correctly concluded that the Baker will was complete when it admitted the instrument to formal probate. We AFFIRM.