In Re Thomas

16 S.E. 226, 111 N.C. 409
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 226 (In Re Thomas) 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
In Re Thomas, 16 S.E. 226, 111 N.C. 409 (N.C. 1892).

Opinion

Avkey, J.,

after stating the case, proceeded : The Court so •construed the Act of 1784 (Rev. Stats., Ch. 122, sections 1 and 6) as to allow wills disposing of real and personal estate to be proven in common form by one of the two necessary *413 subscribing witnesses; but it was declared essential to the sufficiency of the probate, in order to pass land, that the-single witness examined should appear to have sworn that another subscribing witness, as well as himself, attested in the presence of the testator, or that some other witness should depose to the fact of signing in presence of the testator by the subscribing witness who was not sworn. Blount v. Patton, 2 Hawks, 241; Jenkins v. Jenkins, 96 N. C., 254.

Where the Probate Couit undertook to set out the proof in existence, it was fatally defective if the fact of signing in presence of the testator by the subscribing witness who was not sworn, was not made to appear, but it was held sufficient evidence of the probate of a will in common form where the Clerk certified that “ it was proved in open Court by H. G.,. a subscribing witness, and recorded,” upon the principle that all things were presumed to have been done properly, and therefore it would be taken for granted that the witness actually examined, testified that the other witness also signed in presence of the testator. Harven v. Springs, 10 Ired., 181; Mayo v. Jones, 78 N. C., 404. The right to thus set up the will in common form was said to be a temporary measure for the protection of estates (Etheridge v. Corprew, 3 Jones, 14) Randolph v. Hughes, 89 N. C., 428, as the next of kin could still demand, within a reasonable time thereafter, that such probate be recalled, and that the will be proved per testes, in solemn form, which involved necessarily the examination of all of the subscribing witnesses who were living and within the jurisdiction of the Court, and that the handwriting of such as were dead or could not be brought before the Court by its process should be proven. Ralston v. Telfair, 1 Dev. & Bat., 482; Bethell v. Moore, 2 Dev. & Bat., 311. Section 20 chapter 119 of Rev. Code made it necessary to prove wills disposing of personalty as well as those devising real estate-in same manner. Osborne v. Leak, 89 N. C., 433.

*414 The Code, § 2136, in so far as it affects the sufficiency of ■the probate in the case at bar, contains the same provision 3is to signing in presence of the testator as the section of the .Revised Statutes construed in those cases; but section 2148 provides that written wills with witnesses" must be admitted to probate only on the oath of at least two of the subscribing witnesses, if living; but when any one or more of the subscribing witnesses to said will are dead, or reside out of the State, or are insane, or otherwise incompetent to testify, then :such proof may be taken of the handwriting both of the testator and of the witness or witnesses so dead, absent, insane or ■incompetent, and also of such other circumstances as will satisfy the Clerk of the Superior Court of the genuineness and the -due executiou of such will.” The requirement that two witnesses should be examined was first enacted asa part of the Revised Code (ch. 119, sec. 15) and took effect on January 1, 1856. Jenkins v. Jenkins, supra.

The will which gives rise to this contest purports to have •been subscribed by two witnesses, both of whom had died before the filing of the caveat. The will also seems to have 'been lost or taken from the files of the Clerk before this proceeding was instituted. When it was offered for probate, in •common form, Sally F. Gooch, one of the subscribing witnesses, deposed, in so far as it is necessary for present purposes, to set forth the proof, " That she is a subscribing witness to the paper-writing now shown her, purporting to be ■the last will and testament of Ada W. Thomas, and that said Ada, in the presence of this deponent, subscribed her name at the end of said paper-writing, and which bears date •September 5, 1880; that said Ada did, at the time of sub-scribing her name, declare the said paper-writing subscribed by her to be her last will and testament, and this deponent -did thereupon subscribe her name as an attesting witness thereto, and at the request and in the presence of the said .testatrix ; and this deponent further says that at said time, *415 when the said testatrix subscribed her name as aforesaid, the •said Ada W. Thomas was of sound mind and memory, of full age to execute a will and was not under any restraint, to the ■knowledge, information or belief of this deponent. Signed ■by the deponent and sworn to before the Superior Court •Clerk on the 4th of February, 1887.”

S. J. Clooch, who was not a subscribing witness, deposed as •follows: “-That J. W. Thomas, one of the subscribing witnesses to the foregoing will, is dead ; that this affiant was well .acquainted with the handwriting of said J. W. Thomas, and he verily believes that said signature is in the handwriting -of said J. W. Thomas.” Signed, &c.

This will purported to have been executed on the 5th of •■September, 1880, by Ada W. Thomas, and to devise and bequeath to her husband, R. W. Thomas, her personal property and a lot of land lying in Durham. The names of Sally F. Gooch and J. W. Thomas purported to be subscribed .as witnesses.

It is manifest, therefore, that the will was not proved as the law in force on February 4, 1887, and which is still operative, prescribes that it shall be. It is true that J. W. Thomas •died between the date of subscribing as a witness and the time when the paper was offered for probate, and the actual ■signing by the testatrix and the genuineness of the handwriting of J. W. Thomas were proved by the said S. J. Gooch, but section 2136 of The Code must be construed with section ■2148, just as the corresponding sections of the old law (Rev. •Stat., chapter 122, §§ 1 and 6) were interpreted together. While the proof in common form by only one witness is no •longer permitted by the amended law, the requirement that the will shall be subscribed in presence of the testator by ■both, still remains expressed in the very same words that were embodied in the act of 1874 (Rev. Stats., chapter 122, •| 1; Rev. Code, chapter 119, § 1; The Code, § 21236) and that were construed in University v. Blount, N. C. Term Reports, *416 13; Blount v. Patton, supra, and Harven v. Springs, supra. In-order that the proofs should be sufficient to justify the Clerk in recording the paper in the book of wills, and to make such record prima facie evidence of its due execution by the testator, it was essential not only that S. J. Gooch should have deposed to the genuineness of the signature of J. W. Thomas,, but that he or Sally F.

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16 S.E. 226, 111 N.C. 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-thomas-nc-1892.