Langley v. Langley

30 A. 465, 18 R.I. 618, 1894 R.I. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 22, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 A. 465 (Langley v. Langley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langley v. Langley, 30 A. 465, 18 R.I. 618, 1894 R.I. LEXIS 72 (R.I. 1894).

Opinion

Stiness, J.

This petition for a new trial is based upon exceptions to a ruling in the Common Pleas Division, upon the following facts : The plaintiff sued in trespass and.ejectment to recover one undivided fifth *619 part of a lot of land in Newport which formerly belonged to her husband George Wey Langley. Mr. Langley was a resident of New Zealand where he made his will October 17, 1872, in which he gave all his property to the plaintiff. At that time the law of this State provided that a will should be attested and subscribed by three or more witnesses ‘ ‘ or else shall be utterly void and of no effect.” The will in question was attested by two witnesses, but at the time of the death of the testator, August 21, 1873, the law of this State requiring three witnesses had been changed so that two witnesses only were required. The will' was admitted to probate in New Zealand, September 5, 1873, and a duly authenticated copy of the probate was filed and directed to be recorded in the registry of the Court of Probate of the City of Newport, February 20, 1893. At the trial of this case the record of the will and probate was admitted in evidence, to which ruling the defendant excepted. His claim is that as the will was not attested by three witnesses, as required by the law of this State at the time of its execution, it is, in the words of the statute, “ utterly void and of no effect.”

Pub. Stat. cap. 183, §§ 6 to 10, inclusive, provide for the record of foreign wills, with the same effect as in cases of original probate in this State ; but section 10 says : “Nothing in the preceding four sections shall be so construed as to make valid' any will that is not executed, subscribed and attested according to the law of this state.” In Lapham v. Olney, 5 R. I. 413, it was held that these provisions left the question of the validity of a foreign will, arising out of its mode of execution, unaffected by the provision for filing and recording it. The will in that case was held to 'be valid as to personalty and invalid as to realty in this State. The question then comes whether our law in regard to attestation is to be construed to relate to the time of the execution of the will or to the time of the death of the testator, from which time a will ordinarily speaks. Upon this question the decided cases are few and adverse, and the statements of principle by text writers are equally at variance. For example, Mr. Schouler says : “In gen¿ral the legality of the *620 execution of a will should be' judged of by the law as it was when it was executed and not as it was at the death of the testator.” Schouler on Wills, 2d ed. § 11. Judge Redfield says : “Upon general principles there would seem no question that the validity of a will should be determined by the law in force when the instrument becomes operative.” 1 Redfield on Wills, 3d ed. * 406, § 30 a 17.

The question is evidently open for a decision on principle. Several cases are cited in support of the rule relied on by the defendant and as stated by Mr. Schouler. We may remark in passing, that English cases throw very little light on this question, because prior to the. statute, 1 Viet. c. 26, no witnesses were necessary to a will of personal estate, while the Statute of Frauds, 29 Charles II. cap. 3, § 5, required three witnesses to a devise of land ; and the former statute repealing so much of the Statute of Frauds as related to wills, expressly excepted from its operation all wills previously made. In this country two classes of cases have arisen under changes in the law, one class involving the question of the disposition of the property, and the other class involving only the validity of the will by reason of its manner of execution. Thus, in Mullock v. Souder, 5 W. & S. 198, the question was whether real estate acquired after the execution of a will, which would not pass under it by the law as it then stood, should be held to pass by reason of a change in the law before the death of the testator." It was decided that a retroactive construction should not be given to the statute so as to affect a disposition of property and to make a will pass more than it purported to pass when made. In Mullen v. McKelvy, 5 Watts, 399, it was admitted that the execution of the will must be judged by the law as it stood at the time of the execution and not at the time of the death of the testator, and so the rule was not considered. In Gable v. Daub, 40 Pa. St. 217, the subject was considered at great length, and numerous authorities were examined, with reference to the question of after acquired property with the same result as in Mullock v. Souder. See also Battle v. Speight, 9 Ired. (N. C.) L. 288. Taylor v. Mitchell, 57 Pa. St. 209, *621 turned upon the provision of an act of 1855 that no estate, real or personal, shall hereafter be bequeathed, devised, &c., and it was held that the statute did not include a will previously made.

We do not question the soundness of the principle followed in these cases that, as the intention of the testator is the controlling element in a will, the disposition of his property should not be affected by the retroactive construction of a law which does not expressly require .it.

But the disposition of property by will has always been held to be within the scope of legislative action. A notable instance of this is to-be found in the numerous statutes providing that after acquired property may pass by a will, if such an intention appears, and in such cases the law applies to wills previously made. Cushing v. Aylwin, 12 Met. 169; Pray v. Waterson, ib. 262; Church v. Warren Manuf. Co., 14 R. I. 539. This has also been held with reference to lapsed devises and to trusts. Bishop v. Bishop, 4 Hill, 138; DePeyster v. Clendenning, 8 Paige, 295. Hence, it appears that a rule making a will depend in all respects upon the law in force at the date of its execution is neither necessary nor universal. A definite line is evident between cases which touch the act of the testator and those which touch only the policy or demands of the law. In the former cases the law is not construed to retroact so as to make a man do what he did not mean to do; and, without noting this plain line of distinction, the rule of retroaction has been taken over and applied to cases of the latter kind. Many times, perhaps, this has effectuated the testator’s intention, but as to the point before us such a consideration is wholly out of place. The two strong cases in favor of the defendant’s claim are Giddings v. Turgeon, 58 Vt. 106, and Lane’s Appeal, 51 Conn. 182; and the opinion in the latter case is a very full and able review of the subject. Both these cases involve the attestation of a will under a change in the law. We have very high respect for both these learned courts, but we think they have evidently misapplied the principle which has very properly been recognized in the cases cited above. The stat

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Bluebook (online)
30 A. 465, 18 R.I. 618, 1894 R.I. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langley-v-langley-ri-1894.