Malone v. Harper

2 Stew. & P. 454
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1832
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Stew. & P. 454 (Malone v. Harper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malone v. Harper, 2 Stew. & P. 454 (Ala. 1832).

Opinion

The annals of jurisprudence afford no trace of a time, when it did not exist to some extent, in England. While it was exercised in the mode in which the common law allowed it to be, parol evidence was as competent and sufficient to shew that a testament [458]*458had been made and what it was, as written testimony. Since the statute of frauds in England all testamén-' tary depositions of personal property there, except nuncupative wills, made according to the statute, and wills made by soldiers, in actual service, or seamen at sea, must be in writing : 1 Rob. on Wills, 147; Rob. on Frauds, Appendix 472.

The restraints on the power in this State have been created by provisions in our statute concerning wills, similar to those in the statute of frauds, which imposed them,in England : Ala. Dig. 884;

There is no declaration in either statute, that testaments shall not be valid, unless they be in writing; but nuncupative wills are declared to be void, unless they shall be made by persons in the situations described by the statutes — ■with all the formalities.prescribed and reduced to writing within the time required, excepting such wills made by soldiers and seamen, the validity of which depends upon the common law. The effect of each statute is to prohibit the making by other persons than those of the two classes excepted, of wills, which are not nuncupations according to the statute, unless they they be in writing. If wills are in writing, as they were most frequently before the statute, the statute establishes no, test by which their validity is to be tried. Their validity depends now upon the common law. ■ Any written disposition of -personal property, which, before the statute would have been a good tenament, is a good one now. As the statute -requires no signature or seal — no ceremonies in the publication or subscription of witnesses — they.ai’e not necessary. According to the common law, a testament of personal property; in .the hand writing of the testator, with[459]*459out his signature, seal, or subscribing witnesses, is valid. So it is, although written by another, ü' proved to have been approved by him, or written agreeably to his instructions. The competency of such evidence does not depend upon the persons,who may give it, being' subscribing witnesses: 1 Roberts on Wills, 148, 150, 151, 152, 156; 2 Blac. Com., 501, 502, and note 16; Toller on Ex’ors, 58; 1 Dal. Rep. 286; Comyn’s Rep. 452, 453, 454; Bao. Abr. 328, 329 (title, proof;) Peck’s Rep. 306; 1 John. Ch. Rep. 153 ; 1 Call’s Rep. 479.

That the English statute:, of frauds and ours coli-censing wills, did not introduce any rule applicable to written testaments; and that the principles they contain for "the. regulation of devises., do not alfoct the former, will appear from considerations I shall proceed to present. Whilst the testamentary power over personal property has been always exercised, the feudal system denied any such, over real estate.— The statutes of Henry VIII, called the statutes of wills, created the power to devise, in writing, lands held by socago tenure, and the subsequent conversion by an act of parliament, of military tenures into common socage, brought nearly all tho lands in England, within these statutes: 3 Rob. on Wills, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18.

Before the statute of frauds, the law in relation to testaments of personal property, which has .been referred to, was settled, and' was applied also to devises, on the ground, that the statutes of wills required them to be in writing only. Tho application of it to devises, caused the clause in the statute of frauds, which requires the signature of testators to devises, and the subscription of witnesses : 1 Rob’ts on Wills, 15, 16, 17, 18, 150 to 152.

[460]*460If the law liad not ■been too firmly settled i.o be shaken, the clausa In the statute of frauds, which prevents tho effect of it, on devises, was unnecessary; and ii it had not besa considered settled, and properly too, in regard to ies-tamanis, it would have been abolished by the act, which not oftly exempted devises from its operation, but changed-the common law, in relation to personal property, so far ..as it au-thorised such property to be bequeathed without writing, by any person, iu any situation,and at any time. As an alteration in die common law was made, iu these respects only, by a statute, which withdrew, also, one subject of property from the effect of principles, that were left to operate on another — no Oxie can escape the'conclusion, that the legislature did not intend to make any oilier change. The statutes of- wills put devises upon the same ground, in all respects, on which written testaments then stood, and had for agon. The object' of evidence, under these statutes, was to shew that the testator in tended to make ilia devise contained in the writing, and tho intention was shewn by testimony of tho samo kind and amount' which was necessary in the case of a testament of personal property. — 7 But the ¡statute of frauds requires that a devise shall be a statutary conveyance. It may be certain, that a particular act was intended, to make a -particular disposition of real estate; but if the act do not conform to all the directions of the statute, the evidence of it, that may be offered, will be as totally disregarded, as parol proof, that one had given a tract of land to another, would be. In both the cases supposed, there may be testimony to satisfy any mind, for every other than a legal purpose, of what the intention [461]*461of the o;wner of the estate was. But as the right to convoy land in any mode, was conferred by statutory-law, it must be exercised on the terms prescribed by the statutes, and proved by the evidence- they require.

But the power to dispose of personal property depending upon the common law, may, and must be exercised on the terms prescribed by this part of our code; and the exercise of the power, in giving, selling or bequeathing such property; must be shewn by the kind and amount'of evidence required by the common, law,

The right to bequeath personal property, according to the common, law, with the single statutory qualification, that it must be exercised in writing, is as perfect as that to devise real estate agreeably to the statute. The consequence may be,- and has often been, that a will, in which both real and personal estate are included, has been éstablished as to the latter, and rejected as to the former. This must be the result in all such cases, if the proper intention is proved,.as required by the common law, and not shewn, as demanded by the statute. The union of both kinds, in the same writing, “cannot prevent the dispositions of personal property, from being determined by the same kind and amount of testimony, which would be sufficient, if they were not connected with devises. Why should an union afford any better ground to require bequests of personal property to be proved by the evidence, which only can shew that a devise has been made, than to allow devises to be proved by the testimony that is sufficient to shew that a testament has been executed? The power over both kinds of property may be exercised either jointly or [462]*462separately. If an attempt be made to include both in the exercise of the power, a defective execution of.it, as to one, ought not, and cannot affect its. perfect execution as to the other : 2 Henn. & Munf. 506, 512; 4 Vesey, Jr. 200, notes, A. B.; Roberts on Frauds, 143, 327, 348, 349, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363; 1 Brown’s Ch. Rep. 147; Sugden on Powers, 234; 1 Pickering’s Rep. 239, 243, 244; Peck’s Rep. 306, 307; 1 Equity Cases, Abr. 408, 409; 4 Wheaton’s Rep. 91, note; 2 Vesey, Jr.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Stew. & P. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-harper-ala-1832.