Moore v. Moore's

8 Va. 307
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 9, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Va. 307 (Moore v. Moore's) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Moore's, 8 Va. 307 (Va. 1851).

Opinion

Daniel, J.

The writing, the probat of which is con-

tested, is dated the 23d of July 1834, and was ordered to be recorded by the County court of King and Queen, at the October term in the same year. A bill being filed in the Superior court, contesting the probat, an issue was directed, on the trial of which the jury found a special verdict, to the effect, that the said paper writing was written on the day on which it bears date, at the request and dictation of the deceased, and after it was written was read to him, and then read by him carefully; and was then signed by him in the presence of the three subscribing witnesses, who were by him requested to sign it as witnesses; that the will was then taken by the witnesses into the passage and there signed by them in the presence of each other; after which they carried it back and handed it open, with their names subscribed to it, to the testator, who held it a minute or more and looked at it, and then gave it to one of them to be folded up for preservation. That the testator lying in his ordinary position in his bed, could not have seen the attesting witnesses sign their names, but he might have seen them if he had gotten out of bed, or by changing his position in the bed so as to lean out over the foot of the bed, and that his state of health and strength was such at the time that he might have gotten out of bed or have so changed his position in it, if he had desired to do so ; but that the testator did not get out of bed nor change his position in the bed so as to lean out at the foot of it, and that the testator at the time was of sound and disposing mind and memory and of lawful age to make a will.

It is conceded that the paper in question is a good will of personal property, as prior to the passage of the act of the 4th March 1835, entitled “ An act prescribing [314]*314the manner of making wills and testaments of personalty,” the attestation by the witnesses was not one of the requisites of the due execution of wills of personais. The only question here is whether it was duly executed as a will of realty; and turns upon the construction of the words of the last clause of the second section of the act of the 17th February 1823, entitled “An act concerning the probat of wills in certain cases.” The second section of the act is in these words, “ That no last will and testament shall be good and valid to pass any estate, right, title or interest in possession, reversion or remainder, in lands, tenements or hereditaments, or annuities or rents charged upon or issuing out of them, unless such last will and testament be signed by the testator, or testatrix, or by some other person in his or her presence, and by his or her direction, and moreover if not wholly written by himself or herself be attested by two or more credible witnesses subscribing their names in his or her presence.”

The only difference between the language of this section and that of the first section of the act of the 3d March 1819, entitled “ An act reducing into one the several acts concerning wills” &c. in regard to the attestation is, that the act of 1823 requires the will to “be attested by two or more credible witnesses subscribing their names in the presence” of the testator, whilst that of 1819 simply requires that it “ be attested by two or more credible witnesses in the presence” &c.

The only reported case, in which the meaning to be given to the words “ attested in the presence of the testator” has been heretofore directly before this Court for adjudication, is that of Neal v. Neal, 1 Leigh 6.

In that case it was proved that the testator who was very weak and not able to rise from his bed or turn himself without assistance, was raised up and placed on the side of his bed, and a small table set by, and the will placed on it; and that the testator supported there, [315]*315signed it; after which the table was removed and he placed in his bed ; that he was laid with his back to the table on which the will was laid, when two of the attesting witnesses subscribed their names; and that the testator could not see the witnesses attest the will, or the will itself, being unable to turn his face towards them. That the third witness came into the room sometime after this and put his signature, as he said, in a situation where the testator could have seen him; though other witnesses said they thought differently. It was also proved, that before any of the witnesses subscribed, the testator was asked if he acknowledged the paper to be his last will and testament, and if he desired that the witnesses should respectively attest it; to which questions he answered in the affirmative.

On an appeal from a decision sustaining the will, all the English cases bearing upon the construction of the clause of the statute of 29 Charles 2, (from which our statute of 1819 is taken,) requiring the attestation of the witnesses in the presence of the testator, were cited and reviewed by the Judges of this Court in their opinions. The case it is true was one of a will attested in the same room with the testator, yet the circumstances of the case and the nature of the question not only justified but necessarily called for the declaration of certain rules and definitions equally as controlling in questions arising on attestations out of the room. The construction therefore of the words “in the presence of the testator,” drawn by the Court as well from the cases where the attestation was out of the room, as from those in which the attesting witnesses and the testator were, at the time of the attestation, in the same room, carries with it the same weight as a decision when sought to be applied to a case like the one before us, as if it had been pronounced in one of the same class. The true meaning and objects of the requirement of the statute are, I think, more fully developed in the case just cited [316]*316than in any of the English cases on the same subject; and in a recent work, Modern Probate of Wills, the opinion of Judge Cabell is referred to as containing one of the best commentaries on the construction of the word “ presence ” in the statute, to be found. With such views of the character of that case, I do not deem it necessary to repeat here an extended notice of the English decisions preceding it, and shall content myself with citing such portions of the opinions of the Judges as I think particularly applicable to this case, and with endeavouring to shew that the authority of Neal v. Neal is not only not impaired, but is fully sustained by decisions of a more recent date.

“The object of this requisition (says Judge Cabell in his opinion,) is “to enable the testator to see that those who attest the will are the persons in whom he confides, and to prevent a false paper from being surreptitiously imposed on the witnesses.” “ The object of the law will be completely effected, and can only be effected by the testator’s being in such a situation in relation to the will and the witnesses that he may, if he will, see from that situation, both the will and the witnesses in the act of attestation. This capacity in the testator is unquestionably the test of presence, in all cases of attestation out of the room in which the testator may be, for all the cases shew, that an attestation out of the room of the testator, is held to be in his presence, if he might see it, and not in his presence if he could not see it.

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Related

Neil v. Neil
1 Va. 6 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1829)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Va. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-moores-va-1851.