Morey v. Sohier

3 A. 636, 63 N.H. 507
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 3 A. 636 (Morey v. Sohier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morey v. Sohier, 3 A. 636, 63 N.H. 507 (N.H. 1885).

Opinion

Clark, J.

The question in this ease is, whether the will of April 26, 1858, was revoked by the writing of August 5, 1880; whether the writing purporting to convey all the real and personal estate to the residuary legatee, afterwards revoked under a power of revocation reserved in it, was an implied revocation of the will.

By the seventh section of “An act for the devising of real estate, the attestation, filing, and recording of wills in certain cases, and the distribution of testate estates,” passed July 2, 1822, it was enacted “That no revocation of any will purporting a disposition of real estate, or of real and personal estate, or any clause thereof, shall be allowed unless proved by some other will or codicil, executed with the like formalities, or by some other writing declaring the same, or by cancelling, tearing, obliterating, or otherwise destroying such will by the testator, or by some other person in his presence and with his consent; and no will in writing concerning personal estate shall be revoked or altered by any words or will by word of mouth only, except the same be in the lifetime of the testator committed to writing, and be read to him, and be proved so to be done by three witnesses at least: Provided, that nothing in this section contained shall be construed to control or affect any revocation of a will to be implied according to law from any change in the circumstances of the testator, his family, devisees, legatees, or estate, occurring between the time of making the will and the death of the testator.” This portion of the act of July 2,1822, is reenacted in Gen. Laws, c. 193, ss. 14,15. In the original act, section fifteen appears as a proviso to what is now section fourteen,—a modification of form *510 only. The proviso was intended merely to except from the preceding prohibition such revocations as had been established by English decisions on an implication not consistent with the English statute of frauds. “Implied according to law,” in the proviso, means implied according to those decisions. What, if any, change in the circumstances of the testator, his family, devisees, legatees, or estate, occurring between the time of making .the will and the death of the testator, shall operate as a total or partial revocation of the will, is left to be determined as if the proviso had expressly enacted the rule of those decisions so far as the reason on which the rule was founded is not excluded by New Hampshire legislation; and if the reason on which the rule was founded no longer exists, the proviso does not require its observance or prohibit its abrogation.

The cases of implied or presumptive revocation were few, Marriage and the birth of a child revoked the will of a testator made before the marriage, for the reason that the will, disposing of all the testator’s estate, and containing no provision for the wife and child, would entirely exclude them from any share in the estate, except the widow’s right of dower. It was conclusively presumed that the testator did not intend to leave his wife and child wholly unprovided for, and it was assumed that there was a tacit condition annexed to the will when it was made that it should not take effect in such a case. Marriage alone revoked the will of a woman, because a married woman at common law had neither the capacity to make nor revoke a will; and so, having no power to dispose of the property bequeathed or devised by the will, or to alter or revoke it, it became divested of its ambulatory character, and was regarded as absolutely revoked by the marriage. These were instances of revocation implied from subsequent changes in the condition and circumstances of the testator and his family.

It was formerly essential to the validity of a devise of freehold lands that the testator should be seized thereof at the making of the will, and that he should continue so seized without interruption until his decease. If, therefore, the testator, subsequently to his will, by deed aliened the lands which he had disposed of by his will, and afterwards acquired a new freehold estate in the same lands, such newly acquired estate did not pass by the devise, which was necessarily void. 1 Jar. Wills 147. The will was l’egardedin law in the nature of a conveyance of the land devised. It could operate only upon land in which the testator had an interest at the time of the execution of his will, and consequently after acquired real estate could not pass by it. George v. Green, 13 N. H. 521. When the conveyance, subsequent to the devise, though made for a partial purpose, embraced the entire fee simple, or the whole estate of freehold which was the subject of the devise, the rule under the old law was, that the conveyance, though limited in its purpose, and though it instantly revested the estate in the testator, produced a total revocation of the devise. I Jar. Wills 148. *511 A conveyance by the devisor subsequent to the devise (except in mortgage or for the purpose of partition), of the estate devised, removes it from the operation of the will, and of necessity operates as an ademption of the subject of the devise, and in effect, as a revocation of the will pro tanto. If the alienation is partial, the revocation is partial, and if the alienation is of the entire estate, it is in effect a total revocation of the testamentary disposition of the estate,—not because of any infirmity or want of operative force in the will, but by reason of the withdrawal of the entire estate from its operation. Marston v. Marston 17 N. H. 503, 506. And as formerly no after acquired real estate could pass by a will, a conveyance of the entire estate was regarded as an absolute revocation of the testamentary disposition of property.

In England, since 1837, by the statute of 1 Viet., c. 26, no will is revoked by any presumption of an intention on the ground of a change of circumstances, and every will is construed to speak and take effect as if it had been executed immediately before the death of the testator, unless a contrary intention appears by the will. So in this state, many of the conditions upon which the doctrine of implied revocation was formerly based in England no longer exist. Now by statute the widow and children of a testator, not named or provided for in his will, receive the same share of his estate as if lie had died intestate; and there is no longer any necessity for the application of the old rule of implied revocation by subsequent marriage and the birth of a child. Hoitt v. Hoitt, ante 475. A will was not revoked former^ by marriage and the birth of issue, if the revocation would produce no benefit to them, or if provision had been made for them in the will, or by previous settlement. The statutory provisions for the widow and children not named or provided for are grounded upon the assumption that the will is not revoked by the failure of the testator to make testamentary provision for them. If the omission to provide for the widow and childred operated to revoke the will, the statute would be inoperative. A woman’s ante-nuptial will is not revoked by her marriage. Fellows v. Allen, 60 N. H. 439. The incapacity of a married woman to make a will being removed by statute, no reason remains why her will made before marriage should be revoked by mere force of the marriage contract.

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Bluebook (online)
3 A. 636, 63 N.H. 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morey-v-sohier-nh-1885.