Reed v. Roberts

26 Ga. 294
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 26 Ga. 294 (Reed v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed v. Roberts, 26 Ga. 294 (Ga. 1858).

Opinion

By the Court.

Lumpkin, J.

delivering the opinion.

The issue in this case is, devisavit vel non. And the only question which we deem it necessary to discuss is, whether the will of John Nobbettwas duly attested under the statute of frauds? The Act of 29 Car. 2, c. 3, requires that the attestation of the witnesses • shall be in the presence of the testator. Was this provision complied with in this case ?

[296]*296The testator executed his will in extremis. He was very-sick, and in great pain at the time, and died shortly after-wards. The bed upon which he lay had half stand-posts for curtains. There was a counterpane stretched across the head, to protect him from the air. Thus situated, he was raised up and supported, leaning on the shoulder of a friend, until he signed the will himself. It was then taken back of the head of the bed, to a chest, against the wall, some seven or eight feet distant, where it was attested by the subscribing witnesses. It is not pretended that he actually saw them. The weight of the testimony is, that he was unable, without help, to have changed his. position, so as to have seen the witnesses subscribe. It is admitted that, by removing the cuitain in the rear, and turning his head, or elevating his head above the level of the screen, and turning, or by being moved more toward the side of the bed, and turning his head and shoulders, so as to have looked around the post, he could have witnessed the attestation. Under this statement of facts, the Court was requested to charge the jury, “ that if the situation of parties was such that the testator might have seen the attestation of the will by the subscribing witnesses, by rising from his bed, it was not a good attestation; that he must have been able to have seen it in his actual position, at the time of attestation.” Which charge the Court gave to the jury, with the addition and qualification, “ that if the testator might, by a slight effort, or by reaching out his hand and removing the counterpane and obstructions behind him, or by turning his head, shoulders and body in the bed, provided he was able to do so, have seen the witnesses subscribe and attest the will, it was a sufficient attestation, in his presence. But if it required any considerable effort for the testator to have seen the witnesses subscribe the will, it was not a good attestation.”

The jury found a verdict in favor of the will, and counsel for the caveators moved the Court to set it aside and direct a new trial, mainly on the ground, that the instruction given [297]*297was a misdirection as to the law of the case. The application being refused, a writ of error is prosecuted to this Court.

It cannot be denied that the Courts, both in England and in this country, from a disposition to favor wills, have departed, not only from the strict construction, but the obvious meaning, of the statute of frauds ; and the result has been, to open the door to very extensive litigation. Shires vs. Glasscock, 2 Salk. 688; Davy vs. Smith, 3 ibid. 395; Longford vs. Eyre, 1 P. Wms. 740; Casson vs. Dade, 1 Bro. c. c. 99 ; Tod vs. Earl of Winchelsea, 2 Carr & Payne, 488; Broderick vs. Broderick, 1 P. Wms. 239; Doe vs. Manifold, 1 Maule & Selw, 294; 12 Common Law Rep. 227; Right vs. Price, Douglas, 241; Par. on Dev. 90-97; Roberts on Wills, 163—67; Longchamp vs. Fish. 5 Bos. & Pull. 415; Russell vs. Falls, 3 Harr. & McHen. 457 ; Edilen vs. Hardy, 7 Harr. & Johns. 61.

But, notwithstanding Courts of Justice have thus leant strongly in favor of the validity of wills fairly made, and where there is no imputation of fraud, still there is a limit prescribed by positive law, beyond which we cannot go. The witnesses must subscribe in the presence of the testator, in some sense, or else, the statute requiring this to be done, is judicially repealed.

The first case we have upon this subject, is that of Shires vs. Glasscock, reported in 2 Salkel, 688, Carthw. 81, and 1 Equity Cases, abridged, 403. Itwas decided in 3 Jac. 2, about eleven years after the making of the statute, and has ever since been considered a leading case, and is constantly referred to. Let us for a moment examine this case, and compare it with the one before us, and the doctrine contended for in support, of this will.

Sir George Shires, being sick in bed, made his will, and signed it in the presence of three witnesses; but he, being very ill, the witnesses withdrew into a gallery, seven yards distant, between which and the chamber where the testator lay, there was a lobby, with glass doors, and the glass broken in [298]*298some places. Here the witnesses subscribed the will. It was proved that the testator, from the bed where he lay, might have seen the table in the gallery, on which the witness subscribed, through the lobby and the broken glass window. Per Curiam: “The statute required attesting in his presence, to prevent obtruding another will in the place of the true one; it is enough if the testator might see: it is not necessary that he should actually see them signing; for at that rate, if a man should but turn his back, ox look off, it would vitiate the will. Here, the signing was in view of the testator. He might have seen it, and that was enough.”

This, now, is the case, and the judgment of the Court upon it. But in pronouncing the decision, it is added: “ So if the testator being sick, should be in bed and the curtain drawn.” Let it be rembered that this latter point was not before the Court. That it was a bald obiter dictum.

"Well, the next case that came up, is Davy vs. Smith, (3 Salk. 395,) in which the question was, whether the witnesses to a will had pursued the statute of frauds in subscribing their names ; and it was resolved, that where the testator lay in a bed in one room, and the witnesses went through a a small passage into another room, and there set their names, at a table in the middle of the room, and opposite to the door, and both that and the door of the room where the testator lay were open, so that he might see them subscribe their names, if he would, though there was no positive proof that he did see them subscribe, yet that was a sufficient attestation, within the meaning of the statute, because the testator might have seen them subscribe. And therefore, per Curiam: “If the witnesses subscribe their names in the same room where the testator lies, though the curtains of the bed are drawn close) it is a good subscribing within the statute.”

Here we have the bed-curtain obliter in the previous case, resolved to be law in this, with the word “close” superadded, which is not in the original case, upon a state of facts [299]*299which did not at all justify it. And in this form the proposition has passed into the elementary books, and is cited as a precedent, namely: that signing in the room was signing in the presence of the testator, though the testator be in bed and the curtains closely drawn. And this illustration in Shires vs. Glasscock, adopted as law in Davy vs. Smith, is the foundation of all that class of cases which hold, that where the testator had the capacity to witness the attestation, by making some

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26 Ga. 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-roberts-ga-1858.