Welch v. Adams

1 A. 1, 63 N.H. 344
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 5, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 1 A. 1 (Welch v. Adams) 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
Welch v. Adams, 1 A. 1, 63 N.H. 344 (N.H. 1885).

Opinion

Smith, J.

1. The statute does not require a will to be signed or sealed in the presence of the subscribing witnesses, nor that they sign in the presence of each other (G. L., c. 193, s. 6), although this is usual, and generally advisable. The testator may have sufficient reasons for not disclosing the fact that he has made his will. Swinb. Wills 27. His acknowledgment that the seal and signature are his, with a request to the witnesses to attest the instrument, is sufficient. Osborn v. Cook, 11 Cush. 532. The fact that the will in this case was signed, sealed, and witnessed as such in the presence of the testator and subscribing witnesses, was evidence from which the jury might find that the will was attested by the subscribing witnesses at the request of the testator.

2. Prior to the passage of the act of 1857 (e. 1952), the contestant of a will was excluded from testifying on the trial of an appeal by reason of his interest. The general rule of the common law, then in force here, was, that a party to the record in a suit, and persons directly interested in the result of a suit, could not testify. The rule was founded partly on the general expediency of avoiding the multiplication of temptations to perjury. 1 Gr. Ev., s. 329. Our statute, first enacted in 1859, reads thus : “ No person shall be excused or excluded from testifying or giving his deposition in any civil cause, by reason of his interest therein as a party or otherwise.” G. L., c. 228, s. 13. “ Neither party shall testify in a cause when the adverse party is an executor or administrator, or an insane person, unless the said executor, administrator, or the guardian of the insane party elects to testify, except as provided in the following section : ” “ When it clearly appears to the court that injustice may be done without the testimony of the party in such *348 case, he may be allowed to testify, and the ruling of the court, admitting or rejecting his testimony, may be excepted to, and revised.” G. L., c. 228, ss. 16, 17. In Moore v. Taylor, 44 N. H. 370, 375, we said, — “The reason why the exception was made, that where one party is an executor or administrator, and did not elect to testify, the other party should not testify, was, to place the parties upon an equal footing, and not to allow the living pai’ty to a trade or transaction to be a witness to it when the other party to the same transaction, being dead, cannot testify.” And in Chandler v. Davis, 47 N. H. 462, 464, decided in 1867, after the enactment of the amendment which now constitutes section 17, we said,— “ Where the deceased had personal knowledge of the matter in dispute, and might, if living, be- a witness, it would be unequal and unjust to allow the survivor to testify, inasmuch as the other party, being dead, could not contradict or explain the evidence.” Also (on p. 465), — “But, as a general rule, when the deceased had knowledge of the facts, and might, if living, be a witness, it would be unequal and unfair to allow the survivor to give his uncontradicted and unexplained account of the transaction. * * * But we think that for ordinary cases, the safe guide and the decisive test is found in the inquiry, whether the deceased, if alive, could testify to the same matters.” These observations have been approved in numerous subsequent cases. Harvey v. Hilliard, 47 N. H. 551; Brown v. Brown, 48 N. H. 90; True v. Shepard, 51 N. H. 501; Stearns v. Wright, 51 N. H. 600, 611; Fosgate v. Thomp son., 54 N. H. 455; Hoit v. Russell, 56 N. H. 559; Page v. Whid den, 59 N. H. 507, 511; Bailey v. Harvey, 60 N. H. 152; Burns v. Madigan, 60 N. H. 197; Cochran v. Langmaid, 60 N. H. 571; English v. Porter, ante 206. In these cases the matter in dispute, or the transaction about which the deceased, if living, might testify, was in relation to some contract entered into, or tort done or suffered by the deceased in his lifetime, the cause of action accruing in the lifetime of the deceased party. In the action prosecuted after his decease, his executor or administrator was a party in his representative capacity; but we think the reason which forbids the surviving party to testify in that class of cases, unless the executor or administrator elects to testify, is equally applicable in a trial of an appeal upon the probate of a will. The executor represents all the devisees and legatees, and prosecutes or defends the appeal in their interest. In a certain sense, also, he may be said to represent the testator, who can no longer speak for himself. The right of a person to dispose of his estate at his pleasure is destroyed or endangered, unless some one shall act as his representative when it is offered for probate. It is the duty of the executor to cause the will to be proved, or file it in the probate office with his refusal in writing to accept the trust. G. L., c. 194, s. 3. He has sufficient interest in the estate of the testator to give him a right under the statute to claim and prosecute an appeal from a *349 decree of the probate court refusing to admit the will to probate. Shirley v. Healds, 34 N. H. 407: Richardson v. Martin, 55 N. H. 45. The probate of the will does not give him any interest or title either to things in action or possession; for he has the whole title and interest by the will, and not by the probate. Hensloe’s Case, 9 Coke 38, a.; Webster v. Spencer, 3 B. & Ald. 363. The property in the goods is vested in him before probate. Com. Dig., Ex’r, B. 9; Bac. Abr., Ex’rs, E. 14. “ Before probate of the will, not only is the person named as executor seized of all the personal estate of the deceased, as trustee of the legatees and others, but he is the representative of the whole estate disposed of by the will. He is not only the sole trustee for all persons having an interest under the will, but he is the only legal representative of the estate of the deceased. As such, it is his duty to cause the will to be proved, and he is aggrieved in his rights and in his property by any decree which divests him of his title in the estate of the deceased under the will.” Fowler, J., in Shirley v. Healds, supra, 412: Wiggin v. Swett, 6 Met. 197.

The testator must be represented in court by some one, and the executor is the person appointed by him to represent him in the execution of his will. He is necessarily made a party in the probate of the will as executor. Unless he is regarded as executor for the purpose of establishing the will, he is not a party, and has no right to appear. The same injustice that the statute seeks to prevent in other actions in which the executor is a party, by excluding the surviving party from testifying, will often be done in the trial in an appeal upon the probate of a will, if the contestant can testify to matters about which the testator, if living, might testify, and perhaps contradict or explain the testimony of the contestant. A literal construction of the statute includes this case.

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Bluebook (online)
1 A. 1, 63 N.H. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-adams-nh-1885.