A writ of error is the proper form of bringing up to this Court
an order of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia admitting
a will to probate.
Since the Act of July 9, 1888, c. 597, as before that act, the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia has no power to admit a
will or codicil to probate as a devise of real estate.
This was a petition by the executors of the will of the late
Admiral David D. Porter, who died February 13, 1891, to the special
term of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, sitting as
an orphans' court, for the admission to probate of his will and of
a codicil thereto.
Upon citation to the next of kin, Elena Porter, a daughter of
the testator (having become, by marriage, Elena Campbell) appeared,
and demanded full proof of the execution of the will and
codicil.
The will and the codicil each bore the signature of the
testator, and those of the same three persons as witnesses.
Page 162 U. S. 479
At the hearing in special term, it was shown by the examination
of the witnesses that the will was duly executed by the testator
and attested by all three witnesses, and that the codicil was
signed by the testator and attested by two of the witnesses, and
the only controverted question was whether the testator did or did
not make or acknowledge his signature to the codicil in the
presence of the third witness.
Upon the whole evidence (which was set forth in the record, but
is unnecessary to the understanding of the points decided by this
Court), the judge holding the special term ordered the will to be
admitted to probate as to both real and personal property, and the
codicil to be admitted to probate in respect of personal property,
and certified to the general term, for hearing in the first
instance, the question of the sufficiency of the codicil to devise
or dispose of real estate.
At the hearing in general term, it was ordered and adjudged, for
reasons stated in the opinion reported in 9 Mackey (20 D.C.) 493,
that the codicil was duly executed by the testator and subscribed
and attested by three witnesses, as required by law, and should be
admitted to probate as a devise of real estate. A bill of
exceptions to this ruling and order was tendered by Mrs. Campbell
and allowed by the court, which certified that the value of the
real estate devised to her in the codicil was less than that
devised to her in the will by more than the sum of $5,000 -- a
sufficient amount to sustain the appellate jurisdiction of this
Court under the Act of March 3, 1885, c. 355, 23 Stat. 443. And
Mrs. Campbell, on June 22, 1892, sued out this writ of error.
Page 162 U. S. 481
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
It was contended in behalf of the defendants in error that the
case should have been brought to this Court by appeal, and not by
writ of error. But we consider this point as settled by the
decision made six years ago in
Ormsby v. Webb,
134 U. S. 47,
134 U. S. 64-65,
in which a motion to dismiss, for the same reason, a writ of error
to review a judgment of the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia admitting a will to probate was denied by this Court not
merely because in that case a trial by jury had been actually had,
but upon the more general ground that a proceeding for the probate
of a will in the District of Columbia was not a suit in equity, and
was a case in which the parties had the right to claim a trial by
jury, and in which there might be adversary parties, and a final
judgment affecting rights of property.
See Price v.
Taylor, 21 Md. 356, 363. The decision in
Ormsby v.
Webb has since been understood as governing the practice in
the District, and evidently guided the course of the plaintiff in
error in the present case. Under these circumstances, the question
whether the form of bringing up a probate case shall be by writ of
error or by appeal does not appear to us to be so important in its
consequences that it should now be reconsidered.
Page 162 U. S. 482
A more serious question of jurisdiction presented by this record
is whether the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia had power
to admit a will or codicil to probate as a devise of real estate.
Curiously enough, it is the plaintiff in error who contends that it
had, and the defendants in error who insist that it had not. But it
is immaterial by which party the question is made, for, being a
question of jurisdiction, it would be the duty of this Court of its
own motion to take notice of it.
This question depends upon the Act of Congress of July 9, 1888,
c. 597, entitled "An act relating to the record of wills in the
District of Columbia," and the whole of the rest of which is as
follows:
"The record of any will or codicil heretofore or hereafter
recorded in the office of the Register of Wills of the District of
Columbia which shall have been admitted to probate by the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia, or by the late Orphans' Court of
said district, or the record of the transcript of the record and
probate of any will or codicil elsewhere, or of any certified copy
thereof, heretofore or hereafter filed in the office of said
register of wills, shall be
prima facie evidence of the
contents and due execution of such wills and codicils,
provided that this act shall not apply in any cause now
pending in any of the courts of the District of Columbia."
25 Stat. 246.
In order to determine the scope and effect of this act, it as
necessary to consider what the law upon the subject was in the
District of Columbia before its passage.
The law of wills and of probate, as existing in Maryland on
February 27, 1801, is the law of the District of Columbia, except
as since altered by Congress, and the Supreme Court of the District
of Columbia, in special and general term, respectively, has, by
virtue of successive acts of Congress, the probate jurisdiction
formerly exercised by the Orphans' Court and the Court of Chancery
of the State of Maryland, and by the Orphans' Court and the Circuit
Court of the United States for the District of Columbia; with
authority, also at a special term, to order any matter to be heard
in the first instance at a general term. Acts of February 27, 1801,
c. 15, §§ 1, 12, 2
Page 162 U. S. 483
Stat. 103, 107; March 3, 1863, c. 91, §§ 3, 5, 16, 12
Stat. 763, 764; June 21, 1870, c. 141, §§ 4, 5, 16 Stat.
161; Rev.Stat. D.C. §§ 772, 800, 930.
The older laws of the State of Maryland concerning wills,
executors, and guardians were amended and codified by the statute
of 1798, c. 101, drawn up by Chancellor Hanson, and published in 2
Kilty's Laws, and containing the following provisions:
By subchapter 1, § 4 (following the English statute of
frauds of 29 Car. II. c. 3, § 5), it was enacted that
"all devises and bequests of any lands or tenements, devisable
by law, shall be in writing, and signed by the party so devising
the same, or by some other person in his presence, and by his
express directions, and shall be attested and subscribed, in the
presence of the said devisor, by three or four credible witnesses,
or else they shall be utterly void and of none effect."
Subchapter 2, in §§ 1-3, made various provisions for
securing the prompt delivery of "a will or codicil" after the death
of the testator to the register of wills for safekeeping until
probate, and in § 4 enacted that
"an attested copy, under the seal of office, of any will,
testament or codicil recorded in any office authorized to record
the same, shall be admitted as evidence in any court of law or
equity, provided that the execution of the original will or codicil
be subject to be contested until a probate hath been had according
to this act."
That statute did not authorize the probate of wills of real
estate. But in subchapter 2, §§ 5-13, and subchapter 15,
§§ 16-18, it made full and minute provisions for the
probate in the Orphans' Court of "any will or codicil containing
any disposition relative to goods, chattels or personal estate" by
which such a will might, if uncontested, be admitted to probate at
once, or, if contested, be dealt with "according to the testimony
produced on both sides," and be admitted to probate "on such proof
as shall be sufficient to give efficacy to a will or codicil for
passing personal property," or at the request of either party, by a
plenary proceeding, upon bill or petition, answer under oath and
depositions and, it might be,
Page 162 U. S. 484
the findings of a jury upon issues sent to a court of law for
trial, with a right of appeal from the Orphans' Court to the Court
of Chancery or General Court.
By the law of Maryland, and consequently of the District of
Columbia, in accordance with what was the law of England until the
statute of 1 Vict. c. 26, a will of personal property need not be
attested by subscribing witnesses, but might be established, when
offered for probate, by the testimony of any two witnesses or by
equivalent proof. 1 Williams on Executors (7th ed.) 85, 343;
Dorsey's Testamentary Law, 57;
McIntire v. McIntire, ante,
162 U. S. 383; 8
Mackey 482, 489. A will of personal property, until admitted to
probate, was not competent evidence in another suit.
Armstrong v.
Lear, 12 Wheat. 169,
25 U. S. 176.
And in Maryland, under the statute of 1798, an order granting or
refusing probate of a will as to personalty has been considered not
merely
prima facie, but conclusive, evidence in a
subsequent suit.
Warford v. Colvin, 14 Md. 532, 554;
Johns v. Hodges, 62 Md. 525, 534.
In
Darby v. Mayer, (1825) this Court recognized that by
a probate under that statute, the will was conclusively established
as to personalty, but decided that the clause of subchapter 2,
§ 4, above quoted, by which
"an attested copy, under the seal of office, of any will,
testament or codicil, recorded in any office authorized to record
the same shall be admitted as evidence in any court of law or
equity,"
did not make such a copy of the recorded probate of a will
evidence of title to real estate, and the reasons of the court were
stated by Mr. Justice Johnson as follows:
"It is true that the generality of the terms in the first lines
of this clause is such as would, if unrestricted by the context,
embrace wills of lands. It is also true that the previous chapter
in the same article prescribes the formalities necessary to give
validity to devises of real estate. It is further true that the
previous sections of the second chapter indicate the means, and
impose the duty, of delivering up wills of all descriptions to the
register of the court of probates for safekeeping after the death
of the testator and until they shall
Page 162 U. S. 485
be demanded by some person authorized to demand them for the
purpose of proving them."
"But it is equally true that the act does not authorize the
registering of any will without probate. Nor does it, in any one of
its provisions, relate to the probate of any wills except wills of
goods and chattels."
"The clause recited makes evidence of such wills only as are
recorded in the offices of courts authorized to record them. But
when the power of taking probate is expressly limited to the
probate of wills of goods and chattels, we see not with what
propriety the meaning of the clause in question can be extended to
wills of any other description. The Orphans' Court may take
probates of wills though they affect lands, provided they also
affect goods and chattels, but the will, nevertheless, is
conclusively established only as to the personalty."
"Unless the words be explicit and imperative to the contrary,
the construction must necessarily conform to the existing laws of
the state on the subject of wills of real estate. And when the
power of taking probates is confined to wills of personalty, we
think the construction of the clause recited must be limited by the
context."
"We are therefore of opinion that there was nothing in the law
of Maryland which could, under the Constitution, make the document
offered to prove this will
per se evidence in a land
cause."
10 Wheat.
23 U. S. 465,
23 U. S.
471-472.
In
Robertson v. Pickrell (1883), this Court held that
an exemplified copy of the probate of a will of real estate in a
court of Virginia authorized by the law of that state to take
probate of wills, as well of real estate as of personal property,
was incompetent evidence in the courts of the District of Columbia
of title to real estate in the District, and, speaking by MR.
JUSTICE FIELD, said:
"In most of the states in the Union, a will of real property
must be admitted to probate in some one of their courts before it
can be received elsewhere as a conveyance of such property. But by
the law of Maryland, which governs in the District of Columbia,
wills, so far as real property is concerned, are not admitted to
such probate.
Page 162 U. S. 486
The common law rule prevails on that subject. The Orphans' Court
there may, it is true, take the probate of wills, though they
affect lands, provided they affect chattels also, but the probate
is evidence of the validity of the will only so far as the personal
property is concerned. As an instrument conveying real property,
the probate is not evidence of its execution. That must be shown by
a production of the instrument itself and proof by the subscribing
witnesses, or, if they be not living, by proof of their
handwriting."
109 U.S.
109 U. S. 608,
109 U. S.
610.
In the State of Maryland, the statute of 1798 continued to be in
force until the Legislature of Maryland, by the supplemental
statute of 1831, c. 315, § 1, authorized the Orphans' Courts
to take the probate of "any will, testament or codicil, whether the
same has relation to real or personal estate, or to both real and
personal estate," in the same manner as, under the original
statute, they might of wills disposing of personal estate, "which
said probate, as concerns real estate, shall be deemed and taken
only as
prima facie evidence of such will, testament or
codicil," and, in § 16, provided that any will admitted to
probate should be kept in the register's office, except that it
might, at the trial of an issue of
devisavit vel non,
"be adduced in evidence under care of such register, or of any
person in that behalf by him deputed, under a subpoena
duces
tecum issued on special order of the court holding such
trial."
The statute of Maryland of 1854, c. 140, authorized copies of
wills and probates made in other states to be filed and recorded in
the office of the register of wills in any county in Maryland and
provided that a copy of the record, under the hand of the register
and the seal of his office, should
"be evidence in all suits or actions at law and in equity in any
court in this state wherein the title of any property, real or
personal, thereby devised or given shall be in question, with the
same force and effect as if the original will had been admitted to
probate in this state, according to the laws thereof."
Before that statute, the record of a probate in another state
was inadmissible in evidence in the courts of Maryland.
Budd v.
Brooke, 3 Gill 198, 232;
Beatty v. Mason, 30 Md. 409,
412.
Page 162 U. S. 487
Congress never legislated upon the subject mentioned in either
of the last two statutes of Maryland until it passed the Act of
July 9, 1888, c. 597, now in question, entitled "An act relating to
the record of wills in the District of Columbia," and the whole
enacting part of which is so brief that it may well be quoted once
more, as follows:
"The record of any will or codicil, heretofore or hereafter
recorded in the office of the Register of Wills of the District of
Columbia, which shall have been admitted to probate by the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia or by the late Orphans' Court of
said district, or the record of the transcript of the record and
probate of any will or codicil elsewhere, or of any certified copy
thereof, heretofore or hereafter filed in the office of said
register of wills, shall be
prima facie evidence of the
contents and due execution of such wills and codicils,
provided that this act shall not apply in any cause now
pending in any of the courts of the District of Columbia."
Before the passage of this act, as has been seen, neither the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia nor its predecessor, the
Orphans' Court, had any jurisdiction to admit to probate a will of
real estate only, and consequently no record in any court of the
District of a probate of a will would be any evidence whatever of
title to real estate; but, as to personal property, the probate of
a will would seem to have been regarded as conclusive evidence, and
there was no statute law in the District concerning the record or
the proof of wills made and probated elsewhere.
The act of 1888 is a statute of evidence, and not of
jurisdiction. It does not purport to confer any jurisdiction
whatever. Its title describes it as "Relating to the Record of
Wills." The body of it is, in terms, a simple declaration that
records of probates of wills or codicils in the District of
Columbia "shall be
prima facie evidence of the contents
and due execution of such wills and codicils." And the concluding
proviso, that it shall not apply to pending causes, treats it as a
mere rule of evidence.
The records thus made evidence include those of wills and
codicils admitted to probate by the courts of the District,
Page 162 U. S. 488
whether before or after the passage of the act, and also records
of probates made elsewhere, and filed in the register's office
here. The act assumes the probates to have been lawfully made, and
it no more undertakes to define or to regulate the jurisdiction of
the courts of probate of the District for the future than it does
the jurisdiction of those courts in the past or the jurisdiction of
the courts elsewhere whose proceedings filed here are equally made
evidence.
The act gives no greater weight to future than it does to past
probates and records. But if it made the record of a will, admitted
to probate in the District of Columbia before the act, evidence of
title to real estate, it would not only give the probate an effect
which could not have been in the mind of the court which granted
it, but it would in many cases make a will effective to pass real
estate which had never been attested as required by law to
constitute a valid will for that purpose.
For example, take the case now before the court, supposing it to
have arisen before the passage of the act. The codicil disposed of
both real and personal property, and bore the names of three
witnesses. To prove it as a testamentary disposition of personal
property, two witnesses were ample. Therefore, if the court of
probate was satisfied that two only of the witnesses whose names
were on the paper saw the testator sign or acknowledge it, the
court would be bound to admit it to probate, although, for want of
a third witness, there was no sufficient attestation or proof to
make it a good will of real estate, and yet the record of the
probate would be evidence of title to real estate under the devise
therein contained.
The act not only does not (as did the statute of Maryland of
1831, above cited) contain an express grant of jurisdiction to take
probate of wills of real estate, but it does not mention such wills
at all. The leading words, "the record of any will or codicil" in
the first line of this act are no more general than the
corresponding words "an attested copy of any will, testament or
codicil" in the similar provision of the statute of Maryland of
1798, which were held by this Court in
Darby v. Mayer,
before cited, not to embrace wills of real estate, which
Page 162 U. S. 489
the courts had no authority to admit to probate, although that
statute, in other clauses (as this act does not), applied by
necessary implication, and even by express words, to such
wills.
Congress, when framing the act of 1888, cannot be supposed to
have been ignorant of the provision relating to evidence in the
statute of 1798, which had been part of the law of the District of
Columbia for nearly ninety years, nor of the construction which
this Court had given to that provision, nor yet of the want of any
statute concerning records of wills admitted to probate
elsewhere.
There may be some difficulty in ascertaining the motive of
Congress in passing the act of 1888. But difficulty in ascertaining
the motive of Congress is but a slight foundation for attributing
to it an intention, unexpressed, to confer upon the courts of
probate within the District of Columbia an authority over wills of
real estate which they never had before since the district was
first organized.
We regret to be compelled to differ in opinion from the Court of
Appeals of the District of Columbia, which, since the decision
below in the present case, has held that the record of a will
admitted to probate in the District before the passage of the act
of 1888 was competent evidence of the title to real estate in an
action brought since its passage. But the question appears by the
report not to have been argued by counsel or much discussed by the
court.
Barbour v. Moore, 4 App.D.C. 535, 543-544.
The result is that the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia, upon the application for probate of the codicil in
question, had no authority to determine upon its sufficiency to
pass real estate, and that its order in this respect must be
modified.
That the codicil was sufficiently proved to pass personal
property was not controverted at the bar.
Judgment reversed, and case remanded for further proceedings
in conformity with this opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER took no part in the consideration and
decision of this case.