The issue, as stated in the paper books, *444is a.s follows: “ The plaintiff avers that the instrument of the 12th of August, 1843, is the last will and testament of Daniel Kceports; defendants plead that it is not.”
The issue involves the legal execution of the will as well as the sanity of the testator at the time of its alleged execution. The court instructed the jury as follows: “ It is sufficiently shown that Daniel Keeports executed the paper. The question, therefore, depends upon his capacity to make a will at the time he affixed his mark to the paper,” and this is assigned as the first error.
In both of the countries from which we have derived many of our principles of jurisprudence, there was a marked tendency to depart from the statutory provisions regulating the execution of wills. In the history of Roman jurisprudence this tendency was conspicuous, so much so, that one of the novels of Theodosius the Second, after reciting the mode of execution prescribed in the ancient law, proceeds to state that, “ the ignorant presumption of posterity had changed the cautious rule of the ancient law,” and re-enacts its substantial provisions. The Lex Cornelia Testamentaria was designed to recall the practice to the rule prescribed, and finally the legislation of Justinian simplified the mode of proof and attestation, and carefully guarded their execution.
In England, the deviations from the forms of attestation and proof, prescribed in the statute of 29th Charles the Second, c. S, § 5, are emphatic and remarkable, and are familiar to the profession. This statute was itself, so far as it regarded the execution of wills, intended to reform the departure from statutory provisions, and guard with new securities the mode of authentication. The wide departure from the statute of Charles the Second, since its enactment, was the occasion of a report from the real property commissioners in England in 1833, in which the enactment of provisions somewhat similar to our statute of the same year is recommended. In Pennsylvania, very great latitude was allowed in departing from the statute. Our judges were seduced by the authority and sanction of the English courts, in sustaining the deviations from the statute of Charles the Second, until with us it became an evil of much magnitude, and was a matter of some uncertainty even in the profession, as to the extent to which inchoate writings or memoranda, left by a decedent, might or might not be his last will and testament. In this posture of the matter, the act of Assembly of the 8th of April, 1833, was enacted, the sixth section of which provides: “ That every will shall be in writing, and unless the person making the same shall be prevented by the extremity of his *445last sickness, shall be signed by him at the end thereof, or by some person in his presence, and by his express direction, and in all cases shall be proved by the oaths or affirmations of two or more competent witnesses', otherwise, such will shall be of no effect.” Thus, a plain and simple form of execution is provided, easily understood by the unlearned as well as the learned; and it is of the highest importance to society that it should be preserved. The strong ligament formed by social ties and natural kindred, as well as the right of dominion over property which civilized nations sanction and secure, induces a feeling in all classes of society to favour the practice of making wills. But. at the same time, our statute of distributions is so just, and the facilities of imposition upon a weak or illiterate person are so great, that the utmost certainty which human laws can provide, ought to be attained, before an instrument of that nature is allowed to displace the just provisions of the general law.
The question then occurs, was the paper alleged to be the will of Daniel Keeports, executed according to the wise and salutary directions of the statute ? Henry Carpenter, one of the attesting witnesses, testifies that the deceased said he could not write, he was too weak. The witness does not say that he heard the deceased request any person to write his name at the bottom of the will. He merely saw him making .his mark opposite the seal. He does not testify that he heard the deceased, or any one else, call the paper a will. It was not read while he was in the room. Christian Hess, the other witness, says, I saw Daniel Keeports put his mark there. I put his name there by his request. This witness proved that the deceased could write, and that he lived two or three weeks afterward. The first witness said, that deceased told Squire Hess, when he asked him to sign his name, that he was too weak. That was all the witness heard deceased say. Squire Hess had requested him to act as a witness. This comprises the whole proof of the execution of the instrument. From any thing that Carpenter testifies, the deceased might have thought it was a deed or some other instrument. It was established that he was a person who could write, and that he made his mark. It is testified by Carpenter, that when Hess requested him to write his name, he said he was too' weak. But neither of the witnesses testify that the extremity of sickness was such that he could not write his name. They say nothing on that subject. It might be inferred, in the absence of all proof to the contrary, that if he was able to make his mark, he could have written his name. At all events, the act of Assembly *446requires that two witnesses should prove that the extremity of his sickness was so great that he was thereby prevented from writing his name. That proof is absent in this case. He did not make an effort. A mark affords no criterion by which proof of it can be made, whereas the signature even of a man wasted by disease, although his hand may tremble and vibrate, has some resemblance to what it was in a state of health; like the worn features of a dying man, which still bear traces of what they were in his vigour. The mark, although it was held sufficient under the English statute, is not recognised by our act of Assembly, and the substitute for it is, that the testator shall request some person to write his name, and that request must be proved by two witnesses. In this case only one witness, Christian Hess, proves that fact. The proof, therefore, required by the statute, is deficient in two of the important ingredients required. It is not proved by two witnesses that the extremity of his last sickness was such that he could not have written his name if he had made the effort; and if it had been so proved, the attestation is not in. evidence by two witnesses: to wit, that some other person, in his presence, and by his express direction, signed his name to the paper for him. The instrument, therefore, in the language of the act of Assembly, is of no effect. Cavett’s Appeal, 8 Watts & Serg. 21; Stricker v. Groves, 5 Whart. 386; Dunlop v. Dunlop, 10 Watts, 153, are strong authorities on this point.
The legislative and judicial mind have met on this subject; and if deviations from the statute on account of apparent hardship in particular cases, (which in fact constitutes ignorant or careless individuals the law-makers in the community,) are disallowed, and if the sum of proof, required by the act of Assembly is enforced by the judiciary, the clause in the act which prescribes the form of execution and attestation, will in process of time become as familiar as household words to the community, and the last hours of life will in some degree be softened by the certainty which will rest on the disposition of property by will.
The second and third errors are not sustained.
In the opinion of this court, the paper purporting to be a schedule of advancements made by the alleged testator to some of his children, did not form part of the alleged will. The paper of advancements is not mentioned or referred to in the will, was made at a different time, and can have no effect on the question of admitting the instrument to probate, or the proof of its execution.
The fourth error assigned would seem to have been founded on *447some misapprehension. In the judgment of this court, the law on the subject of insanity was correctly stated by the court below, in the whole paragraph, taken together, from which a single sentence is extracted in the assignment.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, for the first error assigned, and a venire de novo awarded.