delivered the opinion oe the coort.
Mrs. Mary Hall Jacob, being about to intermarry with James R. Stewart, was desirous of entering into an antenuptial contract, by which she could secure to herself the right to hold and use her property as her separate estate, and to make such disposition of it as she saw proper by last will and testament. She communicated her wishes to her intended husband, and, obtaining his consent, prepared a will in her own handwriting, by which she devised her estate, one-half of it to her future husband, Stewart, and the remaining half to her two nieces, excluding from the general devise an interest in a dwelling-house in Elizabethtown that she devised to her nephew. She had three brothers and a nephew who were not made the beneficiaries by that instrument, and who are now contesting its probate. A sister of Mrs. Jacob had died many years before the date of the will, leaving children, and among them two infant daughters, one eight days old and the other two years of age. These children were taken charge of by Mrs. Jacob, and raised by her to womanhood, and are made, together with her husband, the objects of her bounty in the disposition she has made of her estate. The will is dated on the ninth of January, 1876; the marriage contract seems to have been written on the eleventh of January, two days after the will was written, and signed by the contracting parties on the twelfth of January, the next day, and the same day on which the marriage ceremony was performed.
After the ceremony was over, and the parties made *42man and wife, the wife, on her way from Elizabethtown to Louisville, on the same day she was married, handed the paper enclosed by an envelope to a friend of hers, telling him to keep it safely, that it was her will. This was in the presence of her husband. This friend, the husband of her deceased sister, took charge of the paper and placed it in the vaults of a bank, where he kept it for three or four years, and Mrs. Stewart, having removed to Wisconsin, it being her husband’s home, wrote, after the lapse of three or four years, to her friend to send her the will. This he did. The will was received by her, and kept in a tin box in her custody and- that of her husband until offered for probate. The paper is identified by Samuels, the friend with whom it was left, as the same paper he had the custody of, he having read it, and is identified as the same paper received by Mrs. Stewart from Samuels, and the same taken from the tin box after her death; that she spoke of her will often while living in Wisconsin is abundantly established, and that the paper offered for probate is the paper alluded to -by her is settled beyond controversy. The preparation and the execution of this paper by Mrs. Stewart on the eve of her marriage is not in fact controverted, or, if denied, is a fact well established.
The propounders of the paper as the last will of Mrs. Stewart are met with the objection by her three brothers, who are the contestants, that the marriage of their sister with Stewart revoked her will, by reason of an express provision of our stat*43ute in regard to wills, and the court below, adopting that view of the case, denied its probate. The ninth section of chapter 113, General Statutes, title “Wills,” provides: “Every will made by a man or woman shall be revoked by his or her marriage, except a will made in the exercise of a power of appointment when the estate thereby appointed would not, in default of such appointment, pass to his or her heir, personal representative, or next of kin.” Section 11, of the same chapter, also provides, that “No will or codicil, or any part thereof, which shall' be in any manner revoked, shall, after being revoked, be revived, otherwise than by re-execution thereof, or by a codicil executed in the same manner hereinbefore required, and then only to the extent to which an intention to revive the same is shown thereby.”
It is manifest, under these two sections of the statute, that a will once revoked can only be revived by a re-execution of the instrument in the manner pointed out by the statute. It is in fact the making of another will, and must be executed in the same manner in which the original will was required to be executed.
The will offered for probate is all in the handwriting of the testatrix, who, at the time of its ■execution, was the widow of Jacob, and it being holographic, it is contended that its preservation by Mrs. Stewart for so many years, and her frequent recognition of the paper as her will, so often made during a long period of time, amounts not only to a republication of the paper as her will, but such *44an execution of the instrument as makes it a complete will. There can be no doubt, from the testimony of those intimately acquainted with the testatrix, that she always, from the date of the execution of the paper until her death, regarded it as her last will, and as having given her property to those whose claim upon her affections made them the objects of her bounty. This manifest intention, however plain on the part of Mrs. Stewart, will not be permitted to override the plain letter of a statute that was enacted for the purpose of preventing a litigation over the question of intent, and admitting to probate a paper already revoked, that has no stronger proof of its validity than the mere intention of the maker to impart a new life to the instrument.
The statute in regard to wills, and particularly the two sections referred to, with their meaning and purpose properly understood, leaves but little room for construction. This court, in the case of Porter v. Ford, reported in 82 Ky., 191, where testatrix executed a paper in her own handwriting, purporting to be her will, while she was a married woman, and after she became discovert, not only recognized the paper as her will, but made indorsements upon it to that effect, held, that as she was then capable of making a will, such a recognition made it a valid instrument, and, being all in her own handwriting, there was nothing in the statutes requiring the paper to be rewritten or resubscribed by her after her disability was removed, in order to make it a testamentary paper. It was also held in that case, in construing the section of the statute in regard to revocation, that *45the section did not apply, because the paper, at no time during the coverture, was valid, but absolutely void, and its recognition after the death of her husband gave to the paper, for the first time, legal vitality. That case, relied on as authority in this case in support of the will, is not analogous, because the question here involved is whether this will of Mrs. Jacob had ever been revoked; for, if revoked, new life could never be imparted to it by mere recognition or a republication, because the statute requires where a will has been once revoked there must be a re-execution, and the will of Mrs. Jacob can not well be held to be the will of Mrs. Stewart, if that paper was revoked by the marriage with Stewart. By the rule of the common law, the marriage of a woman revoked a will previously made by her, because, if allowed to stand, it would affect the marital rights of the husband, and during marriage no power existed by reason “of the disability of the wife, either to revoke, alter or make another will. At common law, however, when the wife had the right of disposing of her separate estate by an antenuptial agreement, her will previously made was not revoked by her subsequent marriage, and in this State a married woman may dispose of her separate estate by last will and testament. (General Statutes, chapter 113, section 4.) In this, case the power to make a will during the marriage, and the separate estate in the wife, existed. by reason of the antenuptial contract between Mrs. Jacob and her intended husband, executed on the twelfth of January, 1876, the day on which the marriage ceremony was performed, and two days after the date *46of the will. It is therefore contended that, as the will of Mrs. Stewart, then Jacob, was executed on the ninth of January, it was revoked by the marriage, and not having been re-executed, her estate descends to her heirs at law. This position is based on the section of the -statute referred to, by which a will made prior to the marriage is revoked, unless made under a power to dispose of property that would not, if undisposed of, pass to the heirs and representatives of the donee of the power, the argument being that it is immaterial how the power to make such a will is conferred, whether by a contract between the wife and a stranger, or by reason of an antenuptial contract; if the property disposed of by the will before the marriage is the property of the wife, the subsequent marriage revokes it. That the statute is imperative, and no contract by which a will is made prior to the marriage can affect its provisions, although the will is made by the consent of the husband, and under a contract that fixes definitely the marital rights of husband and wife. It must be conceded that the wife at no time from the date of the will until her death was disqualified by the disability of coverture, or from any other cause, so far as appears in the record, from making a valid disposition of her estate by last will and testament, and while this same fact exists in regard to her husband, we perceive no reason why the parties, when about to consummate the marriage, may not agree that the wife may, by will, dispose of her estate as she sees proper, or that a will already made may retain its legal virtue, after the marriage, and particularly in a case like this. *47The will was executed by the intended wife in pursuance of the antenuptial contract. It was made and published, by the consent of the husband, he having, by the marriage contract, relinquished all interest in her estate. It was executed as if the context had been signed and the marriage ceremony performed, and was so directly connected with those two events, as to time, place and circumstance, as to make the whole but one transaction. The intended husband, before he left his home in the Northwest to consummate the marriage, had agreed that the wife’s estate should be secured to her. On the tenth of January, 1876, after reaching her home in Kentucky, she told him that she was then writing her will, or had written it. The antenuptial contract is dated, on the eleventh, but executed by both the parties on the twelfth, the day on which the ceremony of marriage took place. After the marriage and on the same day she was leaving her home, the wife, in the presence' of her husband, confided her will to the custody of her friend in Kentucky, in pursuance of the contract, and, we must presume, with a full knowledge of the, statute on the subject of the revocation of wills; and from the date of the marriage until the death of the wife, the paper in question' was recognized by both as. the will of the wife, although the husband was not aware of its contents.
(Jiving to the statute in question" a reasonable construction, is there any rule of law that would require a court to sever the dates of the two writings -and the date of the marriage, with a view of determining that the will of the wife was revoked by the marriage,. *48and the testamentary disposition made by the wife under such circumstances disregarded? The will was in execution of the marriage contract. That contract was signed on the day the marriage took place; it was delivered, although dated on the ninth, to the friend,of the wife on that day for safe-keeping, and must be regarded as a part of the entire transaction.
The reason for the enactment of this statute was to prevent fraud upon the husband or wife, by reason ■of a will executed by the one or the other prior to the marriage, and the ^disturbance or change that would necessarily arise from such an act on the marital relation, in so far as it affected the right of property, and in case of an unmarried woman for the additional reason that after the marriage the wife would be incapable of making, revoking or altering her will. In this case the marriage never deprived Mrs. Stewart of the power to revoke the will made or the power to make a new will. This right she could have exercised at any time, and when the husband surrenders at the •same time his marital rights, even if these transactions can not be said to have taken place on the day of the marriage, who has the right to complain but the husband ? His marital rights are preserved or relinquished at his own instance and by the agreement, and the statute can not apply, because the very reason for its enactment has been removed. It is not a ■question here whether the will was properly executed, for its validity prior to the marriage ceremony is not controverted ; nor does the question arise as to whether or not a holographic will, once revoked, can be revived 'by. a républieation, when the statute requires a re-ex*49ecution, but the question is, was the will of Mrs. Jacob revoked by her marriage with Stewart ? It is conceded that, by a contract, the property rights of either could be regulated and fixed, but when a will is made in pursuance of that contract, and in this instance where it is directly connected with the act of marriage, we are asked to say that the marriage revoked the will, because dated two days prior to the antenuptial contract and the marriage ceremony. The marital rights having been settled by their agreement, and no one else being interested, directly or indirectly, but the husband, why should the will of the wife be revoked % It could have no effect on after-born children, because, by section 24, of chapter 113, they, and not the devisee, take the estate, unless the child should die under age and unmarried and without issue. Was the statute intended to apply to any such case as this? It is argued that the exceptions made by its provisions excluded the idea of any other exception. Should such a construction be given its provisions? If there had been no exception, then the language of the statute might have been held to embrace every will made by a married woman, whether under the exercise of a power or not, and to remedy this, the statute was enacted making an exception where the marital rights could not be affected by the execution of the power. It was to protect the mari tal rights of parties that the statute was enacted, and it was never designed to prevent parties, by written contract, from fixing their marital rights, and to give to one or both, by an antenuptial contract between the two, the power to dispose of their estate *50by will. It is idle to say that, by a deed evidencing a marriage contract, the parties' about to consummate it can, before marriage, fix and determine their right to property, by reason of the marital relation that is binding on both, and can not, under the same contract, agree that the one or the other shall dispose of their property by a will already executed if made as. the statute requires. The will made by the wife in this case was as 'much a part of the marriage contract as if it had been inserted in it. In the case, of Phaup v. Wooldridge, 14 Gratt., 332, relied on by counsel for the ajipellee, the testator made his will that was properly signed and attested in the year 1852. Some two years thereafter he intermarried with Mrs. Bass, and by an antenuptial contract she surrendered all interest in his estate. The question in that case, under a statute similar to ours, was whether the marriage to Mrs. Bass revoked the will of Phaup. The wife was not a party to the litigation, but the will was assailed by the heirs. The court held that they marriage did revoke the will, and that the recognition by the testator, in the presence of one of the witnesses of the instrument as his will, was not a re-execution; the court further holding that marriage alone, save in the exception made, was an absolute-revocation, and that the marriage settlement in nowise affected the construction to be given the statute. While the construction in that case sustains the views of counsel and the judgment below, the facts are not at all analogous to the case being considered. There the will of Phaup was made long before his marriage, and when he was about to marry Mrs. *51Bass two years after an agreement was entered into by which the wife was empowered to devise her estate, and in consideration of that fact relinquished' all interest in his estate. She made no will nor was she asserting any claim to his property, nor did they contract with reference to the will already made by the future husband. It was a naked proposition submitted to the court as to whether or not the marriage revoked the will. If Mrs. Bass, in that case, in pursuance to the power given her to make a will by the -marriage contract, liad, in the exercise of the power and on the eve of the marriage, executed her will, we are inclined to doubt that the court would have permitted the husband to have asserted his marital rights and held the will void, because dated two days before the marriage, when made in pursuance of the antenuptial agreement; still the reasoning of the court in that case, and the construction given the statute, would lead to the conclusion that the will would have been held to have been revoked.
In the case of Osgood v. Bliss, reported in 141 Mass., 474, the parties were married in the State of Indiana, and on the eve of the marriage made an antenuptial contract, by which it was agreed that the marriage should not revoke a will that had been made by the intended wife. The husband had never seen the will, and knew nothing of its contents, yet he signed the agreement. The statute of Indiana contained no exceptions, but provided: ‘‘After the making of a will by an unmarried woman, if she shall marry, such will shall be deemed revoked by such marriage.” The wife dying, the husband claimed *52about twelve thousand dollars in money or choses in action, that she had disposed of by her will, on the ground that the marriage rendered the instrument a nullity. The Supreme Court .of Massachusetts held that the marriage did not revoke the power to make the will. It is true in that case the court draws the distinction between the execution of a power and the execution of the will, and bases its conclusion on that distinction. They proceed to say that the reason given for holding that marriage is deemed to be a .revocation of a woman’s will is because by the marriage she divests herself of the power of revoking it, and destroys the power to change or alter it. It is argued that such reasoning does not apply to an appointment by will, and, for that reason, it was held that the marriage was not a revocation. The argument is well founded and based on the common law rule, and the statute but follows it, and as such reasoning can not apply to the exercise of a right by a married woman to make a will when she, at all times before and after the marriage, had the legal capacity to make a will, that case supports directly the principle recognized in this case. Besides, the marital rights of both husband and wife are fixed by the very contract under which the disability of coverture, in so far as it stands in the way of the execution by her of a will, is entirely removed.
We are satisfied that a proper construction of the statute should not confine the court to the one exception of the exercise of a power to- make a will by a married woman, when disposing of the property of another, or of property that would not pass to her *53heirs, but that the contract rights of husband and wife, determining the right of property and fixing the status of the marital relation in that respect before the marriage, although it may recognize the existence of a will then made, if properly executed, should be regarded, and that such cases are not embraced by the statute. The statute of Wisconsin provided in reference to such wills, ‘ ‘ Excepting only that nothing contained in this section shall prevent the revocation implied by law from subsequent changes in the condition of the testator.” The court held that the révocation implied by' law evidently means such as would be implied at common law — “ the marriage of a woman was the revocation of her will previously made.” Ann Ward, living in Wisconsin, made a will during her second marriage, by which she gave her property to her children by her first husband. She had no issue of the second or third marriages. By the laws of that State a married woman has the right to dispose of her estate by will. Having made the will during her second marriage, she married Ward, her third husband, and shortly after died. Her will was admitted to probate, the Supreme Court to which the appeal had been taken, saying: “To hold that marriage of itself revoked a former will of the wife under the circumstances here presented, when, on the next day after the marriage she had the power to reinstate the same writing as Iier last will and testament, would seem to be absurd.” (Will of Ward, 70 Wis., 251.)
In view of our statute it seems to us that it would be trifling with the rights of the husband and the devisees of Mrs. Stewart, to so construe its provisions *54as to destroy the testamentary act of the testatrix, and, if no other reason exists for denying the probate of this paper, it should be admitted to probate as the last will of Mrs. Stewart, formerly Jacob.
The judgment is. reversed and cause remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.