Prudhomme v. Savant

MONROE, C. J.

Plaintiffs sue to have declared null and void an instrument purporting to be the nuncupative will, by public act, of Angelas 0. Prudhomme (of whom they are the legal heirs), upon the ground that, save the signatures, the instrument is “typewritten,” instead of being in the handwriting of the notary by whom it was executed; it being admitted that the typewriting machine was operated by the notary. The question to be decided is concisely stated by defendant’s counsel as follows:

“Under the article in question [article 1578 of the Civil Code] we readily concede that no one else but the notary himself could receive and write down the testament, but we earnestly maintain that, so long as the notary receives it, either in handwriting or on the typewriter, the requirements of the law are fully met.”

The articles of the Civil Code which seem relevant to the question are as follows:

“Art. 1575. * * * Testaments, whether nuncupative or mystic, must be drawn up in writing, either by the testator himself, or by some other person under his dictation. * * *

“Art. 1577. * * * Nuncupative testaments may be made by public act, or by act under private signature.

“Art. 1578. * * * The nuncupative testaments by public act must be received by a notary public, in presence of three witnesses residing in the place where the will is executed, or of five witnesses not residing in the place. This testament must be dictated by the testator, and written, by the notary as it is dictated. It must then be read by the testator in presence of the witnesses. Express mention is made of the whole, observing that all these formalities must be fulfilled at one time without interruption, and without turning aside to other acts.

“Art. 1579. * * * This testament must be signed by the testator; if he declares that he knows not how, or is not able to sign, express mention of his declaration, as also the cause that hinders him from signing, must be made in the act.

"Art. 1580. * * * This testament must be signed by the witnesses, or at least by one of them for all, if the others cannot write.

“Art. 15S8. * * * ' The olographic testament is that which is written by the testator himself. In order to be valid, it must be entirely written, dated and signed by the hand of the testator. It is subject to no other form, and may be made anywhere, even out of the state. * * *

“Art. 1595. * * * The formalities to which testaments are subject by the provision *259of the present section must be observed; otherwise the testaments are null and void.

“Art. 1647. * * * Nuncupative testaments received by public acts do not require to be proved, that their execution may be ordered; they are full proof of themselves, unless they are alleged to be forged.”

Article 930 of the Code of Practice reads:

“If the will be made by a public act, it shall be sufficient for the petitioner [praying that it be ordered executed] to annex a copy of it in due form to his petition, and to pray for the execution and recording of it.”

“Art. 14 [Civil Code]. * * * The words of a law are generally to be understood in their most usual signification, without attending so much to the niceties of grammar rules as to the general and popular use of the words.

“Art. 15. * * * Terms of art or technical terms and phrases, are to be interpreted according to their received meaning and acceptation with the learned in the art, trade or profession to which they refer. * * *

“Art. 19. * * * When, to prevent fraud, or from any other motives of public good, the law declares certain acts void, its provisions are not to be dispensed with on the ground that the particular act in .question has been proved not to be fraudulent, or not to be contrary to the public good.”

As far back as 1813 the validity of an instrument purporting to be a nuncupative will by public act was attacked upon the ground (among others) that it had not been written by the notary, but by his clerk, and, the law upon that subject being the same then as now (Code of 1808, art. 108), this court said:

“The law which makes it the duty of the notary .to write the will, is not only clear in its expressions — it is also dear in its object. The Legislature has been unwilling to trust any body else but the notary with the sacred function of writing a will — a function which, in unfaithful or negligent hands, may be liable to abuse of the most serious and most dangerous nature. But, be that as it may, the law is such, and must be obeyed. * * * The other objections raised against this will, though not without some weight, are not deemed of sufficient importance to be adverted to. But we are of opinion that a nuncupative will, by public act, must be in the handwriting of the notary himself, and that it must be dictated by the notary to the testator, in the presence of the witnesses. Consequently, although there appears nothing in this case but what is perfectly fair, the court is bound to say that his will is not valid in law.” Knight v. Smith, 3 Mart. (O. S.) 165 et seq.

Counsel for defendant concede that the doctrine that the writing of a nuncupative will by public act must be done by the notary himself remains unquestioned and is unquestionable, and they concede that the olographic will must be written, dated, and signed by the testator, and that that requirement excludes the use of a “typewriter”; but they argue with regard to the nuncupative will by public act that the execution (printing we should call it) of such an instrument by means of a “typewriter” is the “writing” of it as required by the statute. That view of the matter, as we think, not only ignores the rule of interpretation that “the words of a law are generally to be understood in their most usual signification,” but it attributes to the language of the law here in question a meaning which its makers could not, by any possibility, have intended, since the “typewriter” of to-day .had not then been invented, was not brought into use until after a lapse of more than 60 years (its earliest appearance having been, probably, in 1873) and was and is a printing, rather than a writing machine. In the meanwhile the law which was applied in the case above cited had been incorporated in the Code of 1825, amended and re-enacted in 1870, and during that entire period there had been but two commonly known and commonly used methods whereby the thoughts and wishes of men were expressed and perpetuated in a form intelligible through the sense of sight — the one by writing; the other by printing.

Those words, respectively, are defined as follows:

*261“Writing. * * * 1. Specifically, as distinguished from printing, stamping, incision, etc., the act or art of tracing graphic signs, by hand, on paper, parchment or any other material with a pen and ink, style, pencil, or any other instrument; also the written character or words.”

“Printing. * * * 2. The art or process of producing printed matter for reading (including illustrations, etc.) by composition and imposition of types, and their subjection, when inked to pressure upon paper in a printing press; the typographic art, typography in the fullest sense. * * * Printing comprises two distinct trades — composition, or the art of arranging types, and press work, or the art of getting impressions from composed types.”

Cent. Die. and Oyó. Verb. “Writing,” “Printing.”

So far as we are advised, printing presses were operated by hand exclusively in this country prior to the adoption of the Code of 1808, and probably until a much later period; and there are, no doubt, many hand presses in operation at this time, but whether there are any notaries who are capable of setting the type required for particular work and operating the presses in the printing of such work is another matter. This court is called upon at times to examine candidates for notarial commissions as to their qualifications, but, knowing of no law which requires those officers to qualify as printers, and not ourselves being so qualified, we have not extended our examinations in that direction. Upon the whole, we are satisfied that our lawmakers did not intend that the duty imposed upon notaries of writing nuncupative wills as dictated by testators without interruption and without turning aside to other acts should be discharged by the operation of printing presses, and, we hasten to add, the learned counsel for defendants do not so contend.

The question which remains is: If the lawmakers did not intend that nuncupative wills by public acts should be “written” by hand printing machines, then in common use, is it reasonable to suppose that they intended that the requirement that they should be written by the notaries might be complied with by the use of machines not then invented, not to be invented for more than half a century, and the operation and product of which differs almost as widely from the operation and product of writing by hand as do the operation and product of hand printing machines? Our answer to that question is “No;” our conclusion being that it was and is the intention of the law, not only that the will in question should and shall be written by the notary, himself, but that it should, and shall, be “written” in the sense in which that word was generally understood when the law was enacted and reenacted prior to the invention of the typewriter ; that is, by the hand of the notary, and not through the instrumentality of any machine the finished work of which may upon its face be insusceptible of identification as that of the notary. The “typewriter” (so called) is essentially a machine of that character, a printing, and not a writing, machine, in which the metal type constituting each letter is attached to or molded upon one end of an arm or lever, the other end of which is a key (such as a piano key) forming one of a keyboard, so that, upon the striking of the key by the operator, the type, with the mechanical interposition of a carbon-blacked ribbon, stamps upon the paper (mechanically brought into position to receive it) the figure of the letter which the type represents; the product being, not “script,” readily susceptible of identification as the work of the supposed writer, but printed matter indistinguishable from that which might be produced by any other person on any other machine from the sainé factory. The term “typewriter,” as applied to the machine in question involves as it appears to us an unwarranted use of the word “writer,” since the difference between letters and words drawn with a pen and those *263stamped witli a type or molded form is the same as that between any other hand drawing and an impression made by a stamp or die or taken from an engraving on steel or stone. The definition of the term “typewriter” as we find it in the work already cited seems inaccurate in describing it as a “machine for mechanical writing,” since the operation of the machine more nearly resembles printing, thus:

“Typewrite. * * * To print or reproduce by means of a typewriter. * * *

“Typewriter. * * * A machine for mechanical writing, operated by hand, and printing one letter, or combination of letters, at a time, by the impress of the type adapted to that purpose. 2. An operator on a typewriting machine; one who prints characters on paper by means of a typewriter. * * *

“Typewriting. * * * The process of printing, letter by letter, by the use of a typewriter; also work done by this process.”

Cent. Die. and Cyc.

Defendant’s learned counsel say in their brief:

“Of course, no one would contend that such an instrument (referring to the nuncupative will by public act considered in Knight v. Smith, supra) would be valid, under article 1578, because that article specifically provides that the will must be written by the notary. But that decision accentuates the ground upon which the will under discussion was set aside. It declares: ‘The Legislature has been unwilling to trust anybody else but the notary with the sacred function of writing a will — a function which, in unfaithful or negligent hands, may be liable to abuse of the most serious and most dangerous character.’

“And in Succession of Robertson, 49 La. Ann. 868, 21 South. 586, 62 Am. St. Rep. 672, the court had to deal with an olographic will which was partly printed. Of course, that case bears no analogy to the instant case, except that the court did intimate that, unless it was expressly forbidden by a prohibitory law, printed or typewritten words could serve as in the place of handwriting, thus: ‘The writing essential to a deed may include printed words without violating a prohibitory law. But in the matter of an olographic testament it must be written; otherwise the pain of nullity must be inevitable.’ ”

The identical requirement which obliges the notary himself to receive the will, as dictated by the testator, also requires that it shall be, “written” by him as thus received, and it is no more specific in the one respect than the other; nor does it appear to us that the reason for the requirement is any the less obvious and imperative in the one case than the other; the purpose throughout being to place and fix the grave responsibility of carrying into effect the intention of the testator upon a responsible official whose work should thereafter be susceptible of easy identification. Moreover, the language of the court in the cited case reads:

“But we are of opinion that a nuncupative will by public act must be in the handwriting of the notary himself.”

And it was because the will there in question was not written by the notary, and hence was not in his handwriting, that it was declared invalid. It is also said that the requirement as to the olographic will that “it must be entirely writtep, dated, and signed by the hand of the testator” and, as to the nuncupative testament by public act that it is “merely,” that it “must be written by the notary,” indicates that the lawmakers intended to make a distinction with respect to the manner in which the respective wills should be executed.

It is obvious that it was the intention to make a wide distinction between the manner of making the wills, since the one is required to be written by the testator and the other by the notary, at the dictation of the testator, but we find no more reason for assuming that the notary could legally make use of a hand printing press or machine in preparing the will required to be written by him than in so assuming with regard to the will which the testator is required to write with his own hand. How else could either will be written save By the hand of the person authorized to write it; and why, in ei-*265titer case, should the lawmaker have required the will to he written and have declared that the formalities to which they were thus made subject “must be observed; otherwise the testaments are null and void,” if they intended ;hat those formalities need not be observed '

The learned counsel cites the Supreme Court of the United States Benson v. McMahon, 127 J. S. 457, 8 Sup. Ct. 1240, 32 L. Ed. 234 to the effect that, “where * * * such instruments are required to be in writing, the term ‘writing’ includes printing as well as script”; but it is hardly necessary to say that, in using that language, the court was not interpreting or applying the provisions of'our Civil Code regulating the manner of making wills in this state; the facts in that connection being that it was considering an application for habeas corpus by a person who was sought to be extradited by the Mexican authorities upon a charge of having perpetrated a swindle in the city of Mexico by issuing and selling in advance and without authority a large number of tickets to a concert ‘ to be given in that city by Adelina Patti under the management of Henry Abbey, the particular charge against the applicant being that the tickets, which bore the names of Abbey and were printed, had been forged, and his contention being that, as they were not written, they were not susceptible of being forged. The immediate question before the court was whether the offense with which the applicant was charged was extraditable under the then existing treaty between the two governments, and the court found that “there are no common-law crimes of the United States”; that “almost every state in the Union has recast her criminal law by the enactment of statutes in such a mode that the common law is now only appealed to as an aid in the definition of crimes”; that it was not called on to examine critically whether the offense charged was technically forgery at common law; after which, however, followed the statement:

“But we are not satisfied that the crime of forgery, even at common law, is limited to the production by means of a pen of the resemblance of some man’s genuine signature which was produced with a pen. This view of the subject would exclude from the definition of this crime all such instruments as government bonds, bank notes and other obligations of great value, as well as railroad tickets, where the signature of the officer which makes them binding and effectual is impressed upon them by means of a plate or other device representing his genuine signature.”

And in support of the view thus expressed the court cites various authorities, the bearing of which, and of the main case, upon the question here presented, is indirect, not to say inappreciable. Among other cases cited was Henshaw v. Foster, 9 Pick. (Mass.) 312, in which it appeared that a provision of the Constitution of Massachusetts declared that “every member of the House of Representatives shall be chosen by written votes” ; that a printed ballot was offered, and rejected; and that the matter was taken to the Supreme Court, by which it was decided that the printed vote came within the meaning of the law requiring votes to be in writing.

9 Pick, is not at hand, but the statement by the Supreme Court of the United States that the opinion thus referred to was “very well considered” requires no verification, and we entertain no doubt that the circumstances upon which the opinion was based were such as to authorize the conclusion reached. On the other hand, in State ex rel. Mize v. McElroy, 44 La. Ann. 796, 11 South. 133, 16 L. R. A. 278, 32 Am. St. Rep. 355, it appeared that the law required the names of candidates for certain offices to be printed on the ballots, and that relators’ name, having been so printed, was erased from a number of the ballots, and the name of his opponent substituted in writing; and it was *267held by this court that the erasure and substitution were illegal.

The question 'in both cases was: What was the intention of the law makers, the purpose to be accomplished, and the methods to be adopted for its accomplishment? Counsel for defendant cites also Hunt v. Dexter Sulphite Pulp & Paper Co., 183 N. Y. 544, 76 N. E. 1097, to the effect that a typewritten notice answers the requirement of a written notice as contained in ah Employers’ Liability Act; Cummings v. Wallower, 47 Okl. 627, 149 Pac. 864, L. R. A. 1915E, 774, to the effect that by-laws required to be “copied in a legible hand” may be copied upon a typewriter; Deep River Nat. Bank’s Appeal, 73 Conn. 341, 47 Atl. 675, to the effect that, under a statute providing that no acknowledgment or promise by a person deceased shall take a claim out of the statute of limitations,” unless the same be contained in some writing made or signed by the party charged, a typewritten acknowledgment shown to have been dictated by such party, and to which his name was affixed, with his authority, by means of a rubber stamp, was admissible.

The only case involving a will to which we are referred is that of Sears v. Sears, (mentioned by counsel as “another leading case on the subject” of the_ sufficiency of the product of the typewriter where writing is required), reported in 77 Ohio St. 104, 82 N. E. 1067, 17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 353, 11 Ann. Cas. 1008. The position of the learned counsel, however, finds no support in that case wherein it appears that section 4947 in part 3 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio (being that part, as we infer, which regulates the making of wills), declares that “unless the context shows that another sense was intended, the' word “writing” includes printing” ; that in 1895 section 5916 of that part was amended so as to read :

“Every last will and testament (except nun-cupative wills hereinafter provided for) shall be in writing and may be handwritten or typewritten. * * * ”

And it was contended that the effect of the amendment was not merely to authorize a typewritten will, but also to exclude a printed will; which contention the court disposed of as follows, to wit:

“Typewriting has come into general use since the- revision of the statutes in 1880, and the manifest intention of the Legislature was to authorize its use in addition to handwriting and printing in the making of wills, and not to substitute typewriting for printing; so that a will is not invalid because it is partly in print.”

It will be observed, therefore, that writing-was not held to include either typewriting or printing, but that special legislation was thought to be required to authorize any will to be made in either of those forms, and that nuncupative wills were expressly excepted from the operation of that legislation.

Judgment affirmed.