delivered the opinion of the Court:
There is no question as to the validity of the paper writing as the testament of the deceased at the time it was executed,— that is to say, on the 30th day of March, 1898. As the law then existed in this District, a paper purporting to be the will of a deceased person, which related only to personalty, and made and signed by him, required no other formality to render it valid as a testamentary instrument. McIntire v. McIntire, 162 U. S. 383, 40 L. ed. 1009, 16 Sup. Ct. Rep. 814. But a very different and positive rule and requirement of law was enacted and brought into existence since the date of the paper, and was in force at the death of the maker of the paper propounded for probate, as the only and exclusive rule of law upon the subject. And tbe. question is whether the law as it existed at the date of the paper writing, or the law that has since repealed all former laws upon the subject, and prescribed a different and positive rule as a condition upon which a paper purporting to be a will can be admitted to probate, shall control and determine the question as to the validity of the paper offered for probate. It is not a question as to wbat particular property may be operated upon, but whether the paper offered for probate is valid as a will.
By act of Congress of March 3, 1901, a Code of Law for the District of Columbia was adopted, to go into effect and operation from and. after the 1st day of January, 1902.
By the Code thus adopted, chapter 59, title “wills,” it is enacted as follows:
“See. 1623. What may be devised. — All lands, tenements, and hereditaments, and personal estate, which might pass by deed or gift, or which would, in case of tbe proprietor’s dying intestate, descend to or devolve on bis or ber heirs or other representatives, shall be subject to be disposed of, transferred, and *302passed by his or her last will, testament, or codicil, under the following restrictions. . . . ”
“Sec. 1626. Form of Will and Revocation. — All wills and testaments shall be in writing and signed by the testator, 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 testator by at least two credible witnesses, or else they shall he utterly void and of no effect; and, moreover, no devise or bequest, or any clause thereof, shall be revocable otherwise than by some other will or codicil in writing, or other writing declaring the same, or by burning, canceling, tearing, or obliterating the same by the testator himself, or in his presence and by his direction and consent; but all devises and bequests shall remain and continue in force until the same be burned, canceled, tom, or obliterated by the testator or by his direction in the manner aforesaid, or unless the same be altered or revoked by some other will, testament, or codicil in writing, or other writing of the testator, signed in the presence of at least two witnesses attesting the same, any former law or usage to the contrary notwithstanding.”
That this provision of the Code was intended to make one uniform rule, exclusive of all others, applicable alike to both devises of real estate and bequests of personal property, would seem to be free of all doubt. Indeed, language could hardly have been more carefully employed to express that purpose. All lands, tenements, and personal estate can only be disposed of by will, testament, or codicil, subject to the restriction prescribed; and all wills and testaments shall be in form prescribed, and shall be attested and subscribed in the presence of the testator by at least two witnesses, or else they shall be utterly void and of no effect. The use of these terms utterly precludes the application of any other rule to wills of persons dying after the adoption of the Code than the one thereby prescribed. It certainly did not intend to keep the former and the new rule in coexistence to be applied according to the dates of the wills offered for probate, regardless of the fact that the party making the proposed will had died long after the adoption of the Code, and the es*303tablisliment of the new rule for the admission of wills to probate. The former law, as to the disposition by will of personal estate, was exceedingly loose, and allowed of disposition by will of such estate without anything like strict formality, or guards against frauds and abuse. It was the great object of the present provision of the Code to close the door to such frauds and abuse, by throwing around the making of wills of personal estate the same safeguards that have for so many years been the safeguards in devising of real estate under the wise provision of the statute of frauds, which has been generally adopted in the laws of the States of this country.
All wills, in their very nature, are ambulatory and revocable during the life of the testator; and, in respect to personal estate, they speak only from and have effect upon the death of the testator; and to say that a will shall have effect and be declared valid in respect to a prior state of the law, which has been repealed and given place to a quite different rule as a substitute therefor, is to declare valid a testamentary paper without existing law to support it, and that, too, in the very teeth of the existing provision of the Code, which declares that all wills not made and executed according to that provision shall be absolutely void and of no effect. It cannot be questioned that Congress had the legislative power to enact tire provisions of the Code and to make them applicable to all wills whether executed before or after the Code went into effect, if presented for probate after the Code became the law. Suppose, instead of the language employed in the provision of the Code, Congress had declared that, unless the will should appear to have been executed in accordance with the terms prescribed, it should be utterly void and of no effect, whether executed before or after the adoption of the Code, could it be contended that, in such case, there could be any serious question but that such provision would exclude the paper offered in this case from probate ? If that be so, why should the result be different on the terms employed in the provisions of the Code ? They amount substantially to the same thing as the case supposed. The terms employed in the sections of the Code are not only restrictive, but negative and imperative. It is de*304clared that the paper wanting the forms required shall not be .admitted to probate, but shall be utterly void and of no effect, .any former law or usage to the contrary notwithstanding.
Great industry has been shown by counsel in bringing together in their elaborate brief the cases that are supposed to have some bearing on the question here presented. But we have found but .few of them that have any bearing upon the question involved in this case, and those few would seem to be quite against the position contended for by counsel. As for instance, of the cases cited, we have the cases of Houston v. Houston, 3 M’Cord L. 491, 15 Am. Dec. 647; Re Elcock, 4 M’Cord L. 39, 17 Am. Dec. 703 ; Sutton v. Chenault, 18 Ga. 1; Wakefield v. Phelps, 37 N. H. 295; Perkins v. George, 45 N. H. 453 ; Langley v. Langley, 18 R. I. 618, 30 Atl. 465; DePeyster v. Clendining, 8 Paige, 295. These are some of the American cases upon the subject, and these, and all the other cases referred to, turn more or less upon the terms of the particular statutes under which they arose for decision. And so the cases that arose under the English Statute of Erauds, referred to in the brief. By that statute it was enacted “that from and after the 24th day of June, 1677, no devise of land shall be good, unless,” etc., and it was "held that the statute did not apply to wills made before the day named. This ruling was founded upon the obvious reading and meaning of the statute, and the time limited had reference to the time of the devise made, that is, by express terms, all devises were excluded from the operation of the statute that were made prior to the day named. It had no reference to the requirement of form for the probate of wills of personal estate.
The case upon which most reliance is placed by counsel is “that of Carroll v. Carroll, 16 How. 275, 14 L. ed. 936. But we are wholly unable to perceive in what respect that case resembles the present case. That was a case where the attempt was made to make a previously executed will of real estate operate upon and pass after-acquired real estate. It was not a ease involving the validity of the will, nor the sufficiency of the legal requirements to entitle the will to admission to probate. The testator, Carroll, made in due form his will to pass real estate in 1837. *305This was in the State of Maryland, and at the time of the execution of the will the law of that State was that lands of which the testator was not seised at the time of making his will, could not be devised thereby. In 1842 the testator acquired the real estate in controversy, and died seised thereof in August, 1851. In the meantime, that is, in February, 1850, the legislature of the State passed an act which provided: “That every last will and testament executed in due form of law, after the first day of June next, shall be construed with reference to the real and personal estate comprised in it, to speak and take effect as if it had been executed on the day of the death of the testator, unless a contrary intention shall appear by the will.” By the second section of the act it was provided: “That the provisions of this act shall not apply to any will executed before the passage of this act, by any person who may die before the first day of June next, unless in such will the intention of the testator shall appear that the real and personal estate which he may own at his death should thereby pass;” the act to take effect on the first of June then next, 1850.
It was held, upon the construction of this act, that the lands acquired by the testator in 1842 did not pass to the devisee in the will, but descended to the heirs of the testators.
In speaking of the scope and object of the act, the court said that its natural and obvious meaning was that wills executed after the first day of June, 1850, were the only subjects of its operation. That the words “'after the first day of June next” referred to and qualified the words “executed in due form of law,” which they follow, just as in the same section the words "on the day of the death of the testator” referred to and qualified the -word “execute.” In the former case they indicate the time when the will shall be deemed to have been executed; in the latter, the period of time when it was actually executed. The court declared it to be their opinion, that the first section of the law was free from ambiguity, and applied only to wills executed after the first day of June, 1850; and as the will was executed before that day, it was not within the first section. Nor was it within the second section of the act; because, as said by the court, *306that section applied only to cases in which the testator, having executed his will before the passage of the act, might die before the first day of June then next, and the testator, Carroll, survived till after that day.
It is clear, we think, this case of Carroll’s lessee furnishes no authority for the contention of the appellants in this case; nor is there any case cited that has such strict and close analogy to. the present, case as to furnish an authority for the admission of the paper in this case to probate.
We find no error in the order of the court below, refusing, the-admission of the paper offered to probate, and we must therefore affirm said order; and it is so ordered. Order affirmed.