Owens v. Douglas

Wood, J.,

(after stating the facts). Appellants contend. 1. That the circuit court acquired no jurisdiction because the appellees failed to file a cost ¡bond.

Section 1348' of Kirby’s Digest provides that “appeals may be taken to the circuit court from all final orders land judgments of the probate court at any time within twelve months after the rendition thereof by the party aggrieved filing an affidavit andprayer f or appeal, ’ ’ etc. Act 327 of the Acts of 1909 amended section 1348. The latter act sets out section 1348 supra, and amends the same by adding, “And any heir, devisee, legatee or judgment creditor of an estate, who feels aggrieved, may at any time within six months after the rendition thereof, prosecute an appeal to the circuit court from any final order or judgment of the probate court by filing an affidavit and prayer for appeal with the clerk of the probate court, together with a bond to pay the costs of the appeal if the judgment of the probate court is affirmed, and upon the filing of such affidavit and bond for cost, to be approved by the clerk, the court shall make an order granting the appeal at the term at which said judgment or final order shall be rendered or at 'any term within six months thereafter.”

(1) This act, amending section 1348, did not take away the rights of the parties who were aggrieved by the judgment of the probate court to appeal without giving bond for costs. Such bond was not required of the parties aggrieved who were parties to the suit, and the amended act did not affect their rights under the old law. It was only intended to extend the right to appeal to certain classes — “heirs, devisees, legatees and judgment-creditors” — who were not parties to the proceedings in the probate, court at the time the judgment was rendered, but whose interests might, nevertheless, be affected in some manner by ¡such judgment, but who, in the absence of the above amended statute, would have had no right to appeal. See Hall v. Rutherford, 89 Ark. 554.

In Stricklin v. Galloway, 99 Ark. 56-60, speaking of this statute, we said: “Now if the amended statute means ¡anything at all it means that ‘any heir, devisee, legatee or judgment creditor’ of an estate -can appeal from the judgment of the probate court within six months after its rendition whether previously made -a party to the proceedings or not.”

The appellees were proponents of the alleged will, and therefore were not required to give bond specified in the act approved May 31, 1909, supra.

2. The appellants next contend that the instrument set forth was not signed at the end thereof, because it was not signed at the termination of the testamentary or dis-positive clauses, also that the provision requiring that the executors should take care of the testator and his wife so long as they lived rendered the instrument invalid as a will and therefore not subject to probate. But we do not so construe the instrument. It was executed and attested in the manner required by section 8012 of Kirby’s Digest for executing and attesting nonholograph wills. There were no testamentary clauses following the signature of the testator, and it is certain that it was his intention, by his signature, to authenticate and make his own the testamentary clauses that preceded it.

(2) An instrument containing testamentary -provisions, showing the purpose of the signer to dispose of Ms property by will, is valid as a will where it is properly executed, notwithstanding it may contain clauses concerning matters that are not of a testamentary nature. See 40 Oye. p. 1007, and authorities under note 15.

(3) The purpose of our statute in requiring wills to be signed at .the end thereof is to provide against fraud, and this statutory requirement must not be frittered away by loose interpretation. 40 -Cyc. -p. 1105. But certainly an instrument with the various provisions, dispositive and otherwise, closely connected, -as these were, without any intervening blank spaces, and with no testamentary clauses following the signature — (the whole body of the instrument in consecutive order showing but one instrument, and signed at the end thereof) — fully meets the requirements of the statute. In re Gilman, 38 Barb. 364; Morrow’s Estate No. 1, 204 Pa. 479.

(4) The provision requiring the executor to rent the land as long as the testator and his wife lived, and to take care of them as long as they lived, and to take care of Ohairley Dill, and the provision that if the executors left either the testator or his wife before their death, the will should become null and void, “otherwise'to remain in full force and effect at our death,” do not as we construe it, show that the will was not to take effect at the death of the testator 'and that it could not take effect until the death of the testator’s wife. There is nothing in these provisions to indicate that the testator intended that the will should not take effect at his death but that it should take effect at the death of his wife.

The instrument names executors, provides for the payment of just debts and funeral expenses, gives to each of the children named five dollars to be paid after the testator’s death, -and devises to his executors the real estate described, and imposes upon them the duty of paying the debts, funeral expenses and .legacies to his children and of taking care of the testator and his wife as long as they should live, and of taking care of Charley Dill. The instrument constituted the will of Eodgers, and as such was entitled to probate.

It is unnecessary to decide, and we do not decide, whether the instrument vested the fee simple title to the land in appellees. • And as this is only an application to probate the will, it is not proper for us to decide whether the instrument was a contract to make a will between the testator 'and the appellees, and susceptible to enforcement as such. No such question was presented to the trial court. The judgment of the circuit court directing the probate court to admit the instrument to probate is correct, and is, therefore, affirmed.