The issue in contest was whether an "advancement" had been made by George Woodward to the wife of (and on account of) his son Andrew Woodward, within *Page 64 the rule of our statute governing that subject. Code, § 3767 et seq. Twenty acres of land, owned by George Woodward in his lifetime, was asserted to be the advancement chargeable against the share of Andrew in his father's estate. The instrument relied on purported to be a deed from George to Andrew's wife. It was wholly void as a conveyance of the title because George Woodward could not write his name, and only one witness who could and did write his name attested the paper; Code, § 3355, requiring, in such circumstances, that both witnesses shall be able and shall write their names as witnesses. The instrument being void, incapable of passing the title to the land from George Woodward, the gift, the asserted advancement, was not perfected. Fennell v. Henry, 70 Ala. 484, 486, 45 Am. Rep. 88; 1 R. C. L. pp. 660, 661; Grey v. Grey, 22 Ala. 233. There must, of course, be a "perfected" gift before inquiry into the donor's intention in the premises may be made. The title to this land, not having been divested in accordance with the exclusive method prescribed by law (Henderson v. Kirkland,127 Ala. 185, 186, 28 So. 674), remained in George Woodward, and upon his death passed to his heirs at law, unless as is not suggested, he otherwise disposed of it. The rulings of the court below consist with these considerations and conclusions, and were therefore free from error.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.