Court Opinion

ID: 3866342
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:00:10.930042+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:14:57.478719
License: Public Domain

In this case the appellant appeals from a decree of the court of probate of the town of North Providence. A copy of the will of Susan Olney, duly proved and allowed in a court of probate in the state of Wisconsin, was presented, with a copy of the probate thereof, under the seal of the probate court in Wisconsin; and a request was made in writing, that the same might be filed and recorded in the probate office of the town of North Providence, where the testator had real and personal estate, whereon the same might operate. Objection was made on the ground, that the said will was not executed, attested, and subscribed, according to the law of this state. The court below sustained this objection, and refused to allow the copy to be filed and recorded. It is admitted that the will was attested, subscribed, and executed, according to the law of the state of Wisconsin, though not according to the law of this state. It is clear, that it cannot be admitted here as a valid will of real estate; and the question is, whether it can be filed and recorded here as a valid will of personal estate.
The established law in this country and in England is, that testamentary dispositions of personal or movable property are governed by the law of the place of the testator's domicil at the time of his death; and that wills of real estate are governed by the law of the place where the property is locally situate. Story's Conflict of Laws, §§ 464-468, 473.
We are of opinion that there is no statute provision in this state which affects to change or modify these principles of the common law. The defendant's counsel contends, that the provision of the 17th section of the act in relation to wills, (Rev. Stats. ch. 154,) repeals the common law, or abrogates its operation in respect to foreign wills, in this state. The statute referred to prescribes the mode and forms to be observed in the execution of wills of real estate, and the 7th section enacts, that no will or testament of personal estate shall be valid and effectual to convey the same, unless signed, executed, and attested, in the manner prescribed for the execution of wills of real estate. The statute as a whole, is understood to establish a mode for the execution of wills in this state; and the same formalities are required in the execution of wills of personal as *Page 416 
of real estate. It is the law for the execution of wills of real estate; no other form will convey real estate situate here, because the law of this state alone governs its disposition. It is the law which governs the disposition of personal estate of persons domiciled here; because the law of this state governs the testamentary disposition of the personal property of persons domiciled here, at the time of their death, wheresoever it may be situate. Sufficient, and we think, full effect is given to this section, by supposing that its sole purpose is to prescribe the mode and forms of executing wills of persons domiciled in this state. The common law, then, we think, prevails here, as to wills of personalty; and the law of the domicil governs the disposition, by testament, of personal estate.
The will here in question is, upon these principles, valid to convey the personal property of the testatrix, though invalid to convey real estate situate here. At common law, a will disposing of both real and personal estate, not valid for disposing of real, may nevertheless be set up as valid for disposing of personal estate. In Cobbold v. Baas, 4 Ves. 200, n.b., it appears, that "a will disposing of real and personal property, though not conformed to the statute of frauds and perjuries, is a good disposition of personal property." In Deane v.Littlefield, 1 Pick. 239, the will of a minor, "giving all his estate and property of every description whatsoever," though not valid to pass real estate, was allowed and proved as a will of personal property only. And see remarks of Jackson, J., inOsgood v. Breed, 12 Mass. Rep. 551, 552, in which it is maintained, that if a qualified probate is necessary to give validity to an instrument in the nature of a will, though not valid in whole as a will, there is no reason why the instrument should not be allowed in the courts of probate for that purpose and to that effect. See Jenkin v. Whitehouse  another, 1 Burr. 431, and Ross v. Ewer, 3 Atk. 156. We know that there may be cases in which the setting up of a will as valid in part and invalid in part may operate to defeat the design of the testator; yet we deem this to be the doctrine of the common law. In Massachusetts, a statute was early enacted to meet the evil and hardships of such a case. In this state no such statute exists; but *Page 417 
the evils which in consequence may follow from the partial operation only of the will of the testator are not to be compared with those which must ensue from holding that our law requires testamentary dispositions, by foreign testators, of their personalty here, to conform to it. The evils of such a doctrine are apparent. A person in large business may have, and very frequently does have, his property scattered over many states; and if, in his will, he was obliged to conform to the requisites of every jurisdiction in which he may have temporarily placed his property, a testamentary disposition of it would in many instances be impracticable, if not sometimes impossible.
The ground taken against the filing and recording of this copy under the 155th chapter of the Revised Statutes is, we think, equally untenable. This chapter treats of the probate, and of the effect of the probate, of wills; and also provides, that a copy of a will proved in a court of probate in any other state of the United States, or of any kingdom or state, may, upon the terms therein prescribed, be filed and recorded here, with the same effect as though such will was originally proved here. Notice is to be given, before the court can admit such copy to record, in the same manner as is provided in case of an original probate; and the court is to allow the filing and record, if there shall be no objection made, or none in the judgment of the court sufficient to prevent the filing of the same. It is further provided, in the 9th section of the chapter, that "nothing in the preceding four sections shall be construed to make valid any will that is not executed, subscribed, and attested according to the law of this state," c. By reason of this clause, we understand, the court below refused to allow the copy of the will in this case to be filed. Now it will be observed that this proviso does not say, that no will shall be allowed to be filed and recorded unless executed, subscribed, and attested according to the law of this state; but that the statute shall not be construed to make valid such a will. We have seen that a will of personal estate of a person not domiciled here at the time of his death does not depend on the law of this state for its validity, but on the law of the place of his domicil. The foreign probate is sufficient evidence, prima facie at least, of its *Page 418 
validity. The record of it here is simply evidence that it has been duly established in the foreign state; and being valid there, it is, as a will of personal property, therefore valid here. The record here, therefore, gives to the will no validity. It simply recognizes the validity which already by law it has. In the case of a testamentary disposition of real estate, the case is different. That depends upon the law of this state, so far as it regards property situate here. If the will is not executed according to our law, it is an invalid will. Foreign probate is no evidence of its validity; and the ninth section of the act relating to wills provides, with proper caution, that the filing and recording of the copy of such will and probate from abroad, shall not be construed to make such will valid unless it is executed according to our law. Unless so executed it could have no validity as a will of real estate here, and the section alluded to provides that nothing in the statute shall be construed to give it validity. In other words, as the statute finds it, it leaves it, in this respect.
We have seen that a will of personal and real estate, valid to pass personal property, though invalid to convey real estate, may be set up and proved in probate courts, as a will of personal estate only. We think that the same principles of law should govern the court in relation to the filing and recording of foreign wills; and that the reasons on which this policy of the law is founded are quite as strong, if indeed not much stronger, in their application to the latter case, than to the case of an original probate.
The will of Susan Olney, therefore, being valid as a will of personal estate, the copy presented may be filed and recorded; and this proceeding is to have the same effect as an original probate of a will of personal estate. The decree, however, must provide, that the filing and recording shall not apply to, or make valid, the said will, in so far as it affects to convey real estate situate in this state. *Page 419