Opinion
Docket No. 58676.
Decided September 9, 1982.
D'Avanzo, Danko Aycock, for proponent-appellant.
Charles E. Fonville, for heirs-appellees.
Robert W. Plumpe, for contestant/heir-appellee.
William Dodson died on August 16, 1980. On November 14, 1980, appellant, Geraldine McClendon, filed a petition to have an alleged will of Mr. Dodson admitted to probate. The probate court denied admission, holding as a matter of law that the purported will did not meet minimum statutory requirements.
The document submitted was a two-page preprinted will form. It is not clear whether the pages had ever been joined. The first page contains printing clearly indicating that it is to be used as a will form. Typed in the appropriate places are William Dodson's name and address, and the provisions disposing of his property. His purported signature appears directly above the place where his name is typed. The second page contains blanks for appointment of an executor, signature, date, and attestation by witnesses. Calvin C. Stevenson is appointed as executor. Stevenson's signature also appears where the testator's should be. Stevenson's stamp as a notary public appears superimposed over his signature. The page is dated. In the attestation clause, Stevenson is said to have requested the signatures of two witnesses, which appear at the bottom of the page.
MCL 700.122; MSA 27.5122 states in part:
"Sec. 122. (1) A will shall be in writing signed by the testator or in the testator's name by some other person in the testator's presence and by his direction and shall be signed by at least 2 persons each of whom witnessed either the signing or the testator's acknowledgment of the signature or of the will."
The purported will was "in writing". We reject as foolish appellees' claim that only handwriting suffices. Such an interpretation is inconsistent with the inclusion of explicit requirements for holographic wills in the same code. MCL 700.123; MSA 27.5123. We think it clear that the requirement that a will be in writing was intended by the Legislature to preclude oral wills from probate. See Atkinson, Wills (2d ed), § 63, pp 294-295.
The will was also "signed by the testator". Although the paper was signed neither at the bottom nor in the space provided on the will form, it was signed in a manner which indicates testamentary intent. Even when Michigan's statutes required that a will be "subscribed" by the testator, a will signed at the top was held valid in Stone v Holden, 221 Mich. 430; 191 N.W. 238 (1922).
Finally, the statute requires that the will be signed by two persons, each of whom witnessed the testator sign the will, acknowledge his signature, or acknowledge the will. No formal attestation is required. In this case, the witnesses' signatures appear only on the second page of the purported will. The testator's signature appears only on the first page. We do not have the document itself nor any factual record concerning the connection between the two pages. We think it error, however, to conclude as a matter of law that the two pages are unconnected. Appellant is entitled to show, by extrinsic evidence, that the two pages were presented to the attesting witnesses in a manner to indicate that they constituted a single document.
Reversed and remanded. No costs.