Wardwell v. Wardwell
Wardwell v. Wardwell
Opinion of the Court
A father had no authority, by the common law, to appoint a testamentary guardian of his child. 1 Wooddeson, 460. 3 Phillimore, 257. 7 Ves. 370. He was first authorized, in this commonwealth, by the Rev. Sts. c. 79, § 6. In England this authority was conferred by St. 12 Car. II. c. 24, § 8, in these terms: “ Where any person hath or shall have any child or children under the age of one and twenty years, and not married at the time of his death, that it shall and may be lawful to and for the father of such child or children, whether born at the time of the decease of the father, or at that time in ventre sa mere, or whether such father be within the age of one and twenty years, or of full age, by deed executed in his lifetime, or by his last will and testament in writing in the presence of two or more credible witnesses, in such manner and from time to time as he shall respectively think fit, to dispose of the custody and tuition
It is not difficult to account for the omission, in the Rev. Sts. c. 79, § 6, of an expressed direction that wills for the appointment of guardians should be attested by three witnesses. The commissioners, in their report of c. 62, inserted no provision" concerning wills of personal estate, and proposed none in their notes to that chapter. And there were then no statutes concerning such wills. By our common law, certain minors might dispose of their personal estate by will; 1 Pick. 239; and no attesting witness to wills of such estate was required. 3 Pick. 374. 3 Dane Ab. 450, 451. But the legislature introduced into that chapter (§§ 5, 6) provisions which took from all minors their former power to make such wills, and required every such will to be attested and subscribed by three or more witnesses, as had for centuries been required for the due execution of devises oí real estate. And probably no one will doubt that the same provision would have been made respecting wills for the appointment of guardians, if the authority to appoint them which was contained in chapter seventy-nine had been introduced into chapter sixty-two. It is not to be supposed that the legislature would purposely have prevented a father from bequeathing a shilling to his child, except by a will attested by three witnesses, and yet have given him the power— a power withheld for more than two hundred years—to place a guardian over him during his minority, by a will attested by no witness, or by less than three. Nor is it to be supposed that the commissioners would have suggested the provision for wills appointing guardians, without prescribing the manner of their execution, if they had proposed, in c. 62, the changes therein made by the legislature. They proposed the appointment of guardians by will, not as a part of the system now found in that chapter, and still in force, but only as an addition to the previously existing laws of the Commonwealth concerning wills, which laws, as already stated, then required no witnesses to any wills not made for the disposition of real estate.
The judge of probate rightly refused to admit this instrument to probate, and his decree is to be affirmed. But he may nevertheless appoint the appellant guardian of Wm. G. Ward well, if she is found to be a suitable person to receive the appointment ; and the expressed wish of the deceased father is entitled to great regard. But that wish is not to prevail if the judge of probate shall be of opinion that the best interests of the child require that some other person should be his guardian. See Talbot v. Earl of Shrewsbury, 4 Myl. & Cr. 683, 686; In re Johnstons, 2 Jones & Lat. 224, 225; Hall v. Storer, l Y. & Coll. (Exch.) 556. Underhill v. Dennis, 9 Paige, 209 ; Cozine v. Horn, 1 Bradf. (N. Y.) 143; Foster v. Mott, 3 Bradf. 409.
Decree affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Charlotte B. Wardwell v. Henry Wardwell
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- Published