An Unresolved Question

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Wills

An unresolved question David Schmitz considers whether the will must be present when a testator acknowledges their signature to witnesses

T David Schmitz is a barrister at Ten Old Square

he principles governing the making and the attestation of wills were set out in 1837 and were brought up to date in 1982 by the Adminstration of Justice Act, when the Wills Act 1837 was amended. Notwithstanding that a somewhat basic point is still open to argument, namely whether when a testator acknowledges their signature to the witnesses (as opposed to signing it in front of them), does the will have to be visible to the witnesses at the moment of the acknowledgment even if each of the witnesses has previously seen the signature? Let us assume the following facts: A prepares a will and invites B and C to come to sign it as witnesses. B and C arrive separately, however, and B leaves before C arrives. In such a case, the will is clearly invalid because the testator has neither signed it nor acknowledged their signature in front of the witnesses at a time when all three are present. But now let us assume that after the will has been signed as above, the following occurs:

‘The existence of a perceived danger of substitution in some cases, and the desirability of reducing the need for oral evidence in consequent litigation, can justify the inference that the draftsman did intend to impose a requirement for the will to be present.’

12  Trusts and Estates Law & Tax Journal

A invites B and C out for a drink, and when they are all together, A says to them, ‘Thank you so much for witnessing my signature on the will. Drinks are on me,’ whereupon B and C each say to him ‘It was a pleasure to sign.’ This conversation, however, takes place in a public house, the testator having left the will at home. It is, of course, clear that an invalid will can be made valid if the testator acknowledges their signature to the witnesses when all are present, and if in turn the witnesses then

acknowledge their signatures to the testator (though the acknowledgment by one witness need not be done in the presence of the other). What is not clear, however, is whether in such a case there is a requirement that the will must invariably be present while these signatures are being acknowledged. That is the question which this article addresses. This article will, in brief, submit as follows: • Some old dicta that, at first glance, support the contention that the witnesses must always be able to see the testator’s signature at the very moment when the testator acknowledges their signature, and that by implication the will must necessarily be present at that time. • However, these dicta must be viewed in both their textual and historical contexts. From these, two things appear. Firstly, the court was very unlikely to have thought it necessary to consider a situation where each of the witnesses had seen the testator’s signature at some point in the past and separately from one another. This was because, before 1983, there was hardly any possibility that a signed will that had been seen by the witnesses beforehand and separately could later have been validly attested by them, for reasons for reasons set out below. Secondly, the court was concerned to make a totally different point, namely that the witnesses needed to have seen the testator’s signature at some time before the testator’s acknowledgment and before they themselves signed the will, not September 2013


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