
    THE SAFE DEPOSIT & TRUST COMPANY OF BALTIMORE, Trustee, and CHARLES E. RIEMAN, Trustee and Committee of Perlee L. Rieman, and CARLTON ALEXANDER RIEMAN and CHARLES E. RIEMAN, Executors Named in the Paper Writing Purporting to be the Last Will and Testament of Annie Lowe Rieman, Deceased, vs. MARY ISABEL THOM and CHARLOTTE RIEMAN McINTOSH.
    Wills: revocation of separate clauses; erasures.
    
    The last will of a testatrix had remained in her possession until the time of her death, and was then found among her papers with certain items partially erased and the names retraced; with the will there were other memoranda all sealed in an envelope addressed to her attorney, directing him what alterations he was to make; and other evidence showed that she desired a new will to be drawn by him and that the erasures and memoranda were merely for his information, it was' held that the erasures did not effect the revocation of the will or of the items erased. p. 166
    If a testator erases an item of the will, with the intention that such erasure shortld operate as a revocation, he cannot after-wards re-establish the will by retracing the letters erased.
    Under sec. 318 of Art. 93 of the Code, a testator may revoke a clause of his will without destroying or invalidating the remaining clauses provided he does not thereby enlarge the estate of any one or change the character of the remaining provisions. pp. 161-162
    In general where a will was in the custody of the testator and upon his death is found among his private papers, cancelled or obliterated, it is presumed that it was so cancelled or obliterated by the testator and that he did it animo revo-candi. P- 3 62
    But if the will was last in the custody of another, it is incumbent upon the party asserting the revocation to show the will again in the testator’s custody, or that it was mutilated or destroyed by his direction. p. 162
    Revocation requires an act sufficient under the provisions of the Code, and an intention to revoke; where the intention is clear slight acts of cancellation or obliteration may be sufficient to constitute revocation; but an intention to revoke can not be presumed from acts that are in themselves incomplete and inconclusive, and that are readily accounted for in some other way. p.163
    
      Decided January 9th, 1912.
    
    Appeal from the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City.
    The cause was argued before Boro, O. J., Pharce, Burke, Thomas, UrNsr and StocKBRitxíb, JJ.
    IF. Calvin Chesnut and Edgar II. Cans (with a brief by Cans and llaman), for the appellant.
    
      D. tí. McIntosh and Bernard Carter, for the appellee.
   Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the fifth of July, 1911, Charles E. Rieman of Baltimore County, Maryland, filed in the Orphans’ Court of said county a petition in which he stated that his mother, Annie Lowe Rieman, of said county, died on the third of March, 1911, leaving as her only heirs at law and next of kin two daughters, namely, Mary Isabel Thom, of Baltimore City, and Charlotte Rieman McIntosh, of Baltimore County, and three sons, Carlton Alexander Rieman, of Baltimore County, the petitioner and Perlee L. Rieman, who has been adjudicated non compos and whose trustee and committee is the petitioner. The petition further averred that the petitioner and bis two sisters and his said brother, Carlton Alexander Rieman, some days after the death of his mother made diligent search among her papers for the purpose of ascertaining whether she left a will, and that they found the will hereinafter referred to among her private' papers; that upon examination of the same in the presence of his said brother and sisters and George R. Willis, Esq., an attorney at law of Baltimore City, he discovered that “the face of the paper contained evidence of the erasure, or attempted erasure of the first item of the will;” that subsequently Mr. Willis informed the petitioner and his said brother and sisters that the deceased had told him that she had erased the “First Item,” and had given him her reasons for so doing. The petition then stated that said will when found was in a sealed envelope in which was also enclosed a letter addressed by the deceased to Mr. Willis ; that the will and letter had been in the possession of the petitioner ever since the envelope containing them had been found, and were “in the same condition in which they were when so found,” and that he presented them, with said petition, to the Court for such action $ as might be proper to be taken in connection with the probate of said will or instrument of writing.

By agreement of counsel representing all persons interested in the estate and The Safe Deposit & Trust Company of Baltimore, appointed trustee by said will, said trustee, after notice to the heirs of law and next of kin of the deceased, on the thirteenth of July, 1911, presented and propounded the will for probate in said Orphans’ Court, and thereupon Mrs. Thom and Mrs. McIntosh filed in said Court .their petition charging that the deceased had erased the first item of the will; that her said act operated as a cancellation and revocation of said item and of the whole will, and that she intended that it should so operate, and praying that said will be by said Court-declared cancelled and revoked, and that said trustee, the said Charles E. Riemans trustee and committee for Perlee Lowe Rieman, and Carlton Alexander Rieman and Charles E. Rieman, named as executors of the will, be required to answer, etc. This petition was answered by The Safe Deposit and Trust Company, trustee, denying that the will or any part of it had' been revoked. The answer of Charles E. Pieman and Carlton Alexander Rieman, executors, states that they do not admit that the deceased ‘■'attempted to erase, believed she had erased and did erase the first item in said” will, or that her act in connection “with the alleged erasure of said first item, operated as a cancellation and revocation of said first item, and of said” will, and that they require proof thereof by the petitioner, while the answer of Charles E. Rieman, trustee and committee, “neither admits nor denies” the alleged revocation of the will. A replication was filed by the petitioners, evidence was produced before the Orphans’ Court, and, by agreement of counsel, was subsequently written by the stenographer and filed in the case. On the 18th of July, 1911, the Orphans’ Court passed an order adjudging that the will had been can-celled and revoked by the deceased, and that probate of the same be refused, and, on the same day, passed a further order granting letters of administration on the estate of the deceased to Charles E. Rieman and Carlton Alexander Rieman. It is from these orders that The Safe Deposit & Trust Company, trustee, has appealed.

In order to arrive at the real intention of the deceased, and to determine the effect to be given to the alleged act of revocation, it will be necessary to keep in view the provisions of the will in question. After providing for the payment of her just debts and funeral expenses, it proceeds:

“Item: I give and bequeath unto each of my children, that is to say: Mary Isabel Thom, Carlton Alexander Rie-man, Charles E. Rieman and Charlotte Rieman McIntosh, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000).”
“Item: I give and bequeath unto the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore, in trust for the use of my son Peidc-e Lowe Rieman, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) to be held by the said trustee for and during the term of his natural life and subject to the same limitations hereinafter expressed' of that part of the rest and residue of my estate which I have given unto the said trustee for the use .and benefit of my said son, Perlee Lowe Rieman.”

By the third item the deceased gives to Mary Ann Donovan, nurse of her deceased daughter, provided she was living at the death of the deceased, the sum of $250. By the fourth item she gives to, each of certain servants $100, and to certain other servants each the sum of $25, and by the fifth item she gives to her two daughters all her wearing apparel, jewelry, laces, toilet silver, contents of her wardrobe, writing desks and store rooms. The sixth item is as follows:

“Item: I give, devise and bequeath all of the rest and residue of my- estate hereinafter called my Trust estate’ unto the Safe Deposit and'. Trust Company of Baltimore, in special trust and confidence, with the powers and to and for the uses and purposes following, that is to say: With full power and authority to invest all moneys which it'may receive in permanent or transient investments, ground rents, annuities, stocks, bond's, mortgages or other good and safe income-producing securities, as may to it seem most advantageous to those interested in the rest and residue of my estate, and my said trustee is further authorized and empowered at all times during the continuance of said trust, for the purpose of re-investment to sell any of the securities or investments so made or to change any investments left by me or which may be procured by it and to re-invest the proceeds of any sale or sales upon the trusts herein declared, and in turn to sell or change any of the investments thus made by it, submitting, however, in the administration of this trust all of its acts so to be done with reference to the management of the trust estate to some Court of competent jurisdiction for its approval. And my trustee is further directed to pay unto each of my four children : Mary Isabel Thom, Carlton Alexander Rieman, Charles E. Rieman and Charlotte Rieman McIntosh, in quarterly installments, one-fifth (1/5) part of the net income of the rest and residue of my estate, such payments to be continued to be made to each of my said four children for and during tbe full end and term of his or her natural life, and to pay the other one-fifth (1/5) part of the net income of the said rest and residue of my estate to the committee or trustee of my son Porlee Lowe Rieman, for and during the term of his natural life.

In the event of any one of my five children above named, departing this life, I direct my said trustee to divide my estate into five equal parts, having reference to quantity and values and to transfer, pay and deliver one of said five parts unto the child or children of such deceased child of mine, share and share alike per stirpes and not per capita. In the event of any of my five children departing this life without issue living at the time of his or her death, then shall a portion of my trust estate so set apart for the use of the child so dying, be by my trustee divided equally among my children, the child or children of any deceased child of mine to take his, her or their parents’s share per stirpes and not per capita. The share of each of my children living at the time of this division, shall be held by my trustee for the use of my children respectively, for life, with the same limitations over, as is herein imposed upon the original shares of my children respectively.”

Then follows a suggestion to the trustee in reference to the sale of certain unimproved real estate in Dayton, Ohio; and by the remaining and last item Garitón Alexander Rieman and Charles E. Rieman are appointed executors.

The will is dated March 11th, 1907, and the evidence produced by the Safe Deposit and Trust Company, trustee, shows that it was duly executed by the deceased on that date, and that it remained in the possession of Mr. Willis until the 29th of June, 1909, when, at her request, he mailed it to her address in Baltimore County. It was found after her death in her desk, with some instructions to Mr. Willis, in an envelope which was sealed and addressed to him.

From an inspection of the original will, which was produced at the argument of the case in this Court, it appears that the names of the four children of the deceased in the first item have been rubbed and' t-hat some of the letters making np these names have been relined or retraced with a lead pencil. The words “each of my children” in the same item appear to.have been rubbed also, but no part of said item has the appearance of having been entirely rubbed out, erased or rendered illegible.

It appears froan the evidence produced by the petitioners, appellees, that on the 20th of April, 1910, Mr. Willis called to see Mrs. Pieman at her home, in Baltimore City in regard to some changes she desired to make in her will, and that she then told him that she desired to divide the whole of her estate into five equal parts, that “she did not want any distinction among her children; wanted to have them all alike,” and that she wanted her two sons, Carlton A. and Charles E. Rieman, and her two daughters, to have their parts absolutely, but she wanted the share of her son who was non compos to be held in trust for him for life; that she did not want the shares of her sons, Carlton and Charles, and her two daughters held in trust, as is provided in the will in question, and gave as her reason for desiring to malee this change that at the death of Mrs. Thom and Mrs. McIntosh their children will come into possession of quite large estates under their grandfather's will, and that she wanted her daughters to have what she was going to leave them subject to their control absolutely. Mr. Willis says that Mrs. Rie-man called at his office on the 25th of April and on the 16th of June, 1910, when they talked over the proposed changes in her will, and that on the 28th- of June, 1910, she called again “and gave me instructions to prepare the will giving these four children I have named their shares absolutely and the other one-fifth to be in trust for the other son. She said to me further: There are some specific legacies, money legacies, I want to give and I will write the names out for you and the amounts I want to give. I remember, in particular one was an indebtedness she wanted to release. All right I said; I was ready to prepare the will just as soon as I got the information with reference to the legacy. She died before sbe sent me the memorandum, and in this envelope which was found after her death in my presence and which was handed to me by her son Charles and by me opened, was this memorandum, addressed to me.

“MR. Willis :
My legatees are my cousin, Mrs. Nellie Lowe Johnston, Mrs. Gabriel Johnston, Washington, D. C., the sum of $2,000.00, and the debt of $8,000.00 be forgiven her if it is not paid at my death.
To Lucilla Rieman,
Mary Rieman,
Clara Rieman,
Mildred Rieman,
all daughters of Henry Rieman, of Hawksworth, near Easton, Eastern Shore of Maryland, the sum of $250.00 apiece. To Miss Mary Hutchinson Warfield, 700 N. Howard street, Baltimore, the sum of $500.00. To Mrs. Mary Willoughby Osterhaus, wife of Capt. Hugo Osterhaus, IT. S. N., the sum of $500.
ÁNNIE L. RlEMAN.”

Mr. Willis also states: “At the last interview, which was on the 28th of June, she told me, in commenting upon the change that she was going to make, giving the children I have named one-fifth absolutely, that she had rubbed out a provision in her will whereby she had given to each of the children I have named $5,000 absolutely, because, she said, that is no use now because if they are going to get one-fifth of the whole of the estate there is no use of giving them $10,000 absolutely. I told her that she ought not to rub anything out of the will because that was not a proper thing to do, to erase a will or to attempt to change it in that manner.”

The Safe Deposit and Trust Company, trustee, objected to this evidence adduced by the petitioners, and filed a motion to strike it out, but the Court below overruled the motion.

Under the provision of section 318 of Article 93 of the Code a will may be revoked “by some other will or codicil in writing, or other writing declaring the same, or by burning, cancelling, tearing or obliterating tbe same, by tbe testator bimself or in bis presence, and by bis direction and consent and tbe right of a testator under tbis section of tbe Code to revoke a clause of bis will without destroying or invalidating tbe remaining clauses, provided be does not thereby enlarge tbe estate of any one who takes under tbe will, or change tbe character of tbe remaining provisions, was distinctly recognized in Eschbach v. Collins, 61 Md. 478, and affirmed in the case of Home of the Aged v. Bantz, 107 Md. 543. In tbe latter case tbis Court, upon tbe authorities there cited, also adopts tbe rule that where a will was in tbe custody of tbe testator and upon bis death is found among bis private papers, cancelled or obliterated, it is presumed that it was so cancelled or obliterated by the testator and that be did it animo revocando, and quotes tbe statement in Redfield on Wills, 307, that, “Tbe rule of evidence in tbe ecclesiastical Courts in regard to presumptive revocations from tbe absence or mutilation of tbe will seems to be that jif tbe will is traced into tbe testator’s possession or custody and is there found mutilated in any of the ways pointed out in tbe statute for revocation or is not found at all it will be presumed that the testator destroyed or mutilated it animo revocandi; but if it was last in tbe custody of another it is incumbent upon tbe party asserting tbe revocation to show tbe will again in the testator’s custody or that it was mutilated or destroyed by bis direction.”

. If, therefore, in tbe case at bar tbe first item of tbe will bad been cancelled or obliterated, tbe will having been in tbe custody of Mrs. Pieman, and having been found after her death among her private papers, tbe presumption would have i been that it was done by her and that she intended thereby to revoke that clause of her will, unless it could be said, which, however, we must not be understood as saying, that there’ is such an intimate or interdependent relation between that clause and tbe other portions of the will as to give rise to tbe presumption that she intended to revoke tbe whole will. Home of the Aged v. Bantz, supra. But, as we have said, from an inspection of tbe original will, it appears that parts of the first item were only rubbed and then some of the letters were retraeed by lead pencil, and that no part of the clause was entirely obliterated or rendered illegible. We have been unable to find any case in which it was held that a will found in such a condition among the papers of the deceased must be presumed to have been revoked by him. The ground upon which the presumption of revocation rests, where the will was in the custody of a testator and' is found cancelled, etc., is that there is no other way to account for its condition. Revocation requires an act, sufficient under the provisions of the Code, and an intention to revoke, and while, where the intention is clear, slight acts of cancellation or obliteration may be sufficient to constitute a revocation, an intention to revoke can not be presumed from acts that are in themselves incomplete and inconclusive, and that are as readily accounted for in some other way. In the case of Eschbach v. Collins, supra, the Court said: “It is not necessary that the words erased should be wholly illegible, but the act of the testator must be such as to clearly indicate an intention to expunge the whole clause, so that it will no longer constitute a sub-division of the will,” and this was repeated in Home of the Aged v. Bantz, supra. These cases furnish an instance of attempted alteration and of a revocation by cancellation where, of course, the parts cancelled need not be entirely erased or rendered illegible, but even in those cases the Court was careful to say that cancellation must be such as to clearly indicate an intention to revoke. Here, as appears from the face of the will, the act itself is incomplete, not in the sense that the clause was not entirely rubbed out or obliterated, but in the sense that that which was begun was not finished and was abandoned. Such an act is clearly too indefinite, too incomplete to form the foundation of a presumption that .the testatrix intended thereby to revoke an instrument which she had executed with so much formality. She may have commenced to rub out the first clause of her will with the view of revoking it, and then, before completing wbat sbe intended to do, changed ber mind and retraced tbe letters rubbed, and that is wbat is suggested by tbe appearance of tbe will. In 1 Jarman on Wills, 157 (6th ed.), it is said: “But it is clear,-that if a testator is arrested in bis design of destroying tbe will, by tbe remonstrance or interference of a third person, or by bis own voluntary change of purpose, and thus leaves unfinished tbe work of destruction which be bad commenced, the will is unrevoked.’ In the case of Doe v. Perbes, 3 B. & Ald. 489 (106 Eng. Rep. Full Reprint, 740), tbe testator, urged by sudden impulse of passion against one of tbe devisees, undertook to cancel bis will by tearing, and after tearing it twice through, was pursuaded by one present, before be completed bis purpose, to desist, and be then, after putting tbe pieces of tbe will together, said: “It is well it was no worse,” it was held that tbe will remained -unrevoked. In the case of In re Wood’s Will, 11 N. Y. S. 757, 32 N. Y. State Reporter, 286, it appeared that the signature of the testatrix had been erased by drawing diagonal lines over the same, and then the lines and the name were nearly erased, and her name carefully rewritten in her own handwriting with a different colored ink. The Court, in disposing of the case, said: “I am asked by the contestants to presume as a matter of law that the erasure was made animo revocandi with intent to- revoke and destroy the will and that the act was sufficient to accomplish the intent. If the will had been found in her safe carefully preserved among the valuable papers of the testatrix, with her signature erased, it would have been a fair and reasonable presumption that she erased the signature animo revo-candi, and it would then be lacking in one of the statutory requirements of a valid will — tbe signature of tbe decedent at the end thereof; but when found with the signature carefully restored, no such presumption arises. In the absence of all proof how can I find that it was made with the intent to revoke, when the instrument was preserved by her with her signature carefully restored? An intention to revoke a will not fully consummated is no revocation (Doe v. Perbes, 3 Barn. & Ald. 489). The cancellation of a will does not necessarily involve its revocation. The cancelling itself is an equivocal act and in order to operate as a revocation must be done animo revovandi. (2 Whart. Ev., sec. 900; Dan v. Brown, 4 Cow. 483, 490.) It may be that Mrs. Wood drew the lines through her name with the intention of revoking the will, but immediately, and before the act was completed', changed her mind, erased the marks and restored her signature. To sustain the theory of the learned counsel for the contestant, I must find that the erasure was made by the testatrix herself, under standingly, freely and voluntarily, with no other purpose than to destroy her will, and that it was done at sometime previous to the act of re-writing her name; and this finding is asked for in the absence of proof and with the burden resting upon the contestants to establish the fact of revocation.” We have quoted at some length from the opinion in that case because it shows that the Court was dealing with much the same state of facts as confronts us in this case, when considering the question whether a revocation can bo presumed from the condition of the will. It is said in Schouler on Wills and Administration, sec. 390: “Where the testator arrests his own design before the act is completed, a revocation does not take place,” and in 1 Redfield on Wills, star page 307, it is stated that: “Where the testator is arrested in his purpose, and changes his determination to revoke his will, before the act is completed, by which he designed to express his intention,” his act does not amount to a revocation. If where the act, by which the testator designed to accomplish a revocation and to.evidence his intention to do so, is not completed by him but is abandoned, a revocation is not effected, it would seem to follow that where the condition of the will indicates that the act of obliterating was abandoned before completion, and that the testatrix restored the letters or words partially rubbed out or erased, there can be no presumption that the will was revoked.

For these reasons there is no presumption in this case because of the condition in which the will was found, that Mrs. Pieman intended to revoke either the first item or the whole will, and this brings us to the consideration of the other evidence in the case, which was objected' to by the appellant.

. Assuming, without deciding, that all of it was admissible, we do not think it is sufficient to sustain the contention of the appellees. When taken in connection with the will itself, it demonstrates two things, first, that Mrs. Pieman had no idea of dying intestate; and, second, that it was her fixed and settled purpose throughout to make equal provision for her five children, and to so leave the share of her son Perlee that after his death it would go to her other children and their descendants. Therefore an intention to> revoke her will or the first item of it, by rubbing parts of that item, would, be inconsistent with .her clearly established desire to make the provisions mentioned, unless it was done with the further purpose of accomplishing them by another will. The evidence shows that she was, from the 20th of April until sometime after her last interview with Mr. Willis on the 28th of June, 1910, anxious to make a change in her will, and the appellees rely upon her statement to Mr. Willis that she had rubbed out the provision in her will giving four of her children each $10,000, and the condition of the will, to show that she had prior to that statement obliterated the clause referred to with the intention of destroying the will. Of course, if she rubbed the first item to the extent indicated with the intention that that slight rubbing should operate as a revocation, she could not afterwards re-establish the will by retracing the letters rubbed. But the fact that when the will was found after her death in an envelope with additional instructions for á new will the words or letters that had been rubbed were retraced, would indicate that she did not, in the first instance, intend the rubbing to effect a revocation, for if she had deliberately revoked the will, and intended to make a new one, there was no reason why she should retrace what sbe bad partly erased. If, on tbe other band, sbe did not intend, by the rubbing of the first item, to revoke tbe will, it was but natural, when told by ber trusted advisor that it was not tbe proper thing to do, that sbe should attempt to rectify it, pending the execution of a new will containing tbe changes she desired to make, and which sbe knew would effect a revocation of tbe old. Tt is clear that she could not have intended, by tbe slight rubbing of tbe first item, to revoke the whole will, and her settled purpose, apparent from tbe evidence, to make equal provision for ber children, precludes tbe idea that sbe intended to revoke the first item, for that, if it could have been accomplished, would have resulted in giving to ber son Perlee more than be would otherwise have received, and in an unequal distribution of ber estate. Tbe only reasonable conclusion from all tbe evidence is that having determined to change her will so as to give to ber two daughters and her two sons, Carlton A. and Charles E. Rieman, absolute estates in their shares, Mrs. Rieman partly rubbed out or erased tbe item giving each of them $10,000, not with the intention of thereby destroying tbe will or that clause, but as a means and for tbe purpose of indicating to ber attorney, who was to prepare tbe new will, that that clause or item was to be left out of tbe. will sbe was about to make, and that sbe did not intend that the rubbing should have any significance independent of and apart from the making of a new will. This view is confirmed by ber statement to Mr. Willis, as ber reason for rubbing out tbe first item, that if tbe children referred to “are going to get • one-fifth of tbe whole estate, there is no use giving them $10,000 absolutely.”

This conclusion is not at all in conflict with the case of Semmes v. Semmes et al., 7 H. & J. 388, where it is stated by CiiieK JiusTicjE BuchaNAN that- if a will is deliberately cancelled, without accident or mistake, it will operate as a revocation, although tbe party may at tbe time have intended to make another will, and afterwards failed to do it. The same view is expressed in 1 Redfield on Wills, star page 308 (4th ed.), where the author says: “But if a testator destroys a. will upon tbe mere general purpose of thereafter making another, it will not hinder the revocation becoming effectual, because he dies without carrying such purpose of making a new will into effect.

. Where, however, what was done was not intended to have any effect apart from and independent of the making of a new instrument, it cannot operate as a revocation of the existing will, for the manifest reason, as distinctly recognized in Semmes v. Semmes, supra, that unless the act relied on was done animo revocanéi, it does not amount to a revocation. A similar principle is clearly stated and applied in the case of McIntyre v. McIntyre, 120 Ga. 71, where the Court says: “The mere fact that the testator intended to make a new will, or made one which failed of effect, will not klone, in every case, prevent a cancellation or obliteration of a will from operating as a revocation. If it is clear that the cancellation and the making of a new will were parts of one scheme, and the revocation of the old will was so related to the .making of the new as to be dependent upon it, then if the new will be not made, or if made is invalid, the old will, though cancelled, should be given effect, if its contents can be ascertained in any legal way. But if the old will is once revoked — if the act of revocation is completed, — as if the will be totally destroyed by burning and the like, or if any other act is done which evidences an unmistakable intention to revoke, though the will be not totally destroyed, the fact that the testator intended to make a new will, or made one which can not take effect, counts for nothing.” This rule is also stated in 1 Williams on Ex. (7th ed.), 200; 1 Jarman on Wills (6th ed.), 154, and in 30 Ency. of Law', 633 (2nd ed.), where many cases are cited in support of the text. Here all that the evidence shows is that what was done must have been done for the sole purpose of indicating to the attorney of the deceased that the item slightly rubbed was not to be included, in the new will, and we are not, therefore, required to go to - the extent .of the authorities last cited.

We have carefully considered the very able arguments of counsel, and have examined the authorities cited, but are unable to reach the conclusion that Mrs. Eieman intended to destroy the will in question. The case of Bell v. Fothergill, and others, Vol. 2 Law Reports, Probate Div. 148, cited by the appellees, and which resembles in some respects the case at bar, Lokd PeNzaNCe, speaking of the condition of the-will, said: “The signature had been cut clean out, above,, below and cross-ways, apparently by a pair of scissors, but. the paper so cut out had been placed in its position again, and gummed there.” Under such circumstances, the Court held that the will had been revoked. We can not give to the slight rubbing in the case at bar the effect of such a decisive act as that described.

It follows from what has been said that the orders appealed from must be reversed.

Orders reversed, with costs, and case remanded.  