No particular form is required for the disposition of property by will, and in the application of this principle it has been held frequently that letters were valid as wills when properly executed. In re Ledford, 176 N. C., 612.
It must, however, appear that the paper-writing offered for probate, whatever its form, was written animo testendi, by which is meant, not that the maker intended thereafter to make a will on the terms of the paper, but that it was his intention that the paper itself should operate as a disposition of his property, to take effect after his death.
In the Bennett case, 180 N. C., 5, the court refused probate of a letter offered as a will because it did not appear that it was the intention then to make a will, and among other things says: “A will may take the form of an assignment, or of a deed, or of a power of attorney, or of a letter, or of a promissory note, or of a deed, or order, etc., say the authorities. It may assume the form of any instrument or be absolutely informal. This principle is well settled and numerous examples of such wills are to be found in the law books and decisions of the courts here and abroad. Gardner on Wills (1st Ed.), pp. 36 to 43. And the courts have gone very far to support such documents as valid wills, but at the same time they have required sufficient certainty and assurance as to the intention to presently, or at the time the particular document comes into existence, make a will, and as to that paper being the very will he intended to make. Gardner, at p. 40, says:.‘So.a letter written by a testator to a friend, authorizing him to take charge and dispose of the testator’s property, and to sell and convey the same as his executor, properly attested, sufficiently evidences the testator’s intention to dispose of his property, and may be probated as a will. But a letter, like any other instrument, to take effect as a will, must be executed in compliance with the requirements of a statute, and must express a genuine and not merely an anticipated testamentary intent.’ ” And again: “In the ease of In re Estate of C. B. Richardson (appeal of Nina R. Hardee), 94 Calif., 63, the Court held that a letter, which merely expressed a desire that his sister and her children get everything he owned, but containing words indicating that they should take it by a formal will, or by one he would make, was not testamentary in character, but only the expression of a desire, it clearly not being the intention that the letter should be so construed as to become his last will.”
*306Following these precedents it must be held that the paper-writing offered for probate is not the will of J. Yestal Johnson, because it shows on its face that it was not the intention of the deceased that the paper should operate as a will but merely that he had in contemplation the preparation of a will by which final disposition of his property should be made.
He says, “I want you to write my will for me,” indicating a clear purpose to have a will prepared, and that he was simply outlining the contents of a will.
Again, “I want you to give,” etc., which is simply an instruction for the preparation of a will. “I will pay you what you charge for your trouble,” which was for the preparation of the will.
There is nothing in the paper to show a present purpose that it should be the final disposition of his property to take effect after his death; and, on the contrary, the whole letter gives indication that he was giving instructions for the preparation of a will, and the fact that he retained the paper instead of mailing it furnishes evidence that he had not fully determined what he would do with his property.
The refusal to submit an issue as to the intention of the deceased was not erroneous, as this intent must be gathered from the letter and the surrounding circumstances, and a finding of the jury contrary to the language used in the letter could not be sustained.
Affirmed.