Sadie M. Castruccio v. The Estate of Peter A. Castruccio et al., No. 79, September Term,
2016. Opinion by Getty, J.

ESTATES & TRUSTS — VALIDITY OF A WILL — STATUTORY
REQUIREMENTS — ATTESTATION
Attestation does not require that the witnesses sign the will on the same page as the testator
or on physically connected pages. Therefore, an otherwise valid will is not invalid merely
because the witnesses signed the will on a different page than the testator, and the pages
were not physically connected at the time of signing.
Furthermore, neither a complete attestation clause nor having the testator initial each page
of the will are requirements for valid execution of a will. Therefore, the absence of these
elements in a testamentary document does not serve to invalidate the will, nor prevent the
presumption of due execution from attaching to it.
Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County
Case No. 02-C-13-181345
Argued: May 5, 2017


                                             IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

                                                   OF MARYLAND


                                                         No. 79

                                                 September Term, 2016



                                               SADIE M. CASTRUCCIO

                                                           v.

                                        THE ESTATE OF PETER A. CASTRUCCIO
                                                       et al.


                                            Barbera, C.J.
                                            Adkins,
                                            McDonald,
                                            Watts,
                                            Hotten,
                                            Getty,
                                            Rodowsky, Lawrence F.
                                               (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

                                                           JJ.


                                                  Opinion by Getty, J.


                                            Filed: August 25, 2017
       If from the whole evidence, the jury shall find that Tilghman Waters executed
       the will in controversy, in the presence of three subscribing witnesses thereto,
       and that they, at his request, in his presence, and in the presence of each other,
       signed their names as witnesses thereto; that at the time of the execution
       thereof, he, the said Tilghman, was capable of understanding the business in
       which he was engaged—the property he desired to dispose of, and the object
       of his bounty named in said will, and that the same was his free and voluntary
       act, they will find for the defendants.

Waters v. Waters, 35 Md. 531, 536 (1872).

       Remarkably similar to the formulation quoted by this Court in Waters in 1872, the

current testamentary statute provides that “every will shall be (1) in writing, (2) signed by

the testator, or by some other person for him, in his presence and by his express direction,

and (3) attested and signed by two or more credible witnesses in the presence of the

testator.” Md. Code (1974, 2011 Repl. Vol.), Estates & Trusts (“ET”) § 4-102.

       In fact, the statutory requirements for the valid execution of a will have remained

virtually unchanged in Maryland for over two hundred years. In 1798, the General

Assembly enacted the first testamentary statute in Maryland, which included strikingly

similar language for devises:

       All devises and bequests of any lands or tenements, devisable by law, shall
       be in writing, and signed by the party so devising the same, or by some other
       person in his presence, and by his express directions, and shall be attested
       and subscribed in the presence of the said devisor, by three or four credible
       witnesses, or else they shall be utterly void and of none effect[.]

1798 Md. Laws, ch. 101, sub-ch. 1, § 4. This Court has previously traced the foundational

roots of these longstanding testamentary formalities to the English Statute of Frauds. See

Casson v. Swogell, 304 Md. 641, 648–50 (1985).
         Relatively few changes have been made to the language of the 1798 statute. In

1884, the statute was amended such that only “two or more credible witnesses” were

required for attestation. 1884 Md. Laws, ch. 293. In 1943, the statute was amended to add

a paragraph (b), which provided exceptions to the statutory formalities for persons serving

in the armed forces located outside of the United States.1 1943 Md. Laws, ch. 799. The

current language of the statute first appeared in 1969 as Article 93, § 4-102 of the Maryland

Code. See 1969 Md. Laws, ch. 3, § 1. In 1974, the former Article 93 was recodified as the

Estates and Trusts Article during Code Revision. See 1974 Md. Laws, ch. 11, § 2. The

statute has not been substantively amended since its enactment in its current form in 1969.

But see 2010 Md. Laws, ch. 72, § 5 (nonsubstantive amendment).

         In this appeal, we must determine whether a will admitted to probate satisfied the

statutory requirements for valid execution, particularly the requirement of attestation. For

the following reasons, we hold that the will at issue satisfied the statutory requirements for

valid execution, and therefore the circuit court properly granted summary judgment in

favor of the testator’s estate. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Special

Appeals.

                                     BACKGROUND

         Dr. Peter Castruccio died on February 19, 2013, at the age of eighty-nine. He was

survived by his wife of sixty-two years, Sadie Castruccio, who was ninety-two years old at

the time of his death.


1
    The language of the former paragraph (b) is now codified as ET § 4-103.

                                              2
A.     Drafting and Execution of the 2010 Will

       Peter signed a last will and testament on September 28, 2008, which he filed with

the Register of Wills for Anne Arundel County for safekeeping. In September 2010, Peter

asked his attorney, John Greiber, to retrieve the 2008 Will so that he could revise it. When

Peter received the 2008 Will, he marked up the document in the presence of Mr. Greiber,

and asked his longtime employee, Darlene Barclay, to transcribe his changes. Darlene

made the requested changes and returned the draft 2010 Will to Peter, who reviewed it with

Mr. Greiber on September 28, 2010.

       On September 29, 2010, Peter signed the 2010 Will in the presence of three

witnesses: Mr. Greiber, his daughter Samantha Greiber, and Darlene’s daughter Kim

Barclay, who had also been employed by Peter for approximately six years. Peter called

the three witnesses into his office and requested that they sign the papers on his desk, which

he identified as his will. Peter then signed the Will in the presence of Mr. Greiber,

Samantha, and Kim. Next, each of the three witnesses signed the Will in the presence of

Peter and each other. Six weeks later, on November 17, 2010, Mr. Greiber deposited the

Will with the Register of Wills for Anne Arundel County, where it remained until one week

after Peter’s death.

B.     Format and Substance of the 2010 Will

       The 2010 Will, which is reproduced in the appendix to this opinion, consists of six

pages, which are consecutively numbered as pages 1 of 6, 2 of 6, etc. The page numbers

are centered on the bottom of each page. The words “Peter Adalbert Castruccio” are



                                              3
centered in large font on the top of page 1 of 6; otherwise, the font and type-size are

consistent throughout the document.

       In the first paragraph on page 1 of 6 of the Will, Peter “declare[s] this instrument as

his WILL IN TESTAMENT [sic].” The second paragraph on page 1 of 6 states that, upon

his death, Peter “hereby declare[s] the following:[.]”        Following these introductory

paragraphs, the 2010 Will contains eleven consecutively numbered paragraphs labeled

Item 1, Item 2, etc. Some paragraphs are further subdivided into consecutively numbered

subparagraphs.

       Item 1 names Mr. Greiber as Peter’s personal representative for the administration

of his estate. Item 7 leaves cash bequests of varying amounts to three specified individuals,

including Darlene. Item 8 leaves “the rest and remainder” of Peter’s estate to Sadie,

“should she one, survive [Peter] and two provided she has made and executed a Will prior

to [Peter’s] death.” Item 10, entitled “Residuary Clause,” appearing on page 5 of 6,

provides as follows:

              Should, at the time of my death, my beloved wife not have a valid
       Will filed with the Register of Wills in Anne Arundel County dated prior
       thereto these, I hereby give, devise and bequeath all the rest and residue of
       my Estate and property, whether imposition, expectancy will remainder,
       including all property over which I may have Power of Appointment to the
       following individuals share and share alike per stirpes and not per capita to
       DARLENE BARCLAY, [address redacted], Glen Burnie, Maryland,
       21061.[2]



2
  According to Mr. Greiber, Peter was concerned that Sadie would leave her estate to
certain family members of whom he did not approve. He sought assurances that Sadie
would not leave her assets, or at least the assets that she would receive from him, to those
family members. Thus, he conditioned Sadie’s bequests under the 2010 Will upon her
                                              4
       Also on page 5 of 6 of the Will, below the “Residuary Clause” and Item 11, appears

a concluding paragraph:

               IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I, the above mentioned testator have
       hereunto set my hands and seals to this six page instrument, and have initial
       [sic] each page hereof, which instrument is intendant [sic] to be my Last Will
       and Testament, this 29th day of September, 2010.

(The date “29th” is handwritten above a blank line.) Contrary to this statement, none of the

pages of the 2010 Will are initialed. Below this concluding paragraph, Peter signed his

full name above the typewritten words “PETER ADALBERT CASTRUCCIO[.]” Below

his signature are the words “SIGNED, SEALED, PUBLISHED AND DECLARE [sic],

BY PETER ADALBERT CASTRUCCIO.” Another line down, the last two lines of page

5 of 6 read as follows: “The above named individual, does declare for his Last Will and

Testament this instrument, have hereunto subscribed to have witness on the date last

mentioned above, and at the location, and [. . . .]”

       The first two lines of the next page of the Will, page 6 of 6, appear to be a

continuation of the sentence that began on the previous page: “I do hereby attest that the

testator to be of sound mind, fully able to understand this instrument, and the testator

voluntarily and freely did sign same.” Below these words are the signatures of Mr. Greiber,

Kim, and Samantha, each appearing under the word “WITNESS:” and above a line that

reads, “Signature, residing at:[.]” Below each signature appears the witness’ address. (Mr.

Greiber’s address is typed consistent with the text of the document; Kim’s and Samantha’s



having made and filed a will that disclosed whether she intended to make testamentary
gifts to those family members.

                                             5
addresses are handwritten in what appears to be the same handwriting as their signatures.)

No other text appears on page 6 of 6, other than the pagination at the bottom of the page.

C.     Petition to Caveat the 2010 Will

       On February 26, 2013, one week after Peter’s death, Mr. Greiber filed a Petition for

Administrative Probate with the Register of Wills for Anne Arundel County, requesting

appointment as personal representative of Peter’s estate and admission to probate of the

2010 Will. The next day, the Register of Wills issued an Administrative Probate Order,

appointing Mr. Greiber as personal representative of Peter’s estate and admitting the 2010

Will to administrative probate.

       At the time of Peter’s death, Sadie had not filed a valid will with the Register of

Wills for Anne Arundel County. Thus, under Mr. Greiber’s interpretation of Peter’s 2010

Will (and specifically the Residuary Clause), the residue of Peter’s estate would pass to

Darlene, not to Sadie. Seeking to avoid this result, on March 27, 2013, Sadie filed a Petition

to Caveat Will in the Orphans’ Court for Anne Arundel County. On July 2, 2013, Sadie

petitioned the Orphans’ Court to transmit issues related to the caveat to the circuit court.

       On August 1, 2013, the Orphans’ Court entered an order transmitting seven issues

to the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County for trial, designating Sadie as the plaintiff

and the Estate of Peter Castruccio (“Estate”) as the defendant. The seven issues were

designated as follows:

       A.     Was the six (6) page paper writing dated September 29, 2010,
              captioned “Peter Adalbert Castruccio” (the “Will”) executed by Peter
              Adalbert Castruccio (the “Testator”)[?]



                                              6
       B.     Did the Testator execute the Will intending it to constitute his last will
              and testament?

       C.     Are all of the pages of the Will the genuine pages the Testator believed
              comprised the Will he intended to execute?

       D.     Was the execution of the Will procured by undue influence?

       E.     Was the execution of the Will procured by fraud?

       F.     Was the Will actually attested and signed by credible witnesses in the
              presence of the Testator?

       G.     Were the contents of the Will read by or to the Testator or known to
              him at or before the time of its purported execution?

On September 17, 2013, the circuit court granted a motion to intervene filed by Darlene,

and designated her as a defendant.

D.     Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment

       On October 10, 2013, the Estate filed a motion for summary judgment on all seven

issues. Sadie filed an opposition to the motion on October 30, 2013. The circuit court held

hearings on the motion on February 21, 2014 and May 2, 2014. Meanwhile, on April 8,

2014, Sadie filed a cross-motion for summary judgment as to Issue F, arguing that the 2010

Will did not satisfy the statutory requirement of attestation because the witnesses did not

sign on the same page as the testator or on “physically connected pages.” Sadie submitted

the affidavit of her attorney, who declared that he inspected the 2010 Will at the Register

of Wills on March 27, 2013, and found that it “consisted of six separate, unattached pages,

without any staple holes or other evidence of having ever been physically connected

together.”




                                              7
           Sadie also submitted the deposition testimony of Mr. Greiber and his daughter

Samantha, both of whom were witnesses to the 2010 Will. In his deposition, Mr. Greiber

recalled that the Will had been stapled when it was signed:

        Q. So he took his signature page and the—
        A. The whole will, I think everything was stapled together I’m pretty sure.
        Q. It was stapled at that time?
        A. I think, I’m pretty sure. Again, Peter had a habit of stapling everything.
        I don’t staple everything.
        Q. So—and this is not a will but—so if it was stapled, was it stapled like
        here—
        A. Yes.

Samantha also testified in her deposition that the 2010 Will was stapled at the time of

signing:

        Q. Do you remember when he gave you the will—
        A. Uh-huh.
        Q. And again, if you don’t remember please let me know.
        A. Okay.
        Q. But whether it was actually stapled as one unit—
        A. Yes.
        Q. –or whether it was just loose papers?
        A. Stapled.

In addition, Samantha testified that she remembered seeing Peter initial each page of the

Will:

        Q. But you do remember seeing him sign it?
        A. Yes.
        Q. Do you remember seeing him initial each page?
        [Counsel for the Estate]: Object to the question. Go ahead and answer.
        A. Yes. Yeah. I remember him signing and then him getting up and giving
        the will to me.

        Based on this testimony and the affidavit of her attorney, Sadie argued that summary

judgment as to the remaining issues (other than Issue F) was inappropriate because there


                                             8
were disputed issues of material facts. Specifically, Sadie noted that the 2010 Will

admitted to probate did not match the physical description of the will provided by Mr.

Greiber and Samantha: The 2010 Will was not stapled nor was each page initialed, even

though Mr. Greiber and Samantha stated that it was at the time of signing.

E.     The Lower Courts’ Rulings

       On September 23, 2014, the circuit court issued a memorandum decision granting

the Estate’s motion for summary judgment on all issues and denying Sadie’s cross-motion

for summary judgment as to Issue F. In reaching its decision, the circuit court “proceeded

. . . on the assumption . . . that the separate sheets of the Will were not mechanically affixed

by a staple or other device and were not so affixed when deposited with the Register of

Wills for safekeeping on November 17, 2010.” The court then concluded, as to Issue F,

“that the focus should be on a more holistic inquiry about whether the document purporting

to be the will holds together as the unitary document completed by the testator and signed

by the witnesses rather than an inquiry that at a certain point some or all of the pages were

mechanically affixed to each other.”

       As to the remaining issues, the circuit court found that the 2010 Will contained a

proper attestation clause, and therefore the presumption of due execution attached. The

court also found that Sadie had not presented clear and convincing evidence to overcome

the presumption. Finally, regarding Peter’s testamentary capacity, the court found “that

while Peter was at age 84, elderly, he appears to have been fully in control of what his

desires and intentions were and was not one to be lead [sic] by others or even to take

advice—including good advice—that he did not appreciate.”

                                               9
       On October 2, 2014, the circuit court entered an order consistent with its

memorandum decision. In its order, the court found that

       A.     the six page paper writing dated September 29, 2010, captioned “Peter
              Adalbert Castruccio” (the “Will”) was executed by Peter Adalbert
              Castruccio (the “Testator”);

       B.     the Testator executed his Will with the intention that it constituted his
              last will and testament;

       C.     all of the pages of the Will are the genuine pages the Testator believed
              comprised the Will he intended to execute;

       D.     the Will was not procured by undue influence;

       E.     the Will was not procured by fraud;

       F.     the Will was actually attested and signed by credible witnesses in the
              presence of the testator; and

       G.     the contents of the Will were read by the Testator and known to him
              at and before the time of the execution of the Will on September 29,
              2010.

On October 9, 2014, Sadie filed a notice of appeal to the Court of Special Appeals.

       The Court of Special Appeals affirmed the judgment of the circuit court in a reported

opinion issued on July 28, 2016. Sadie filed a motion for reconsideration, which the

intermediate appellate court granted in part and denied in part. The Court of Special

Appeals issued a revised opinion on September 29, 2016.             Castruccio v. Estate of

Castruccio, 230 Md. App. 118 (2016). Sadie then petitioned this Court for a writ of

certiorari, which this Court granted on January 9, 2017. Castruccio v. Estate of Castruccio,

451 Md. 248 (2017). Sadie presents three questions for our review:

       I.     Can a Will satisfy the requirements of valid execution in Maryland if
       (a) the testator and the witnesses do not sign on the same page, or on
       physically connected pages, (b) the Will contains no proper attestation

                                             10
       clause, and (c) the Will was not otherwise regular on its face because it
       expressly states the pages were initialed, but they were not?

       II.    Can a presumption of due execution attach to a Will (a) executed by
       the testator and the witnesses on separate, loose pages, (b) containing no
       valid attestation clause, (c) expressly stating the pages were initialed, when
       they were not, and (d) lacking any other evidence that the witnesses signed
       in the presence of the testator, based on a common font, consecutive page
       numbering, and continuation of language?

       III.   Can summary judgment as to a Will’s validity be granted where the
       physical description of the Will by two of the witnesses directly contradict[s]
       the actual physical condition of the Will submitted for probate?

                               STANDARD OF REVIEW

               The question of whether a trial court’s grant of summary judgment
       was proper is a question of law subject to de novo review on appeal. In
       reviewing a grant of summary judgment under Md. Rule 2-501, we
       independently review the record to determine whether the parties properly
       generated a dispute of material fact, and, if not, whether the moving party is
       entitled to judgment as a matter of law. We review the record in the light
       most favorable to the nonmoving party and construe any reasonable
       inferences that may be drawn from the facts against the moving party.

Boland v. Boland, 423 Md. 296, 366 (2011) (quoting Haas v. Lockheed Martin Corp., 396

Md. 469, 479 (2007)).

                                      DISCUSSION

       In Maryland, in order to be validly executed, a will must be “(1) in writing, (2)

signed by the testator, or by some other person for him, in his presence and by his express

direction, and (3) attested and signed by two or more credible witnesses in the presence of

the testator.” ET § 4-102. The proponent of the will bears “[t]he burden of proving the

existence of these elements, by a preponderance of the evidence[.]” Groat v. Sundberg,

213 Md. App. 144, 152 (2013).



                                             11
       One way to establish the validity of a will is through an attestation clause in the will

itself. “An attestation clause is a ‘provision at the end of an instrument (esp. a will) that is

signed by the instrument’s witnesses and that recites the formalities required by the

jurisdiction in which the instrument might take effect (such as where the will might be

probated).’” Slack v. Truitt, 368 Md. 2, 8 n.5 (2002) (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary 124

(7th ed. 1999)). “[A]n attestation clause reciting facts necessary for the valid execution of

a will is prima facie evidence of the due execution of the will, if it bears the genuine

signatures of the testator and subscribing witnesses.” Van Meter v. Van Meter, 183 Md.

614, 617–18 (1944). Furthermore, “a presumption of due execution attaches to a will that

contains the testator’s signature and an attestation clause signed by the witnesses.” Slack,

368 Md. at 7–8 (footnote omitted). “[O]nce the presumption attaches, the burden of proof

is on the caveator to show by clear and convincing evidence that the facts stated in the

attestation clause are untrue.” Id. at 8 (footnote omitted).

       On the other hand, an attestation clause is not a requirement for a valid will. See id.

at 8 n.5 (“A formal attestation clause is not an essential part of a will.”); Van Meter, 183

Md. at 617 (“The validity of the execution of a will depends, not upon an attestation clause,

but upon conformity of the execution with the requirements of the statute, and also the

testimony of the subscribing witnesses if they are produced and examined.”). Nor is an

attestation clause required in order to establish the presumption of due execution. See

Slack, 368 Md. at 12 (“[A]n attestation clause is not the sine qua non of the presumption

of due execution.”). “[I]n the absence of an attestation clause, if a proponent of a

testamentary document can adduce sufficient evidence from the document and/or

                                              12
surrounding circumstances to make a prima facie case for the satisfaction of the statutory

requirements for execution of a will, the presumption of due execution attaches.” Groat,

213 Md. App. at 156–57. Thus, a proper attestation clause in a will is itself sufficient to

establish a prima facie case for the validity of the will, but is not necessary to do so.

       “The attestation of the will is the act of the witnesses in seeing that those things exist

and are done which the attestation clause declares were done and which the statute

requires.” McIntyre v. Saltysiak, 205 Md. 415, 421 (1954). In other words, the witnesses’

attestation confirms that the will was executed in accordance with the requirements of ET

§ 4-102. Attestation requires that “the testator directly or indirectly request[] those persons

who do attest [the will] to subscribe their names to it as witnesses.” Casson, 304 Md. at

654–55 (quoting Gross v. Burneston, 91 Md. 383, 387 (1900)). “[T]he testator need not

formally ask the witness to sign the paper, his implied assent being sufficient.” Id. at 654.

Furthermore, “where the testator signs a will in front of the witnesses, proper attestation

does not require that the testator inform the witnesses that they are signing a will.” Slack,

368 Md. at 13 (citing Casson, 304 Md. at 656). Nor does attestation require that the

witnesses “see the testator sign the will.” Van Meter, 183 Md. at 617. But, if the witnesses

do not observe the testator signing the will, then “the testator must acknowledge his

signature before the witnesses or declare the document to be his will.” Slack, 368 Md. at

13 (citing Casson, 304 Md. at 655).

       In contrast, the witnesses must always sign the will in the presence of the testator.

See Groat, 213 Md. App. at 161–62; ET § 4-102(3). “In the presence of the testator” means

“within the unobstructed range of vision of the testator, although if he is able to see it,

                                               13
without any material change of position, the fact that he does or does not avail himself of

the privilege is immaterial.” Groat, 213 Md. App. at 161–62 (quoting Brittingham v.

Brittingham, 147 Md. 153, 160 (1925)). In other words, “[i]t is not necessary for the

testator to have watched the witnesses sign, as long as the testator could have watched them

sign.” Id. at 162 (alteration in original) (quoting Restatement (Third) of Property, Wills

and Other Donative Transfers § 3.1 cmt. p (1999)).

       In this appeal, Sadie does not dispute that the 2010 Will satisfies the requirements

of ET § 4-102(1) and (2)—it is a writing, signed by Peter, the testator. Sadie also does not

dispute that the Will was “signed by two or more credible witnesses in the presence of the

testator”—it was in fact signed by three credible witnesses in the presence of Peter and

each other. Furthermore, there is no dispute over the requirement that the witnesses either

see the testator sign the will or that he acknowledge his signature or declare the document

to be his will. In fact, Peter signed the 2010 Will in the presence of the three witnesses,

and he identified the document as his will.

       Instead, Sadie contends that the 2010 Will does not satisfy the requirement of ET §

4-102(3) that the will be “attested . . . by two or more credible witnesses.” Quoting Shane

v. Wooley, 138 Md. 75, 78 (1921), Sadie argues that attestation requires “that the witnesses

must sign, either upon the same sheet as the signature of the testator, or on some sheet

physically connected with it.” Because Peter signed on page 5 of 6 of the 2010 Will, and

the three witnesses signed on page 6 of 6, and those pages were not physically connected

at the time of signing (or, at a minimum, there is a factual dispute as to whether the pages

were physically connected when signed), Sadie argues that the circuit court erred in

                                              14
granting summary judgment in favor of the Estate on the issue of attestation. In addition,

Sadie contends that the 2010 Will is otherwise invalid because it does not contain a “proper

attestation clause,” and because the Will “expressly states [that] the pages were initialed,

but they were not.” In the alternative, Sadie argues that even if these deficiencies do not

necessarily invalidate the 2010 Will, the circuit court nonetheless erred in finding that the

presumption of due execution attached to the Will, thereby requiring Sadie to rebut the

presumption by clear and convincing evidence.

A.     Attestation on a Different Page than the Testator’s Signature

       The primary issue in this case is whether attestation requires that the testator and the

witnesses sign on the same page of the will, or else on physically connected pages. Sadie

cites Shane v. Wooley for the proposition that attestation requires “that the witnesses must

sign, either upon the same sheet as the signature of the testator, or on some sheet physically

connected with it.” Shane, 138 Md. at 78. The Estate and Darlene respond that the

“physically connected” rule of Shane applies only when the attestation is “on a document

separate from the will itself”; this rule does not apply, they contend, to separate pages of a

multi-page will.

       Shane involved a one-page will that had been signed by the testatrix, placed in an

envelope, and sealed. 138 Md. at 76. The following language “appeared across the sealed

portion of the envelope,” followed by the signatures of three witnesses: “We have seen the

said Mrs. Catherine Shane sign and seal this paper in our presence and at her request we

hereby sign our names as witnesses.” Id. The plaintiffs argued that the will was invalid



                                              15
because the witnesses signing on the envelope rather than the will itself did not satisfy the

statutory requirement of attestation. Id. at 77.

       In Shane, this Court examined a variety of cases (both in state and out of state) and

treatises, and arrived at the following observation:

       While there is no provision of the statute of this State which requires in terms
       that the attestation clause and the signatures of the witnesses shall be at the
       end of the will or at any particular place of the will, as in some of the States
       of the Union, the weight of authority, however, appears to be that the
       witnesses must sign, either upon the same sheet as the signature of the
       testator, or on some sheet physically connected with it, to constitute a valid
       will.

Id. at 78. After summarizing those authorities, the Court concluded that “it is obvious,

under the authorities cited, the formalities prescribed by law, in the execution of wills, have

not been complied with, to constitute a valid will.” Id. at 80.

       As the Estate and Darlene note, however, the facts of Shane and the cases cited

therein are materially distinguishable from the facts of this case. For example, the Shane

Court quoted Brengle v. Tucker for the proposition that “[t]o subscribe means that the

witnesses shall sign their name to the same paper for the purpose of identification, and

implies that attestation has been performed.” Id. at 78 (quoting Brengle v. Tucker, 114 Md.

597, 602 (1911)). In Brengle, the testator wrote and signed a will from a hospital bed

immediately before going into surgery. Brengle, 114 Md. at 599–600. After writing the

purported will on a piece of paper he had received from his doctor, the testator handed the

paper back to the doctor and asked him to sign it. Id. at 600. The doctor complied. Id.

Although there were three other people in the hospital room who had also witnessed these

events, none of them signed the purported will. Id. at 601. The Court held that the

                                              16
purported will did not satisfy the statutory requirements because there was “only one

subscribing witness to [the] paper writing.” Id. at 602.

       Thus, the issue in Brengle was not where the witnesses must sign in order to satisfy

the statutory requirement of attestation, but whether the “witnesses” must sign the will at

all in order to satisfy the requirement, when it is undisputed that they actually witnessed

the testator write and sign the will. In this case, there is no dispute that three witnesses

actually signed the 2010 Will in the presence of Peter and each other.

       The Shane Court also cited In re Baldwin’s Will for the proposition that “[t]he

authorities hold that the attestation or subscription by witnesses must be on the same sheet

of paper as that which contains the testator’s signature, or else upon some paper physically

connected with that sheet.” Shane, 138 Md. at 78 (quoting In re Baldwin’s Will, 59 S.E.

163, 165 (N.C. 1907)). In Baldwin, Mr. Covington wrote a will that was dictated to him

by the testator, Mr. Baldwin. Baldwin, 59 S.E. at 164. Mr. Baldwin signed the will in Mr.

Covington’s presence, and Mr. Covington signed the will as a witness in the presence of

Mr. Baldwin. Id. Later, Mr. Covington took the paper writing with his and Mr. Baldwin’s

signatures to his home and “transcribed it on better paper.” Id. There, outside the presence

of Mr. Baldwin, Mr. Covington signed this new copy of the will as a witness. Id. At some

point after Mr. Covington returned the new copy to Mr. Baldwin, Mr. Baldwin signed it

outside the presence of Mr. Covington. Id. Thereafter, another witness named Mr. Bowles

signed the new copy of the will at the request and in the presence of Mr. Baldwin. Id. at

164–65. After Mr. Baldwin’s death, his wife burned the original copy of the will, and only

the second copy (on better paper) was admitted to probate. Id. at 165.

                                            17
       The Supreme Court of North Carolina held that the second copy of the will did not

satisfy the statutory “requirement that the will shall be subscribed in the presence of the

testator by two witnesses at least.” Id. This was because Mr. Covington signed the second

copy of the will before Mr. Baldwin had signed it and outside his presence. Id. It was

immaterial that Mr. Covington had signed the original copy in Mr. Baldwin’s presence,

because this copy “was not attached in any way to the paper offered for probate and had

no physical connection with it.” Id. Therefore, the Court held that, “[i]n the absence of

any sort of physical connection between the two papers, resort cannot be had to parol proof

to show a similarity of contents, and that they constituted one and the same will.” Id.

       Thus, the issue in Baldwin was whether a witness’ proper attestation of one copy of

a will could essentially transfer to a second copy of the will, when the witness’ signature

on the second copy occurred outside the presence of the testator and consequently was

invalid. In this case, all three witnesses signed the 2010 Will after Peter had signed it, in

the presence of Peter and each other. All four signatories signed the same document (albeit

on separate pages) as part of the same transaction.

       The Shane Court also relied on James Schouler, Law of Wills, Executors, and

Administrators § 336 (5th ed. 1915). Shane, 138 Md. at 79. That section is entitled

“Attestation on a Different Paper” and provides,

              But the attestation or subscription by witnesses must be on the same
       sheet of paper as that which contains the testator’s own signature, or else
       upon some paper physically connected with that sheet. No particular mode
       of connection is prescribed by law; and hence the fastening by tape, by
       eyelets, by mucilage, or even by a pin, seems unobjectionable. Where papers
       are thus connected, the testator may sign on one paper and the witnesses on
       another, provided their intent corresponded.

                                             18
              But attestation or a subscription by witnesses on a piece of paper,
       detached and separated from the will and the testator’s signature, nor
       affixed in his presence to the paper at the time of execution, fails of
       compliance with the policy of our law; we may assume it to be void, as
       otherwise a door would be open to much fraud and perjury.

Schouler, supra at § 336 (emphasis added) (footnote omitted). Notably, the Shane Court

did not cite to the next section of Schouler, § 337, which is entitled “Attestation where a

Will is written on Several Sheets.” That section provides,

       [I]f the will be written on several sheets, whether fastened together or not,
       and the last sheet alone is attested in form, the whole will is well executed,
       provided all the sheets were in the room. . . . and unquestionably, if the
       several pieces of paper are connected in their provisions and form a
       connected series, and are brought in this shape before the attesting witnesses
       at the time of their subscription, a single attestation will suffice for the whole.

       The fact that the Shane Court cited § 336, which discusses attestation “on a piece of

paper detached and separated from the will,” but did not cite § 337, which describes a will

“written on several sheets, whether fastened together or not,” supports the Estate’s and

Darlene’s position that the Shane Court was only concerned with the validity of the

attestation when the witnesses sign a document other than the will itself, not when the

witnesses sign the will on a different piece of paper than the testator. Indeed, these were

the facts in Shane: the testator signed a one-page will, while the witnesses signed on a

sealed envelope containing the will. Unlike here, where the three witnesses signed the will

on a different page than the testator, the witnesses in Shane did not sign the will at all.

Therefore, we conclude that the “physically connected” rule of Shane does not apply to

loose pages of a multi-page will. Instead, Shane stands for the proposition that, when the




                                               19
witnesses sign on a piece of paper that is not part of the will itself, the paper must be

physically connected to the will in order to satisfy the statutory requirement of attestation.

       As we have just determined, Shane did not address the issue presented in this case:

when the witnesses sign the will on a different page than the testator, must the pages be

physically connected in order to satisfy the statutory requirement of attestation? In fact,

the majority of the cases cited by the parties to this Court are generally concerned with the

validity of a multi-page will whose pages are not physically connected at the time of

execution, rather than the validity of the attestation when it is not on the same page as the

testator’s signature. See, e.g., In re Estate of Beale, 113 N.W.2d 380 (Wis. 1962); In re

Covington’s Estate, 33 A.2d 235 (Pa. 1943); In re Swaim’s Will, 78 S.E. 72 (N.C. 1913).

Those cases generally hold that a multi-page will is not invalid merely because its pages

are not physically connected, as long as “they are connected by their internal sense by

coherence or adaptation of parts.” Swaim, 78 S.E. at 73; see also id. (“[T]he papers

themselves bear intrinsic evidence that, while separate, they were tacked together in the

mind of the testator.”).

       Sadie acknowledges that “[t]he overwhelming majority of the cited material

confirms that a properly executed will may be valid even if written on disconnected sheets,”

and she does not challenge this principle. Thus, Sadie does not dispute the validity of the

2010 Will merely because its pages were not physically connected. Nor does she dispute

whether the page containing Peter’s signature (page 5 of 6) and the page containing the

witnesses’ signatures (page 6 of 6) are part of the same document constituting the 2010

Will. Instead, Sadie argues that the 2010 Will was not properly attested, because the

                                             20
witnesses did not sign on the same page as the testator’s signature or on a page physically

connected to it.

       The parties have cited, and this Court has been able to find, only one case in

American jurisprudence that addresses this precise issue: In re Kaiser’s Estate, 34 N.W.2d

366 (Neb. 1948).3 The will in Kaiser “consisted of two sheets numbered (1) and (2)

respectively. The dispositive portion of the will thus written, and signed by the testator,

all appeared on page (1). The perfected attestation clause thereof, subscribed by the

witnesses, alone appeared on page (2).” Kaiser, 34 N.W.2d at 370. The evidence did not

affirmatively show “[w]hether or not the two sheets were physically attached to each other

at the time of execution.” Id. “[A]fter the execution of the will[,] both pages were placed

in a sealed envelope and on the same day delivered into the custody of the county judge,

who thereafter opened it only after [the] testator’s death.” Id.




3
  The appellant in Goroum v. Rynarzewski, 89 Md. App. 676 (1991) raised a similar issue,
but the Court of Special Appeals did not address the argument on the merits. In Goroum,
the attestation clause and the signatures of the witnesses appeared on a page that contained
no other provisions of the will. 89 Md. App. at 684. “[T]he testator [had] initialed and
signed each and every page of his will, except the attestation page, in the presence of the
witnesses.” Id. at 683. The appellant argued that the will was invalid based on one of the
witnesses’ testimony that it was the normal practice of the law office “that the sheets were
not stapled together when wills were signed.” Id. at 680 n.2.

The court noted that “[n]o one testified that the attestation page of this will was at any time
unaffixed.” Id. at 681. Furthermore, “[a] law office’s general practice to do things a certain
way is not clear and convincing evidence that it was done that way in a specific instance.
Simply put, there is no evidence that at the time the testator and witnesses executed this
will, its pages were unaffixed.” Id. Therefore, the court declined to address whether the
will would have satisfied the statutory requirements if the attestation page had not been
affixed to the remainder of the will. Id. at 684.

                                              21
       The Kaiser Court noted that “[t]here is no statutory provision in this state

designating just where a will shall be attested and subscribed by the witnesses, or

forbidding the use of separate sheets in making a will, or directing how or that they shall

be physically attached to each other in order to make a valid will.” Id. at 373. The Court

also observed, “[i]n the case at bar, the sheets were not only connected by their internal

sense, but identified by the subscribing witnesses as connected parts of [the] testator’s

will.” Id. Therefore, the Court upheld the validity of the will. Id. at 374.

       Sadie attempts to distinguish Kaiser by noting that the will in that case “contained

a valid attestation clause,” and “was placed in a sealed envelope after it was signed, from

which it did not emerge until the testator’s death.” Indeed, these additional facts provide

further indications of the validity of the will in Kaiser. However, these additional facts

have no bearing on whether attestation requires the witnesses to sign on the same page as

the testator, or else on physically connected pages. If attestation required the witnesses to

sign on the same page as the testator, or else on physically connected pages, then it would

not matter that the will bore certain other indicia of its validity, such as having a valid

attestation clause and remaining in a sealed envelope. In other words, if the will was not

properly attested as required by statute, then it would have been invalid, regardless of any

other indicia of validity.

       This Court considered a similar issue in Casson. In that case, the Court rejected an

argument “that the will is invalid because the signatures of both witnesses do not appear at

the end of the will, and do not appear in close proximity to one another at any particular

place on the document.” 304 Md. at 657. The Court noted that ET § 4-102 “does not

                                             22
require the witnesses to sign together, or at any particular place on the will.” Id.

(emphasis added). Therefore, the Court concluded that “[w]hile the fact that the two

witnesses did not sign in the same place may bear on the jury question of whether the will

is a fraud, it does not constitute a fatal variance from the required procedure for lawful

execution.” Id.

       Furthermore, we believe that the holding of Kaiser comports with previous

decisions of this Court emphasizing the effectuation of the testator’s intent over strict

compliance with the statutory formalities. For example, in Slack, this Court held that the

presumption of due execution attaches to a will notwithstanding the absence of an

attestation clause, as long as the will bears sufficient other indicia of due execution. 368

Md. at 12. Moreover, the Slack Court declined to invalidate the will at issue in that case

even though one of the witnesses “testified that she did not know that the paper she was

signing was a will, and could not remember whether she saw [the testator]’s signature on

the document.” Id. at 14. The Court noted that the purpose of ET § 4-102 “was to remove

uncertainty in the making of wills and to prevent the practice of imposition and fraud upon

testators.” Id. at 17. The Court then observed that the circumstances of that case did “not

suggest that there was any fraud worked upon the testator. The will was found in [the]

testator’s home after his death, duly signed and witnessed; this shows that the testator

thought it was a valid will.” Id. (emphasis added). Therefore, the Slack Court concluded

that “the will was entitled to probate as a validly executed will.” Id. at 18. Additionally,

in Casson, this Court held that “[t]o fulfill the requirement that a testator request a witness

sign a document it is not necessary that the witness know it is a will.” 304 Md. at 654.

                                              23
       Thus, this Court’s decisions in Casson and Slack indicate that the Court is generally

reluctant to impose formalities beyond those specifically required by statute, and that the

testator’s intention that the document act as his will is paramount. Cf. Carney v. Kosko,

229 Md. 112, 117 (1962) (“[A] will or a codicil need not be in any particular form, so long

as it (a) makes a disposition of the testator’s property, and (b) such disposition is to take

effect only upon death.”); see also Restatement (Third) of Property (Wills & Don. Trans.)

§ 3.1, cmt. f (“A court should never impose formal requirements beyond those in the

statute.”).

       Moreover, we believe that Sadie’s proposed rule—that the witnesses must sign on

the same page as the testator, or on physically connected pages—would not serve the

purpose of ET § 4-102, “to prevent the practice of imposition and fraud upon testators.”

Slack, 368 Md. at 17. To the contrary, we believe that Sadie’s rule would result in the

invalidation of numerous wills that otherwise comply with the statutory requirements and

present no evidence of fraud. As the Court of Special Appeals noted,

       One need not strain to consider the unfortunate results that could occur when
       a will is drafted on word-processing software, as most undoubtedly are these
       days. Even if the places for the witnesses’ signatures are initially adjacent to
       the testator’s, the slightest revisions or additions to the body of the will may
       send them to a new page, presumably in violation of the strict rule that
       [Sadie] advances. The results may attend changes to the font, font size, or
       margins. Facing such potentially ruinous results, the testator might have to
       compose the document on a scroll.

Castruccio, 230 Md. App. at 142 n.13. In addition, “the physical-connection rule is fraught

with vagueness and uncertainty. Would a paperclip or binder clip suffice? What if




                                             24
someone pinched the pages between her thumb and index finger while the witnesses

signed? What if the pages were pressed together under a paperweight?” Id. at 143.

        For all of these reasons, we conclude that attestation does not require the witnesses

to sign on the same page as the testator, or on physically connected pages. Instead,

attestation requires (1) that two or more credible witnesses sign the will in the presence of

the testator, and (2) that the witnesses either observe the testator sign the will, or that the

testator acknowledges his signature on the document or acknowledges that the document

is his will.

        In this case, three credible witnesses observed Peter sign on page 5 of 6 of the 2010

Will, and Peter informed the witnesses that the document was his will. After having

witnessed this, the three witnesses each signed on page 6 of 6 of the 2010 Will. Whether

they were physically connected or not, all six pages of the document were in the room,

together, at the time of signing. The six pages are consecutively numbered, the font and

typeface are consistent throughout, and the text flows continuously from one page to the

next. “[T]hey are connected by their internal sense by coherence or adaptation of parts”

and “the papers themselves bear intrinsic evidence that, while separate, they were tacked

together in the mind of the testator.” Swaim, 78 S.E. at 73.

        The evidence does not reveal whether the pages were physically connected to each

other at the time of signing, but this fact is immaterial to the Will’s validity. Regardless of

whether the last two pages (or any of the pages, for that matter) were physically connected,

it is clear from “the papers themselves” that they were intended to form a single document

constituting the 2010 Will. Attestation does not require that the witnesses sign on the same

                                              25
page as the testator, or on physically connected pages. Therefore, the fact that the last two

pages of the 2010 Will may not have been physically connected at the time of signing does

not render the Will invalid, nor prevent the presumption of due execution from attaching

to it. Accordingly, we hold that the circuit court did not err in denying Sadie’s cross-motion

for summary judgment as to Issue F (attestation).

B.     Imperfect Attestation Clause and the Presumption of Due Execution

       Next, Sadie argues that the 2010 Will is invalid because it does not contain a “proper

attestation clause,” and “it expressly states [that] the pages were initialed [by Peter], but

they were not.”     Alternatively, Sadie argues that even if these deficiencies do not

necessarily invalidate the 2010 Will, they nonetheless should prevent the presumption of

due execution from attaching to it. Therefore, Sadie asserts that she should not have been

required to rebut the presumption by clear and convincing evidence. Accordingly, Sadie

contends that the circuit court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of the Estate

on all transmitted issues.

       The Estate and Darlene respond that these purported deficiencies do not invalidate

the 2010 Will because neither a “proper attestation clause” nor having the testator initial

each page are requirements for a valid will. Furthermore, the Estate and Darlene maintain

that even if the attestation clause in the 2010 Will was itself insufficient to give rise to the

presumption of due execution, the Will contained other sufficient indicia of due execution

such that the presumption should attach. Additionally, the Estate and Darlene assert that

Sadie produced no evidence to rebut the presumption of due execution, let alone clear and



                                              26
convincing evidence. Therefore, the Estate and Darlene contend that the circuit court

properly granted summary judgment in favor of the Estate on all transmitted issues.

       Sadie is correct that page 5 of 6 of the 2010 Will states that Peter has “initial [sic]

each page hereof,” when in fact he did not, as his initials do not appear on any pages of the

Will. However, Sadie cites to no authority, and we have found none, supporting her

position that this error either invalidates the Will or prevents the presumption of due

execution from attaching to it. We see no reason why an error such as this—stating that

the pages were initialed when in fact they were not—should either invalidate an otherwise

valid will or prevent the presumption of due execution from attaching to it, so long as the

will contains sufficient other indicia of due execution. Having the testator initial each page

of a multi-page will is not required by statute, and therefore we decline to impose such a

requirement here. See Restatement (Third) of Property (Wills & Don. Trans.) § 3.1, cmt.

f (“A court should never impose formal requirements beyond those in the statute.”).

       Turning to the allegedly “improper” attestation clause, we note that the attestation

clause appearing in the 2010 Will is admittedly imperfect. It states,

               The above named individual, does declare for his Last Will and
       Testament this instrument, have hereunto subscribed to have witness on the
       date last mentioned above, and at the location, and [//4] I do hereby attest
       that the testator to be of sound mind, fully able to understand this instrument,
       and the testator voluntarily and freely did sign same.




4
 These symbols have been inserted to indicate the page break between the bottom of page
5 of 6 and the top of page 6 of 6 in the 2010 Will.

                                             27
The attestation clause does not recite the statutory requirement that the witnesses signed

the Will “in the presence of the testator.” See ET § 4-102(3). Thus, it does not “recite[]

the formalities required by the jurisdiction in which the instrument might take effect (such

as where the will might be probated).” Slack, 368 Md. at 8 n.5 (quoting Black’s Law

Dictionary 124 (7th ed. 1999)). As such, the attestation clause in the 2010 Will, standing

alone, does not provide prima facie evidence for the validity of the Will. See Van Meter,

183 Md. at 617–18 (“[A]n attestation clause reciting facts necessary for the valid

execution of a will is prima facie evidence of the due execution of the will, if it bears the

genuine signatures of the testator and subscribing witnesses.” (emphasis added)).

       However, as discussed earlier in this opinion, we agree with the Estate and Darlene

that an attestation clause is not a requirement of a valid will, and therefore an “improper”

or incomplete attestation clause does not serve to invalidate an otherwise valid will. “The

validity of the execution of a will depends, not upon an attestation clause, but upon

conformity of the execution with the requirements of the statute, and also the testimony of

the subscribing witnesses if they are produced and examined.” Id. at 617; see also Slack,

368 Md. at 8 n.5 (“A formal attestation clause is not an essential part of a will.”). Nor is a

“proper” attestation clause required for the presumption of due execution to attach to a will.

See Slack, 368 Md. at 12 (“[A]n attestation clause is not the sine qua non of the presumption

of due execution.”). “[I]n the absence of an attestation clause, if a proponent of a

testamentary document can adduce sufficient evidence from the document and/or

surrounding circumstances to make a prima facie case for the satisfaction of the statutory



                                             28
requirements for execution of a will, the presumption of due execution attaches.” Groat,

213 Md. App. at 156–57 (citing Slack, 368 Md. at 12).

       In this case, the circuit court did not err in finding “sufficient evidence from the

document and/or surrounding circumstances to make a prima facie case for the satisfaction

of the statutory requirements for execution of a will,” id. at 157, and thus properly found

that the presumption of due execution attached to the 2010 Will. Although the attestation

clause itself is imperfect, each of the three witnesses signed their names under the word

“WITNESS:.” Cf. Slack, 368 Md. at 12 (that “[t]he two witnesses, in the presence of the

testator, signed beneath the words ‘Witnessed By’” provides an indication of due

execution). The witnesses’ signatures all appear on the same page, which is the next

consecutively numbered page following the one that contains the testator’s signature. Cf.

id. (that the testator’s signature “was nearly adjacent to the signatures of the witnesses”

provides an indication of due execution). Additionally, the imperfect attestation clause

includes a recitation of some (though not all) of the statutory requirements for execution of

a will, including witnessing Peter sign the will and a statement of Peter’s testamentary

capacity.

       Furthermore, the “surrounding circumstances” in this case provide additional

evidence of satisfaction of the statutory requirements. All three witnesses testified that

they observed Peter sign the 2010 Will, that he declared the document to be his will, and

that they all signed the Will in his presence and in the presence of each other. See Van

Meter, 183 Md. at 617 (“The validity of the execution of a will depends, not upon an

attestation clause, but upon conformity with the requirements of the statute, and also the

                                             29
testimony of the subscribing witnesses if they are produced and examined.” (emphasis

added)).

       Therefore, based on the document itself and the circumstances surrounding its

execution, we conclude that the circuit court did not err in finding sufficient evidence “to

make a prima facie case for the satisfaction of the statutory requirements for execution of

a will,” Groat, 213 Md. App. at 157, and thus finding that the presumption of due execution

attached to the 2010 Will.5 Accordingly, the circuit court did not err in granting summary

judgment in favor of the Estate on all transmitted issues.

C.     Disputed Facts

       Finally, Sadie argues that the circuit court erred in granting summary judgment in

favor of the Estate because she produced evidence that generated disputed issues of

material facts. Specifically, Sadie contends that the 2010 Will admitted to probate did not

match the physical description of the will provided by Mr. Greiber and Samantha in their

depositions. Both Mr. Greiber and Samantha testified that they remembered that the 2010

Will was stapled when it was signed, and Samantha recalled that Peter had initialed each

page. The Will admitted to probate, however, bore no indication of ever having been

stapled, and did not contain Peter’s initials on any of the pages. Sadie contends that

whether the Will was stapled and initialed are material facts bearing on its validity, and


5
  Sadie only argues that the circuit court erred in finding that the presumption of due
execution attached to the 2010 Will. She does not argue, in the alternative, that if the
presumption did attach, she nonetheless produced clear and convincing evidence to rebut
the presumption. Therefore, we need not consider whether Sadie produced sufficient
evidence to overcome the presumption of due execution regarding the 2010 Will.

                                             30
therefore the circuit court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the Estate. The

Estate and Darlene do not respond to Sadie’s argument regarding disputed issues of

material facts.

       “A material fact is a fact the resolution of which will somehow affect the outcome

of the case. Consequently, a dispute over a non-material fact will not preclude summary

judgment.” King v. Bankerd, 303 Md. 98, 111 (1985) (citation omitted). In other words,

       [m]erely proving the existence of a factual dispute is not necessarily fatal to
       a summary judgment motion. A dispute as to facts relating to grounds upon
       which the decision is not rested is not a dispute with respect to a material
       fact and such dispute does not prevent the entry of summary judgment.

Boland, 423 Md. at 366 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).

       As discussed in Part A above, whether the 2010 Will was stapled at the time of

signing has no bearing on its validity. As such, resolution of this disputed fact would not

affect the outcome of the case. Indeed, in granting the Estate’s motion for summary

judgment, the circuit court “proceeded . . . on the assumption . . . that the separate sheets

of the Will were not mechanically affixed by a staple or other device and were not so

affixed when deposited with the Register of Wills for safekeeping on November 17, 2010.”

Therefore, the dispute about whether the 2010 Will was stapled at the time of signing

“relate[d] to grounds upon which the [circuit court’s] decision [was] not rested.” Boland,

423 Md. at 366. Similarly, as discussed in Part B above, whether the 2010 Will was

initialed by Peter also has no bearing on its validity. Accordingly, resolution of this

disputed fact would not affect the outcome of the case.




                                             31
       Sadie contends that these disputed facts are material because the contrary

descriptions of the 2010 Will by the witnesses indicate that the will that was signed by

Peter and the three witnesses on September 29, 2010 might not be the same will that was

admitted to probate. However, in order to defeat summary judgment, “[a] plaintiff’s claim

must be supported by more than a ‘scintilla of evidence[,]’ as ‘there must be evidence upon

which [a] jury could reasonably find for the plaintiff.’” Blackburn Ltd. P’ship v. Paul, 438

Md. 100, 108 (2014) (second and third alterations in original) (quoting Beatty v.

Trailmaster Prods., Inc., 330 Md. 726, 738–39 (1993)). Furthermore, when a witness to a

testamentary document provides testimony that is contrary to the description provided in

the document itself, “[t]he court views such contradictory testimony with great caution and

scans it with grave suspicion[.]” Van Meter, 183 Md. at 618; see also Slack, 368 Md. at

15 (“This Court and most other state courts consistently have found that a witness’ inability

to remember certain events should not overcome the presumption of due execution.”).

       Therefore, we conclude that Mr. Grieber’s and Samantha’s inaccurate recollections

about whether the 2010 Will was stapled and initialed on each page at the time of signing

were insufficient to generate disputed issues of material fact. Accordingly, the circuit court

did not err in granting summary judgment in favor of the Estate on all transmitted issues.

                                      CONCLUSION

       The statutory requirements for a validly executed will are that it must be “(1) in

writing, (2) signed by the testator, or by some other person for him, in his presence and by

his express direction, and (3) attested and signed by two or more credible witnesses in the

presence of the testator.” ET § 4-102. When the testator and the witnesses sign on separate

                                             32
pages of a multi-page will, attestation does not require that the pages be “physically

connected” at the time of signing. Furthermore, neither a complete attestation clause nor

having the testator initial each page of the will are requirements for valid execution.

Therefore, the absence of these elements in a testamentary document does not serve to

invalidate the will, nor prevent the presumption of due execution from attaching to it.

       In this case, the Estate and Darlene produced “sufficient evidence from the

document and/or surrounding circumstances to make a prima facie case for the satisfaction

of the statutory requirements for execution of a will.” Groat, 213 Md. App. at 157. Thus,

the circuit court properly found that the presumption of due execution attached to the 2010

Will, and Sadie does not argue that she produced clear and convincing evidence to

overcome the presumption. Therefore, the circuit court correctly denied Sadie’s cross-

motion for summary judgment as to Issue F (attestation), and properly granted the Estate’s

motion for summary judgment on all transmitted issues. Accordingly, we affirm the

judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.

                                             JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
                                             SPECIAL   APPEALS     AFFIRMED.
                                             COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.




                                            33
APPENDIX
                                                                                                                          FILED
                       PETER ADALBERT CASTRUCCIO                                                                          FEB 21 2013

                                                                                                                    REGISIER OF WILLS
                                                                                                                 -NNE ARUNDEL
                                                                                                                              COUNTY, MD

       I, PETER ADALBERT CASTRUCCI O, residing at 8229 Anglers Edge Trail, Glen Burnie,

Maryland 21060, being      of   sound and disposing mind, memory and understanding, do hereby

voluntarily make, publish and declare this instrument                     as   his WILL IN TESTAMENT, thereby
revoking any and all previous Wills and Codicils herein before made by me.


       WHEREAS, it is my intention that on my death, all provisions of this instrument will
constitute my Last   Will In Testament; therefore, I do hereby declare the following:


ITEM   1: RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF                      MY PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE
       I do hereby nominate, constitute and appoint my friend and counsel                               of many years, JOHN
RALPH GREIBER, JR. to act         as   my Persona] Representative for the administration of my Estate.
To that affect, I do confer upon my Personal Representative the following rights and obligations:
       1.      I do hereby express the desire that my Personal Representative pay my just debts,
               ﬁnal expenses and taxes,       as soon as     practical after my death. Firstly out of cash or
               liquid assets within my Estate, secondly by of the sale of any personal property in my
               Estate, and thirdly out       of   any real estate which is subject to my control and
               disposition.
       2.      I do hereby direct that my Personal Representative pay from my Estate, primarily
               from the residuary clause, all government, Estate or inheritance taxes, which may be
               due and payable by reason       of my debt, without requiring contribution from anyone,
               who, in the absence      of this exoneration, would be liable for payment of any portion
               of such taxes by virtue of the inheritance of the status of beneﬁciary.
       3.      I do hereby request that my Personal Representative be excused from the necessity

               of giving bond,    unless absolutely required by law, and in that event, my Personal

               Representative shall give such bond in such minimum amount as would be required

               by law.



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      For any and all activities    of my    Personal Representative, I do hereby direct and

      request that he be relieved from the necessity       of securing   any previously obtained
      authority or subsequent ratiﬁcation from any court, to perform the activities of
      Personal Representative.

      My Personal Representative shall not       be   liable for any act or omission on his part
      which results from mere negligence, unless such activity by the Personal
      Representative constitutes fraud or willﬁJI misconduct.

      My Personal Representative is hereby authorized to sell,            lease, give option, or

      otherwise dispose of any and all property constituting a part       of my Estate, whether
      real, personal or mix, at eithar public or private sale, all within the performance     of
      the activities of the Personal Representative in the furtherance       of administering my
      Estate.

      I do hereby direct that my Personal Representative pay the cost of any and all funeral
      expenses and that these cost be paid out      of the funds available in my Estate.
      I   do hereby authorize my Personal Representative to carry on my business for such

      a reasonable period    of time     as is necessary to   bring the business to a orderly
      conclusion, or, if in the discretion of the Personal Representative, to continue to carry

      on such business for such    a   reasonable period   of time as maybe appropriate for the
      eventual termination    of my       Estate, whereby I hereby authorize my Personal

      Representative to act with the same authority which I may have had in the conduct

      of such business.
      I hereby authorize my Personal Representative to be empowered, by sale or
      otherwise, to deal with any personal propeny in my Estate, including stocks, bonds,
      secun'ties or other similar matters, including the right to cast vote on such sécurities,

      either in person or by limited general proxy.

10.   My Personal Representative is hereby authorized to enforce, compromise and/or
      litigate any claim against or in favor of my Estate.
11.   My Personal Representative        is hereby authorized to execute such guarantees and

      indemnity agreements binding upon my Estate, which, in his sole discretion, are
      appropriate to the handling      of the administration of my Estate.

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         12.      My Personal Representative is hereby authorized to prepare, ﬁle and execute in my
                  name, or on behalf of my Estate any and all income or other Tax Returns.

         1   3.   My Personal Representative is hereby authorized to exercise any and all other powers
                  which are reasonable and necessary for the proper handling of the administration of

                  my Estate.
         14.      The enumeration      of the foregoing powers       are given   for the purpose of enumerating
                  some   of the power of my         Personal Representative, and not by way      of limitations;
                  therefore, any and all other powers permitted to Personal Representatives, under the

                  laws   of the State of my residence at the time of my death are expressly granted unto
                  my Personal Representative.


ITEM 2: SURVIVAL OF BENEFICIARY
        If any beneﬁciary      or beneﬁciaries under this instrument, and I should die in           a    common
disaster or accident, or under such circumstances that it is doubtful as to which of us died ﬁrst, then

all provisions    of this Will shall   be effective as though any such beneﬁciary or beneﬁciaries shall

have predeceased me. Further, in the event that any beneficiary under this              Will shall die
within (30) days after my death, then such beneﬁciary shall be deemed to have predeceased me, and                   4




I direct that the provisions of this Will shall be construed upon that assumption.


ITEM 3: MEMORANDUM OF INTENT
        Al] the bequests contained in my Will            are absolute, it is my desire that any memorandum
[which I may leave, addressed to my Personal Representative, or to any beneﬁciary, indicating my

desire with regard to the disposal      of any item of my Estate, or manner of handling my Estate,          shall
be   given due regard in so far        as   it   is deemed practical in the sole discretion    of my     Personal
Representative, and provided these directions are otherwise legal.



ITEM 4: PRIOR DISTRIBUTION OF BEQUEST
        As to any speciﬁc item of property, whether real, personal or mix, indicated to be left to a

bcneﬁciary, under the provisions of this Will,           if such beneﬁciary shall have received all or part of
any such asset prior to the ﬁnal administration             of my   Estate, then I do direct that my Personal


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Representative deduct from the Estate to be received by such beneficiary all such advances made to
such beneficiary.


ITEM S: ADVANCES TO BENEFICIARIES
        By his sole discretion, my Personal Representative shall be empowered to make such
advances of assets to any such beneficiary mentioned herein, provided such advances made prior to
final administration of this Estate, shall be taken to reduce the eventual distribution to any such
beneficiary.


ITEM 6: EFFECT OF UNSUCCESSFUL ATTEMPT TO VOID
        In the event that any party, whether they are a beneficiary or not, shall file any proceeding
in an attempt to void any and all provisions of this instrument, in that event, such
party shall receive no benefits whatsoever from my Estate, in the event that such proceedings are
unsuccessful.


ITEM 7: CASH BEQUESTS
        The following individuals shall receive cash bequests, prior to any bequest to my beloved
wife:
        !.      DARLENE BARCLAY, 107 Foxhound Drive, Glen Burnie, Maryland, 21061,
                Eight Hundred Thousand Dollars ($800,000) which includes the Four Hundred
                Thousand Dollars ($400,000) already set aside with Wachovia.
        2.      ADRIANA LANATA, Via Trieste 45, Chiavari 16043, Italy, One Hundred
                Thousand Dollars ($100,000)
        3.      ERNEST STINCHCOMB, JR., 1141-B Dicus Mill Road, Millersville, Maryland,
                21108, One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($100,000)


ITEMS:
        To my loving wife,. Sadie, excluding the individual bequest made in Item 7, I leave the rest
and remainder of my Estate to her should she one, survive me and two provided she has made and
executed a Will prior to my death.

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ITEM 9: PERSONALITY
       I have instructed my friend and Attorney of many years to draft a letter, which we have
discussed, to advise my family members of my demise and reasons for the beneficiary distribution
of my estate.


ITEM 10: RESIDUARY CLAUSE
       Should, at the time of my death, my beloved wife not have a valid Will filed with the Register
of Wills in Anne Arundel County dated prior thereto these, I hereby give, devise and bequeath all
the rest and residue of my Estate and property, whether imposition, expectancy will remainder,
including all property over which I may have Power of Appointment to the following individuals
share and share alike per stirpes and not per capita to DARLENE BARCLAY, I 07 Foxhound Drive,
Glen Burnie, Maryland, 21061.


ITEM 11.        As above noted, should any beneficiary be deceased at the time of his or her
distribution under the proceeds of my last Will, it is my express intention that his or her share shall
be distributed to his or her heirs equally.


       IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I, the above mentioned testator have hereunto set my hands
and seals to this six page instrument, and have initial each page hereof, which instrument is intendant
to be my Last Will and Testament, this    ~ 9""-fay;;fseptember, 2010.


                                                     ~1(~ QJil ktf a<,y1;v1vi o
                                                          ETER ADALBERT CASTRUCCIO




SIGNED, SEALED, PUBLISHED AND DECLARE, BY PETER AD ALBERT CASTRUCCIO.


        The above named individual, does declare for his Last Will and Testament this instrument,
have hereunto subscribed to have witness on the date last mentioned above, and at the location, and

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I do hereby attest that the testator to be of sound mind, fully able to understand this instrument, and
the testator voluntarily and freely did Sign same.



WITNESS:




     ature, reading at:
  Hull Avenue      ’/
Annapokis, MD 2140




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                                                       Signature, residing at:

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