This guest post is from Autumn
Miller, Regent Law 2L:
“. . . Life is old there, older than the trees . . .” are
words so familiar from the famous John Denver song Take Me Home, Country
Roads. However, the reality is that life in West Virginia – which became a
state on June 20, 1863 – is not nearly as old as Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania
became the second state on December 12, 1787. Thousands of German, Finnish,
Welsh, Scottish, etc. immigrants moved towards the western part of
Pennsylvania, moving further after the Proclamation Line of 1763 ended in the
Appalachian Mountains.
The culture on top of the mountain differs from life in the
“valley.” Those living in the modern 21st Century would be appalled
by the simple living people still do. While I have lived in the “valley” most
of my life, most of my family live secluded and isolated up in the Appalachian
Mountains at some point along the incredible 230 miles of mountain the range
takes up in the Commonwealth. A fact usually brought up by the family members who
live in the mountains is how ridiculous it is that Walmart is over an hour's
drive away above Selinsgrove, sometimes more depending on the road conditions
on the mountain. While there is running water and electricity, you will be
hard-pressed to find many modern-day luxuries.
One thing is for sure: while most of those who live in the
mountains are friendly individuals, just as those in the “valley” or other
parts of extremely rural Pennsylvania, they enjoy being left alone to live
their happy, simple lives. This is why holographic wills make sense in Pennsylvania.
A holographic will is a handwritten will, written and signed without the
presence of witnesses. Very few states allow such a thing due to the Wills Act
or state law prohibiting allowing wills signed without witnesses. The nature
and culture of the Appalachian Mountains already create a natural distrust for
anyone not attuned to their usual way of life. The suspicion for attorneys is
pretty standard for those who live in rural areas, where most people would solve
their disputes independently. Most attorneys are not perched on the
mountaintops, which requires those up in the mountains to come down to the
valley. Coupled with the long distance, the distrust of attorneys, and the
amount of money attorneys cost, there is little incentive to make the trip to
write a document that will cost the person too much money. There is far more
benefit in writing their own will that does not involve interrupting an entire
day.
The mountains hold a deep and old way of life that does not
appear willing to bend to modern comforts. Even the Commonwealth statutes
reflect this ancient way of life, allowing them to live as freely as they
desire.
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