John J. BOYLE, Appellant,
v.
Louise SCHMITT, etc., et al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
John J. Boyle, in pro. per.
Robert M. Brake, Coral Gables, for appellees.
*666 Before SCHWARTZ, C.J., and BARKDULL and JORGENSON, JJ.
JORGENSON, Judge.
John Boyle appeals from a final judgment denying recovery in an action for breach of a contract to make a will. We affirm.
In 1979, James and Blanche Boyle, husband and wife, executed a document entitled "Agreement to Make Will." The agreement provided, in pertinent part, that:
The parties hereby recite and declare that John J. Boyle, their son, has and is performing services necessary to maintain them in reasonable comfort and dignity by managing and maintaining their real and personal property.
In consideration of the above services, James J. Boyle and Blanche E. Boyle, shall make a Will bequeathing and devising all their property to their son, John J. Boyle, escept [sic] that all their jewelry and household effects at5895 S.W. 35 Street, Miami, Florida, shall go to their daughter, Louise Schmitt.
Simultaneously with the execution of the will agreement, Blanche and James Boyle executed a joint will in which each left all property to the survivor. Upon the death of the survivor, the property was to go to John Boyle with the exception of jewelry and household effects that were left to the daughter, Louise Schmitt.
During their marriage, the parties refinanced their jointly owned rental properties several times, drawing cash that they invested in municipal bonds. Eventually, the bond interest payments had to be used to meet the mortgage payments on the properties. In 1987, because of family difficulties, Blanche Boyle moved to California to live with her daughter and refused to contribute her share of the bond interest to the debt service on the properties. James Boyle sued for divorce and sought to have a constructive trust imposed on the bonds held by Blanche Boyle.[1] John Boyle, their son and plaintiff in this case, represented his father in the action against his mother. In the divorce proceeding, Blanche Boyle gave a deposition in which she expressly repudiated the Agreement to Make a Will. She did not remember executing the document and testified that she never would have agreed to leave the bulk of her property to John, effectively disinheriting her daughter and a son by a previous marriage.[2] Blanche Boyle's repudiation of the will agreement was immediately communicated to James Boyle. In addition to representing his father against his mother in the divorce proceeding, John Boyle sued his mother and his father for breach of the agreement to make a will.[3] The son later dismissed the action against his father. When Blanche Boyle died in 1989, she left a will, executed in California in 1988, naming her daughter, Louise Schmitt, as personal representative and sole beneficiary.[4] John Boyle substituted his mother's estate as defendant in the breach of contract action and joined his sister as a party.
We affirm the trial court's judgment and hold that under these circumstances, Blanche Boyle properly revoked the contract to make a will. The third party beneficiary, John Boyle, is therefore not entitled to enforce the terms of that contract against either his sister or his mother's estate.
*667 This court has held that "unlike a will which clearly is ambulatory in nature and therefore may readily be revoked by a competent testator, a contract to make a will may be irrevocable and therefore subject to specific enforcement by the courts." Donner v. Donner,
Until now, no Florida court has been presented with a case such as this, where a party to the agreement to make a will clearly and unequivocally revoked that agreement prior to death and communicated that revocation to both the other promisor and the third party beneficiary.
An agreement to make mutual wills, or the execution of wills in pursuance of such an agreement, does not bind the testators to keep the property, covered thereby, for the intended beneficiaries under such wills, or prevent them from making such other disposition of it, either inter vivos or by will, as they may desire and mutually agree, while both or all are alive. Moreover, while both or all of the parties to such an agreement are yet alive, any party may recede therefrom, and revoke his will or make a different disposition of his property, on giving proper notice to the other party or parties of his act in so doing, or where such other or others have actual knowledge thereof; but a revocation or alteration of his will by one of the parties to such an agreement in secret, or without notice to, or the knowledge of, the other or others, although all are yet alive, does not release such party from his obligations under the agreement, and it remains enforceable against him.
Allen v. Dillard,
In sum, we join those jurisdictions that have adopted the bright line rule that a party to a contract to make a will may repudiate that contract during her lifetime, provided that she gives notice of that repudiation to the co-promisor and the third-party beneficiary.
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The litigation over the bonds resulted in appeals to this court. See e.g., Schmitt v. Boyle,
[2] John Boyle has stipulated that his mother repudiated the will agreement during the divorce proceeding.
[3] The litigation over the contract to make a will resulted in the following appeals to this court: Schmitt v. Boyle,
[4] The will provided in part: "Not being unmindful of my sons, John Boyle, who is now suing me, and Bruce Boyle... ."
[5] Even if Blanche Boyle had not properly revoked the agreement to make a will, the mutual revocations by both parties to the agreement bar enforcement of the agreement to make a will. A contract to make a will may be modified or revoked by mutual agreement of the parties. In re Estate of Algar,
