284 S.W. 1106 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1926
Affirming.
On March 17, 1924, a paper purporting to be the last will and testament of Mrs. Mary J. Evans Taylor, deceased, was offered for probate in the Lawrence county court. Probate there being refused, the matter was appealed to the Lawrence circuit court with like result. From this last judgment the propounder brings this appeal.
The case was tried in the circuit court on law and facts without the intervention of a jury. Although given opportunity to do so, the appellant filed no bill of exceptions. The clerk has copied into the record sent here what purports to be the evidence heard by the lower court on the trial of this case, but, under the many decisions of this court, it is obvious that it cannot be considered in the absence of a bill of exceptions, and that the only question we have before us is whether or not the pleadings support the judgment. Kavunedas v. Long,
However, we have examined what purports to be the evidence heard by the trial court in this case, and, if it be such evidence, the trial court committed no error in refusing to admit to probate the paper in question. From this purported evidence we gather that on the 25th day of April, 1912, Mrs. Mary J. Evans, then a widow, executed a last will and testament; that on September 2, 1916, she intermarried with William Taylor; that prior *434 to their marriage they entered into an antenuptial contract which was reduced to writing on September 10, 1916, after their marriage; that by this antenuptial contract the parties agreed that "neither of us is to have any interest in each other's estate before our marriage;" that just prior to the marriage Taylor conveyed to his relatives practically all, if not all, of his estate; that he died some time after the marriage; that Mrs. Taylor, who had been Mrs. Evans, made no claim to any part of his estate, and that she died thereafter.
By section 4832 of the Kentucky Statutes it is provided:
"Every will made by a man or woman shall be revoked by his or her marriage except a will made in exercise of a power of appointment when the estate thereby appointed would not, in default of such appointment, pass to his or her heir, personal representative, or next of kin."
In the case of Ransom v. Connelly,
Appellant, however, seems to have the idea that section 2147 of the statutes, empowering married women with the same power to make a will as has a feme sole, in some way affects section 4832 supra. We are unable *435 to follow appellant's reasoning in this respect. In the Ransom case supra, the will in question was that of a husband who at all the times involved had the right to make a will. Clearly the testatrix in this case is in no better position than was the testator in the Ransom case. Section 2147 at the best does no more than put Mrs. Taylor on the same plane as was Ransom. This reasoning is well worked out in the case of Lathrop v. Dunlop, 4 Hun. 213 (N.Y.). In that case the facts were: Jessie A. Dunlop, a resident of New York, executed her will. Subsequently she entered into an antenuptial agreement, by the terms of which she retained full control of her own property. A few days afterwards she married, and about two months after her marriage she died. Her will was presented for probate and probate was refused under a statute of New York, practically the same as section 4832 of our statutes. It was urged that the New York married woman's acts had in some measure superseded that part of the law of New York similar to section 4832 of our statutes. In speaking to that point the court said:
"We see nothing in the so-called married woman's acts which should modify this statute. The fact that married woman now has power to make a will does not affect the reason of the law, which is mentioned above. To illustrate this, the previous sections of the statute declare that, in certain cases, the marriage of a man and birth of children shall be deemed a revocation of his will. This is not because he had not the testamentary power, but because, as a general rule, the change of circumstances prevents his will, made previously, from expressing his wishes."
In Brown v. Clark,
"The married women acts confer testamentary capacity upon married women, but they do not undertake to interfere with or abrogate the statute prescribing the effect of marriage as a revocation. *436 It was quite consistent that the legislature should have intended to leave the statute of 1830 in force, although the new statutes took away the reason upon which it was based. The legislature may have deemed it proper to continue it for the reason that the new relation created by the marriage would be likely to induce a change of testamentary intention, and that a disposition by a married woman of her property by will should depend upon a new testamentary act after the marriage."
As the case before us is indistinguishable from the Ransom case supra, the trial court committed no error in holding that the will of Mrs. Evans Taylor was revoked by her marriage to Taylor in 1916, despite the antenuptial contract entered into by her and Taylor.
However, because of the absence of the bill of exceptions the only question before us is whether or not the judgment is supported by what was filed as the foundation of appellant's case in the trial court. As it is, such judgment must be and it is affirmed.