230 Wis. 246 | Wis. | 1939
The following opinion was filed December 6, 1938:
Eleanor Kamba Forster and Viola Kamba Francek, beneficiaries named in the sixth and seventh paragraphs of the will of their father, James F. Kamba, after the admission of the will to probate, petitioned the county court for construction of those paragraphs. The testator besides making other bequests to his wife made her residuary legatee. The two paragraphs involved read as follows :
“Sixth: I give and bequeath to my daughter, Eleanor Kamba, as her share of my estate, the proceeds of the five thousand dollars ($5,000) insurance policy in which she is named beneficiary and ten per cent (10%) of the common stock of the Appleton Engraving Company held by me, the earning and dividends of which shall be used by my wife, Nila Kamba, for the upkeep of the home until my said daughter, Eleanor, shall leave home.
“Seventh: I give and bequeath to my daughter, Viola Kamba, as her share of my estate, the proceeds of the five thousand dollars ($5,000) insurance policy wherein she is named as beneficiary and ten per cent (10% ) of the common stock of the Appleton Engraving Company held by me, the earnings and dividends of which shall be used by my wife, Nila Kamba, for the upkeep of the home until my said daughter, Viola, shall leave home.”
After making his will the testator desired to have the proceeds of the two policies paid to his daughters in monthly instalments of $75 each instead of a lump sum. Pie desired the insurance company to act as trustee to hold the proceeds and SO' apply them. The insurance company pursuant tO' its custom would act as trustee only if the policies were made payable to the testator’s “executors, administrators or assigns” instead of the beneficiaries named therein. To procure the change in mode of payment to1 his daughters, the testator changed the policies to make the policies so payable, and entered into trust agreements with the insurance company making it trustee to hold and disburse the proceeds of the policies in monthly payments. One of the agreements was attached to one of the policies and the other to the other. The agreements were identical, except as’ to the number of the policies, each agreement being attached to the policy numbered according to the number designated in the agreement.
Upon the death of the testator both policies were paid to the widow, one to her as guardian of the sons and stepson above referred to, who are minors, and the other payable to her as executrix to be distributed according to the will. There is no controversy as to the fund paid to the guardian. The fund paid to the executrix is claimed by the widow as residuary legatee and by the daughters under paragraphs sixth and seventh of the will. The court as above indicated held that on distribution of the estate the money should be paid to the widow, on the ground that the “action of the deceased in changing the beneficiary of one of these policies so that the other, under the terms thereof, become payable to the estate, effected a revocation of these paragraphs [sixth and seventh] of the will relating to these policies of insurance and that deceased did not intend that the former beneficiaries [the daughters] would be entitled to payment of any part of the proceeds of the policy paid into the estate.”
With this determination of the court we cannot agree. It is our opinion that in view of the undoubted and manifest purpose of the testator in changing the named beneficiaries in the policies from “Eleanor Kamba and Viola Kamba” to “executors, administrators or assigns” merely to make provision so that the proceeds of the policies would be payable in monthly instalments instead of in a lump sum, the change of the payee evidenced no intent to deprive the daughters of the avails of the policies, but on the contrary evidenced an intent that they should receive those avails. That this was
Respondent contends that because Will of Battis, 143 Wis. 234, 235, 126 N. W. 9, holds that wills may by change of circumstances be revoked by implication, the paragraphs of the instant will involved should be held to be so revoked. More to the point is the ruling in Will of Kendrick, 210 Wis. 218, 221, 246 N. W. 306, wherein it is said:
“The testatrix in this case had it within-her power, after her circumstances were altered, to revoke her-' will and execute a new one. The mere fact that it may be supposed that, had she done so, the will would have been different, does not affect the 'interpretation of her will as of the date*251 when it was made. She failed to exercise the power of control which she had over the estate. Under such circumstances it must be presumed that she intended to leave her will as she had written it.”
The change of circumstances involved in the Battis Case, supra, was far different and of an entirely different nature from those here involved, and the testator here made express provision, by change of beneficiary in one of the policies, because of that change. The change in circumstances involved in the Battis Case was the granting of a judgment of divorce to a wife and a final division of property after the making of a will by the husband bequeathing $10,000 to her, designating her as “my wife Frances May Battis” and bequeathing and devising the remainder of his estate to his brother. It does not follow from the ruling in the Battis Case that the paragraph of the instant will involving the insurance policy payable to the estate was revoked. We infer instead,' following the reasoning of the Kendrick Case, supra, that had the testator intended revocation of that paragraph he would have expressly manifested that intent by changing either the policy or the will.
It is argued also that the legacy to the daughters was adempted, but the argument is not persuasive. The legacy was specific. Ademption of a specific legacy “is effected by the extinction of the thing or fund, as it is generally stated, without regard to the testator’s intention.” 1 Bouv. Law Diet., Rawle’s Third Revision, p. 134. The “thing” here bequeathed was “the proceeds” of a $5,000 life insurance policy. The fund constituting those proceeds is still in existence.
By the Court. — The judgment of the county court is reversed, and the record remanded with directions to enter judgment in accordance with this opinion.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on February 7, 1939.