13 S.E.2d 73 | W. Va. | 1940
This is a statutory proceeding, coming to us from the Circuit Court of Brooke County, involving the probate of a paper as the last will and testament of William M. Werkman, deceased. The trial court, on appeal from the county court, reversed the action of said court and refused probate, and this writ of error is prosecuted in the name of Ethel C. Kaltenbach under circumstances which this opinion will relate.
William M. Werkman and Rose Werkman, his wife, were married in the year 1902, and thereafter lived in the City of Wellsburg. No children were born of this marriage. On April 23, 1936, they executed separate wills, by which the entire estate of each was devised to the other. The circumstances surrounding the execution of these wills will be hereafter discussed. Rose Werkman died in April, 1938, leaving surviving her husband and a child, Ethel C. Kaltenbach, who was born out of wedlock of a father other than William M. Werkman. Rose Werkman's will was admitted to probate and her husband took her estate thereunder. William M. Werkman did not formally revoke his will, and died in July, 1939. Ethel C. Kaltenbach, hereafter designated as the proponent, then presented the said will for probate. It is conceded that if *585
said will be admitted to probate, his entire estate will pass to Ethel C. Kaltenbach, under the provisions of Code,
A preliminary question should be considered at this point. The order of the trial court, refusing the probate of the will, was entered on the 20th day of December, 1939, and a writ of error to said judgment was awarded by this Court on February 26, 1940. On or about the 25th of May, 1940, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in the absence of any of counsel who appeared in the trial of the case in the circuit court, and certainly without the knowledge of her counsel, proponent entered into an agreement with the contestants, by which she, in effect, waived her rights under the will in question and agreed to share the estate as one of the testator's heirs-at-law. There is no evidence that counsel for the contestants, who appeared in the circuit court, had any knowledge of this agreement at the time it was executed.
Subsequent to this agreement a petition was filed by the contestants, defendants in error, asking that the writ of error granted by this Court be dismissed; whereupon counsel, who appeared for the proponent of the will in the circuit court, filed an answer asserting a contract between the proponent and themselves, by which they were to be paid a definite percentage of the amount which the proponent would receive should the said will be probated, and the estate of the said Werkman thereby pass to her. Counsel for proponent request that they be permitted to prosecute this writ of error for their own benefit and protection.
We are of the opinion that counsel are within their rights in asking that this case be determined upon its merits. According to the allegations of the answer filed by her counsel, the contract entered into with proponent entitled them to one-third of the Werkman estate should the will in question be upheld by a final decision of this *586
Court. The agreement entered into by the proponent and the contestants provides for a division of the estate into six shares, making it obvious that the amount proponent will receive under this agreement will be one-half of that which her counsel would be entitled should the entire estate pass to her under the conditions above mentioned. In Burkhart v. Scott,
A decision of the case on its merits requires a statement of the background leading up to the execution of the two wills in question, as well as the attitude, acts and conduct of William M. Werkman after the death of his wife. The wife, when a young girl, gave birth to the child who is now Ethel C. Kaltenbach, proponent of the Werkman will. This was in 1893. Shortly thereafter, the mother married an elderly man by the name of Beckett, not the father of proponent, who died some years later, and from whom she received some estate. In 1902, she married William M. Werkman, who, it appears, probably had knowledge of the birth of this child. The child had, in the meantime, and when less than one year of age, been legally adopted by Charles and Jennie Swearengen, who resided in Steubenville, Ohio. After the marriage of the Werkmans, when proponent was about twelve years old, a question arose between the Swearengens and Mrs. Werkman as to the custody of the child, the Swearengens believing that Mrs. Werkman was making an effort to take the child from them. They were reassured on this point at a meeting in the Werkman home in Wellsburg, Werkman telling them that so long as they were able to take care of the child she would not be taken from them, but that if the time came when they could not properly care for her, or if anything happened to them, he, Werkman, would take her. After this there does not seem to have been any discord between the two families and the child was permitted to visit the Werkmans until her marriage at an early age. The evidence is that during all these years William M. Werkman evidenced an affection for the child, and this is not seriously controverted, nor is it controverted that Ethel C. Kaltenbach is the child of Rose Werkman. The proponent contends that while William M. Werkman had this affection for her, his feeling for his *588 own relatives was not cordial; that he had no affection for them; and that he frequently stated that his brothers and sisters would not get any of his property. These contentions are disputed, and there is evidence that during the life of Rose Werkman she corresponded with at least one of these relatives, and that one of them attended her funeral, and another visited Werkman during his last illness. After the death of his wife, William M. Werkman continued his interest in her daughter, made expensive gifts to her, made an extended trip to Virginia with her, and asked her to give up her position in Wheeling and come to his home, and take charge of his house. When he became ill early in 1939, he relied on her for care and attention, in an increasing measure. She accompanied him to the hospital and he directed that should anything happen to him she should be notified. We think the evidence justifies the holding that Werkman was undoubtedly attached to his wife's daughter, the proponent, and that he was indifferent to his own kindred. Further than this we do not think it necessary to go.
The evidence clearly shows that prior to 1936, Rose Werkman made a will by which she devised her estate to her husband. It is probable that William M. Werkman also made a will, but if so its provisions are unknown. The record shows that the former will of Rose Werkman was, in respect to its formal execution, an independent act on her part, being executed and witnessed in the absence of her husband, and so far as known without his knowledge. This will, and possibly the will of William M. Werkman, was placed in a safety deposit box in the City of Wellsburg, and was blurred or defaced by the flood of 1936. It was after this flood that the two wills were executed in April, 1936, and Mrs. Werkman soon thereafter stated that she and Mr. Werkman "had executed new wills."
That they did formally and legally execute these wills is beyond question. On the 23rd day of April, 1936, they, together, went to the banking room of the Wellsburg Banking Trust Company, and each of them had a typewritten will, almost identical in terms, although not entirely *589 so. The evidence, we think, shows that both of these wills were written on an old-fashioned, double-keyboard typewriter, the product of which carried marked peculiarities, and there is a strong inference that the actual writing of the wills was done by Mr. Werkman, who was a one-armed man and who followed certain peculiar methods in the preparation of typewritten manuscript. Be this as it may, when Werkman went into the bank he stepped to the counter that divided the lobby of the bank from the working quarters and asked W. M. George and Martha Noland, employees of the bank, to witness his will. He then signed the same in their presence, and at his request they affixed their signatures thereto, in his presence, and in the presence of each other. At this time his wife was standing nearby, and there is evidence that she held the will in place on the counter when Werkman signed the same. When the transaction had been completed as to the William M. Werkman will, his wife stepped to the counter and signed her will, and the same was witnessed in due form and by the same witnesses. While the papers so executed and witnessed were separate papers, and the execution and witnessing thereof were separate transactions, it is clear that both Werkman and his wife were in position to know, and probably did know, what the other was doing. When the execution of the wills was completed, they were handed to the respective parties who executed them, and they then left the banking room together. Immediately thereafter they rented a safety deposit box in Wellsburg in their joint names, and it is assumed that the wills were placed therein. Upon the death of Mrs. Werkman her will was probated, and upon the death of William M. Werkman, his will was found in this safety deposit box, and it was withdrawn therefrom by Ethel C. Kaltenbach, who, it is argued, must have been advised by Werkman of its being there. It is in evidence that after the death of his wife, Werkman frequently opened this safety deposit box, from which it is contended that he did not intend to revoke this will, but, evidently intended that it should remain operative and take *590 effect upon his death. It is also contended that, being an attorney-at-law, it must be assumed that he had knowledge of the legal effect of allowing this will to remain unrevoked; while, on the other hand, it is argued, with equal force that he had the right to assume that the death of his wife rendered said will inoperative.
The trial court refused to probate the will on the basis of the holding of this Court in Wilson v. Starbuck,
No attack is made upon the holding of the Court inWilson v. Starbuck, and it is apparently accepted as sound law. But it is insisted by counsel for proponent that the circumstances developed by the evidence in the case at bar do not establish the contractual relationship which was there held to exist. In that case the parties executing the wills were well advanced in years and had been recently married, and each of them had children by previous marriages, and all the circumstances, it was held, indicated an agreement between them that their estates should go to the survivor. In the case at bar it is said that all of the circumstances indicate an intention on the part of William M. Werkman to have his will remain operative after his wife's death. It is contended that his assumed knowledge of the effect of permitting the will to remain among his private papers in the safety deposit box, his frequent visits to this box, his known affection for and interest in Ethel C. Kaltenbach, and his indifference to his own kindred, all show that it was not his intent that his will, solemnly executed, should become inoperative upon the death of his wife, and that his acceptance of his wife's estate under her will, together with the failure to destroy or revoke his own will, indicates that he intended that his own estate, together with what he had inherited from his wife, should go to the proponent.
We hold that these contentions must be sustained. In the first place, we need do no more than state the rule governing wills, their construction and operation: "The fundamental rule in the construction of wills is, that the intention of the testator, if not inconsistent with some established rule of law, must control." 9 Michie's Digest, Va. and W. Va. Reports, 1101, and cases there cited. We perceive no reason why the rule thus announced with respect to the construction of a will should not prevail and *592 govern in determining whether or not a person intended a paper he had executed to operate as his will, which might in some cases involve the question of its revocation.
With this rule before us for our guidance, we are confronted with a solemnly executed will, legal in all respects, which disposes of the entire estate of the testator. The death of the wife between the date of the execution of this will and the death of the testator did not operate as a revocation of the will, but only created a situation provided for by Code,
However, if the mere fact of the execution of the two wills in the case before us, even if knowledge of the contents of each may be imputed to the testators, is not alone sufficient to establish an agreement to execute the same, *593
as stated in 69 C. J. 1303-4, and supported by Rolls v. Allen
This is not a case where we are, primarily, overruling the trial court on a finding of fact. The important facts *594 are not in dispute. We think that the trial court, in applying the principles announced in Wilson v. Starbuck to the facts of the present case, failed to give proper weight to what we consider are the clear distinctions between the two, and on this ground we base our decision.
It follows that the judgment of the Circuit Court of Brooke County is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.