Kathleen F. LONERGAN, etc., et al., Appellant,
v.
ESTATE OF Ethel L. BUDAHAZI, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*1063 Mark Edward Hager of Charnock & Hager, Spring Hill, for Appellant Kathleen F. Lonergan.
David C. Sasser of Johnston & Sasser, P.A., Brooksville, for Appellant Andrew Brickwedel.
Richard G. Padgett, Spring Hill, for Appellee.
ANTOON, Judge.
This is an appeal from an order admitting a copy of Ethel Budahazi's lost will to probate. Because the legal presumption that a lost will was destroyed by the testator with the intention of revocation was sufficiently overcome by competent substantial evidence, we affirm.
Ethel Budahazi (wife) and John Budahazi (husband) were married on September 16, 1975. In 1986, after eleven years of marriage, the wife executed a will leaving her entire estatе to her husband. Thereafter, the parties' relationship deteriorated and by the spring of 1992, it had become turbulent. In May, the wife obtained an injunction against domestic violence, and in June the husband filed a petition to dissolvе the marriage. In July 1992, the wife executed a second will leaving her entire estate to her daughter Marilyn Wilbright. The wife аlso changed the title to bank accounts owned jointly with her husband to her name only. But, as the end of the summer of 1992 approached, the parties had a change of heart and by late summer they had reconciled. On August 28, the husband and wife executed a joint stipulation agreeing to dismiss the lawsuits against one another. The husband moved back into the marital residence, and the parties resumed their marital relationship. By the time the attorney who prepared the wife's second will mailed the executed original to the wife on September 14, 1992, the parties were again living together as husband and wife.
Tragedy then befell the couple. The wife died on May 7, 1993, and the husbаnd was severely injured in an automobile accident the following July. As a result of his injuries, the husband was incapacitated and Kathleen Lonergan was appointed guardian of his person and property.
Incident to her dutiеs as guardian, Lonergan searched the parties' home for important papers. Lonergan found the wife's 1986 will, but she was unable to locate the wife's 1992 will, the whereabouts of which is still unknown. Lonergan filed a petition for intestаte administration of the wife's estate, and the wife's daughter, Wilbright, filed a counter-petition for administration requesting thаt a copy of the wife's July 1992 will be admitted to probate. The trial court granted Wilbright's petition and admitted the copy of the 1992 will to probate. Lonergan appeals this ruling.
The findings of the trial court are to be presumed correct and are to be given the same weight as a jury verdict. Parson v. Hendley,
In Florida, when a will known to have existed prior to the testator's death is lost, and its loss сannot be explained, a rebuttable presumption arises that the testator destroyed the will with the intention of revocation. Potts, et al. v. American Legion Hospital for Crippled Children,
The term "competent substantial evidence", although often used, is rarely defined. In his concurring opinion in Dunn v. State,
The term "competent substantial evidence" does not relate to the quality, character, convincing power, probative value or weight of the evidence but refers to thе existence of some evidence (quantity) as to each essential element and as to the legality аnd admissibility of that evidence. Competency of evidence refers to its admissibility under legal rules of evidencе. "Substantial" requires that there be some (more than a mere iota or scintilla), real, material, pertinent, and relevant evidence (as distinguished from ethereal, metaphysical, speculative or merely theoretical evidence or hypothetical possibilities) having definite probative value (that is, "tending to prove") as to each essential element of the offense charged.
Dunn,
In concluding that Wilbright had submitted competent substantial evidence to rebut the presumption that her mother had deliberately destroyed her 1992 will, the trial court, citing to Walton v. Estate of Walton,
AFFIRMED.
DAUKSCH and GOSHORN, JJ., concur.
