Townshend v. Howard

86 Me. 285 | Me. | 1894

Walton, J.

The question is whether a will made by the late George H. Townshend was afterwards legally revoked. We think it was.

A will can be revoked in whole or in part by cancellation or obliteration. E. S., c. 74, § 3. To cancel is to cross out. To obliterate is to blot out. The former leaves the words legible. The latter leaves the words illegible. By either method a will can be legally revoked in whole or in part. If that which is essential to the validity of the whole will is cancelled or obliterated, animo revocandi, the whole will is revoked. If only a single clause is so cancelled or obliterated, then that clause only is revoked. And such cancellations or obliterations are as effectual when made with a pencil as when made with a pen.

In Succession of Muh, 48 Am. Rep. 242 (35 La. Ann. 394), the rule is aptly expressed thus : " Erasures of clauses in the body of the will affect only the dispositions erased. Erasure of the signature strikes at the existence of the whole instrument.”

In Bigelow v. Gillott, 133 Mass. 102, lines had been drawn through two clauses of a will, and the court held that the effect was to revoke those clauses, and leave the remainder of the will unimpaired. "The cancellation,” said the court, "by the testator of the sixth and thirteenth clauses of his’ will, by drawing lines through them, with the intention of revoking them, ivas a legal revocation of those clauses.”

In Woodflll v. Patten, 40 Am. Rep. 269 (76 Ind. 575), the testator had drawn lines through his signature with a pencil, and the court held that the act having been done, animo revocandi, the will was legally destroyed. "It is not necessary,” said the court, " that there should be a destruction in a literal sense of the fabric upon which the words of the testator are written ; it will be sufficient if the legal force of the instrument is extin*289guished.” And the court held further that it can make no difference in the result whether a pen, a pencil, or some other implement is used to make the erasures. And to the same effect are Estate of Tomlinson, 19 Am. St. Rep. 637 (133 Pa. St. 245), and Myers v. Vanderbelt, 24 Am. Rep. 227 (84 Pa. St. 510).

In the present case, the signatures of the testator are all erased. The testator had signed the will in three places, at the bottom of the first page, at the bottom of the second page, and at the end of the will on the third page. These signatures are all erased with a lead pencil; and the evidence satisfies us that they were erased by the testator himself, animo revocandi. The will was evidently one with which he had become dissatisfied. He was possesed of but a small estate. Its value, according to his own estimate, was not more than from five to seven thous- and dollars. He had been induced, when away from his home and away from all his friends and relatives, to sign a will giving to a comparative stranger (Oliver Otis Howard, Jr.), a legacy of two thousand dollars. He had known the legatee less than a month. The legatee was not related to him ; and it is evident that upon reflection the testator became dissatisfied with this bequest; for, on obtaining possession of the will, he immediately erased it by drawing lines through it with a lead pencil. What then remained of the will was of little importance. It contained only a small legacy of three hundred dollars conditionally given to Frederick W. Murphey, to assist him in getting an education, and the gift of a few books, and other articles of little value, to Shiler G. Cushing. The residue of his property was given to his brother; and, as his brother was his only heir, this clause in the will was of little importance. Without the will, his brother would inherit the whole. With the will (the legacy to Howard being cancelled) he would receive all but three hundred dollars, and the few books and other articles of little value given to Shiler G. Cushing. Under these circumstances, it is not strange that the testator finally resolved to revoke the Avhole instrument. And the evidence satisfies us that when he erased his signatures such was his pur*290pose. His brother testifies that ho was sitting by his side fanning away the flies; that after George had worked upon the will for some time, he finally crossed off his name in the different pla.ces where it had been signed, and then said, "There, Lewis, it is all yours, now.” This declaration, made at the very moment of erasing his signatures, confirms what the act itself so clearly indicates, namely, an intention to revoke the whole instrument.

x' It is urged by the learned counsel for the appellee that other marks upon the paper indicate an intention on the part of the testator to make a new will, and that inasmuch as he died without having accomplished that purpose, the revocation of his then existing will should be regarded as deliberative and not operative, and that the doctrine of "dependent relative revocation,” should be applied. In other words, that the revocation should be held to be conditional, and that, the condition not having been performed, the revocation should not be allowed to take effect. We can not accept this interpretation of the testator’s acts. N It is true that some of the marks upon the revoked will indicate an intention on the part of the testator, at the time when they were made, to make another will. But they also indicate that the new will, if made, was to be essentially different from the old one. ^They show7, an unmistakable intention on the part of the testator to abrogate, totally and absolutely, the legacy of two thousand dollars to Oliver Otis Howard. Two lines are drawn through it from top to bottom. The legacy is neither enlarged nor reduced; it is totally expunged. And the paper found in the same .envelope with the old will, which the appellee claims is a nearly completed draft of the new will which the testator intended to make, contains, nothing to indicate that the legacy to Howard, or any portion of it, was to be renewed, f The evidence is plenary that the testator intended to cancel and revoke this ill-advised legacy, totally and absolutely. And if we should now annex to its revocation an implied and unperformed condition, by which the legacy should be revived, our firm belief is that, instead of giving effect to the testator’s intentions, we should thwart them, *291and produce a result the very opposite of what he intended. Neither reason nor the rules of law will justify such a perversion of the testator’s intentions.

The appellee’s motions, — one to have the appeal dismissed, because his exceptions to the decision of Mr. Justice Virgin, granting the appellant leave to enter and prosecute the appeal, Avere not allowed, and the other to open the ease for the introduction of further evidence — have been considered, and are disallowed. It is the opinion of the court that the decision of Mr. Justice Virgin Avas right, and that the exceptions could not be sustained, if they Avere now properly before the court; that the further evidence proposed to be introduced is not of' sufficient importance to justify the expense and delay that would be caused by opening the ease for its introduction. It ivoulck not change the result if it was now in the case.'

It is the opinion of the court, upon the whole case, that the-appeal be sustained; that the decree of the probate court be-reversed ; that the will offered for probate be disalloAved ; that neither party recover costs against the other; and that theappellee recover no costs against the estate.

Appeal sustained.