Owens v. Fahnestock

June 28, 1918. The opinion of the Court was delivered by On December 11, 1916, after the death of Mrs. Rosa Fahnestock, of Walhalla, S.C. two papers, one dated September 24, 1915, and the other dated January 1, 1916, were produced and offered for probate as her last will and testament. Both were admitted to probate in common form, the latter as a codicil to the former. Upon a proceeding to prove the will in due form of law, the proper execution of each paper was duly proved. The probate Court admitted to probate in due form of law the paper of September 24, 1915, but refused to admit to probate in due form of law the paper dated January 1, 1916. Thereupon Thomas G.C. Fahnestock, one of the parties who would have inherited had the deceased died intestate, appealed to the Circuit Court, *Page 134 and upon hearing the appeal the Circuit Court reversed the judgment of the probate Court, and held that the will of September 24, 1915, had been revoked by the paper dated January 1, 1916, which he held constituted her last will and testament, and ordered that it be admitted to probate in solemn form as the last will and testament of Rosa Fahnestock. From the judgment of the Circuit Court the executor appeals.

The will of September 24, 1915, contains nine items. By this will the testatrix disposed of all her property, providing for a number of legacies and leaving the residue to a nephew, William John Owens. By item 9 she named as her executor her nephew, William John Owens, of Panama, and in the event that he should fail to qualify, James Owens, another nephew. The paper dated January 1, 1916, is headed "Item Ten," then follows language commonly used in the preamble to a will (evidently copied verbatim from the will of September 24th) in which the testatrix recites that she is desirous of disposing of all her worldy effects, and that she makes, publishes and declares this as and for her last will and testament, "revoking any and all wills and testamentary documents or instruments by me heretofore made." She thereupon appoints W.L. Verner, of Walhalla, as her attorney, requesting that he take charge of her property immediately after her death, "and hold same together until the arrival of my said executor. And that my said attorney immediately notify my said executor and also my other relatives." This paper names no executor, and, except for the above provisions for temporary holding the estate pending the arrival of her executor, it makes no disposition whatever of the property of the testatrix. The conclusion of the Circuit Court was to the effect that the paper, dated January 1, 1916, was complete in itself, and alone constituted the last will and testament of the deceased, and hence that it annihilated and wiped out the will of September 24, 1915. The appellant appealed and by four exceptions challenges *Page 135 the correctness of the Circuit Court's conclusion and findings, and take the position that it is a codicil to the will of September 24, 1915, and that both papers must be considered together.

The evidence in the case beyond question establishes the fact that shortly before her death Mrs. Fahnestock handed to her executor a small package of papers. After her death this was opened, and in it was found an envelope, marked "Mrs. Fahnestock's Will." Within this envelope were found two paper folded together, the paper dated January 1, 1916, being folded inside the paper dated September 24, 1915. The will of September 24, 1915, contained various items numbered from 1 to 9, disposing of all the property of testatrix. The paper of January 1, 1916, found inside the will of September 24, 1915, begins with the words "Item Ten." These two words indicate clearly that what followed was intended by the testatrix as a continuation of her will, which contained nine items. The will and codicil being folded together in an envelope handed by testatrix to her executor before her death and when opened by him after death found to be marked "Mrs. Rosa Fahnestock's Will," leads to the inevitable conclusion that these papers should be read in connection with each other, and to treat as surplusage the words embodied in the last paper, to wit, "I do hereby make, ordain, publish and declare this as and for and to be my last will and testament, hereby revoking any and all will and testamentary documents or instruments by me heretofore made," so as to make the last paper a continuation of the will of September 24, 1915, being item 10 of said will. The construction given by the Circuit Court would defeat the manifest purpose of the deceased, and create a situation never contemplated or dreamed of by her. Her manifest intention was that the paper of January 1, 1916, was intended by her as a supplement or addition to her will of September 24, 1915. She begins with the words, "Item Ten," indicating clearly an intention of the continuation of *Page 136 some testamentary containing nine items. The will of September has nine items. In the will of September she declares her intention of disposing of all of her property; in that will she does so. In the last paper she appoints Verner as attorney, with power to hold property until arrival of the executor, shows it was not her intention to revoke her will, but her intention is to simply provide for the looking after her property by Verner until the arrival of her executor, appointed under her will, and to hold otherwise and sustain the Circuit Court's holding would be destructive of the clear purpose and manifest intention of the testatrix.

The papers, read in connection with each other, show that there was a manifest intention on the part of the testatrix that they should be so taken, and that the general intention of the testatrix should not be defeated by a literal construction of an apparent inconsistent provision. The testatrix did not intend to revoke the will, but to add another item to it. The actual intention of the testatrix is clear to the Court, and it would be unjust and destructive of her clear purpose and intention to sustain his Honor and hold that the last paper revoked the first. There was no intention on her part to revoke her will, but construing both papers together, clearly arrives at her intention. She intended her will to stand, and the manifest intention of last paper is shown by its terms as intended only for the purpose of making temporary provision for the custody of the estate until arrival of executor, when it was to be delivered to him. When the executor appeared Verner's appointment under the paper of January 1, 1916, was functus officio. There was nothing for him to do by the terms of the paper, and the probate Judge was not in error in not admitting it to probate.

The exceptions are sustained.

Judgment of the Circuit Court reversed and judgment of the probate Court made the judgment of this Court.

Judgment reversed. *Page 137

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MESSRS. JUSTICES HYDRICK and FRASER concur.

MR. JUSTICE GAGE did not sit.